Court Opinion

ID: 7363615
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:49:27.50222+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:42.024645
License: Public Domain

DENSON, J.
As the owner of a well-defined interest or estate in lands, a tenant for years, unless restrained by the covenants and conditions in his lease, may under-let the premises, or any part of them. — 1 Washb. on Real Prop, (4th Ed.) 517; 4 Kent. Com. 96; 24 Cyc. 962; Nave v. Berry, 22 Ala. 382; Crommelin v. Thiess, 31 Ala. 412, 421, 70 Am. Dec. 499. In the lease presented in this case is the following clause: “And the said party of the second part (lessee) are to commit no waste of property, but, on the contrary, take good care of the same, and, further, not to underlease the said property, without the written consent of the said parties of the first part under penalty of forfeiture and damages, and, further, this agreement being terminated, to surrender the quiet and peaceful possession of the same, in like good order and condition as at. commencement of said term, as reasonable use and wear thereof will permit.” It is conceded that the tenant sublet a part of the store rented to Poulos & Brown for use as a restaurant; and it is admitted that the oral consent was given by Baldwin Wescott to the tenant prior to the making of the subcontract thereto. But it is insisted, first, that oral consent does not answer the terms of the lease, and that it cannot take the place of written consent; second, that the consent was procured without information being given the landlord that the persons to whom the sublease would be made desired to establish a restaurant in the store, and that good faith required such information to* be imparted, and in the absence of it the consent given was ineffective.
*496Although consent to subrent is required by the contract to be given in writing, this is for the benefit of the lessors; and it seems to be a, well-established principle that it may be waived by parol, and that, if parol consent is established to the reasonable satisfaction of the court or jury trying the cause, it will work a waiver of the stipulation requiring written consent. — Benson v. Suarez, 43 Barb. (N. Y.) 408, 19 Abb Prac. 61, 28 How. Prac. 511; Dierig v. Calahan, 35 Misc. Rep. 30, 70 N. Y. Supp. 210; Weisbrod v. Dembosky, 25 Misc. Rep. 485, 55 N. Y. Supp. 1; Prevost v. Holland, 15 Que. Sup. Ct. 298; Cordner v. Mitchell, 9 L. J. Jur. 319. The tenant on the 5th of March, 1907, addressed the following letter to the lessors: “Mrs. M. A. Wescott & Sons, City — -Dear Madam and Sirs: I have opportunity to lease a portion of store No. 31 Commerce street that is now leased to me by you, and I kindly ask you to please give your consent. Yours truly, T. J. Mattox.” This letter was sent to the home of the lessors on the afternoon of March 15th, but Baldwin Wescott, the person who represented all the lessors, and who> attended to the leasing and to the collection of rents for them, not being at home, no reply to the letter was sent. Later in the afternoon of the same day, Mattox (lessee) called Baldwin Wescott over the phone, and asked him if he had received his note. Wescott replied that he had. Mattox then inquired if he would consent for him to sublet a part of the house, as requested in the letter. Wescott replied that he had no objection. Mattox then asked him to put the consent-in writing, and Wescott answered that “it was no use.” Mattox then stated to him that it would be necessary to run a partition lengthwise about the center of the sore, and Wescott consented to this. Mattox did not state to what use the store would be put, nor did Wescott make any. inquiry of him in that regard. On Saturday after*497noon (the 16th day of March) Mattox and the parties to whom he had agreed to subrent were in the office of an attorney to.have prepared and to execute the sublease contract, when one of the sublessees expressed the preference that Mattox should have Wescott’s written consent to the sublease. Mattox thereupon called Westcott over the phone and communicated to him the preference of his lessee, asking him if he would put his consent in writing. Westcott replied that he had already consented to the making of the sublease, and that he saw no reason for its being in writing — that it was wholly unnecessary. Mattox then stated that his parties preferred it, and Wescott testified that he replied: “I will be down to your store to see you about it Monday morning.” Poulos and Brown (the sublessees) heard Mattox’s conversation over the phone, and when it was concluded the sublease contract was executed. Westcott testified that he did go down, on Monday, to Mattox’s store, but that Mattox was not in, and he did net see him.
On these facts, which are shown without conflict in the testimony, we cannot perceive that any unfair practice was resorted to by Mattox to obtain Wescott’s consent. He made no false statement, no misrepresentation, nor was anything concealed by him in his conversation with Wescott. Besides, Wescott had full opportunity to inquire the names of the parties to whom the lease was to be made and the purposes to which the store would be devoted. There is nothing to show that Mattox resorted to any means, foul or fair, to preven! or suppress such an inquiry. If it had been made, no doubt can be entertained — or, at least, we can see no cause for doubt — that it would have elicited the information which Wescott now insists was suppressed. . In this connection let us suppose that, in reply to the letter sent by Mattox to Wescott, Wescott had written just *498wbat he testified he said to Mattox through the phone; could it then be said that the consent given in such written reply was procured in bad faith, because Mattox did not state in his letter the purposes for which the store would be used by the subtenants? If so, we confess we cannot perceive upon what ground the predicate could be rested. Wescott knew when he read the letter that the names and purposes were not given; but there was nothing in the letter to beguile him from making inquiry in respect to them, neither was there anything of that nature in the conversations had over the phone. On the contrary, Mattox’s statement to the effect that it would necessitate the building of a partition lengthwise the store, in the middle of it, it seems to us, was calculated to incite Wescott to inquire of Mattox as to the purposes to which the store was to be put, if he deemed knowledge of such purposes material; and yet, he made no such inquiry. That the parties with whom Mattox contracted preferred the written consent of Wescott to Mattox, and that they proceeded to make the contract after hearing Avhat was said by Mattox through the phone to Wescott, seems to us to be a mere incident, and to possess nothing of an invalidating character in respect to the consent Avhich had already been given- to Mattox. The fact that Wescott said he would go to the store and see Mattox on Monday cannot be treated as a revocation by Wescott of the consent already given. Mattox was perfectly justified in acting upon the oral consent, so far as that statement goes, and if the parties he was contracting with chose to proceed to the conclusion of the contract without the consent of Wescott expressed in writing it did not concern Wescott.
Having obtained the consent, the lease contract stood, in respect to the question of subleasing, as if no condition as to subrenting had been originally placed in it. *499What, then, were the rights of the parties under the lease, with regard to the subrenting, with the consent of Wescott given? It contains no stipulation or agreement as to the nature of the business that should be conducted in the store, nor that a restaurant should not be conducted therein. Mattox had the right, then, to subrent it for the purposes of a restaurant. The case of Crommelin v. Thiess, 31 Ala. 421, 70 Am. Dec. 499, is in point on this proposition; and also see Jones on Landlord and Tenant, § 108. It also appears from the evidence that running a restaurant in the store increased the insurance rates slightly, but that before this suit was brought Mattox had offered to Wescott to pay any'increase in the insurance rates.
But it is said there was no consideration for the consent to subrent. This suggestion is met by the facts that after consent was obtained, and on the faith thereof, and before any dissent from the leave to subrent was uttered, Mattox had entered into a legal, binding contract to sublet the premises, and, further, that after being notified that the lessors would not allow the store to be subrented for a restaurant, as the record shows. Mattox proposed to them that, if they would hold him harmless against a breach of his contract with his lessees, he would not allow them to take possession, and that this proposition his lessors ignored.
It is further insisted that consent was not obtained from all the lessors — that only Baldwin Wescott gave consent. The evidence shows without conflict that Bald, win had acted for the other plaintiffs (lessors) in renting the property and in collecting the rents, and, as we think, shouts his general agency in respect to this property. But, aside from this, the evidence shows without conflict that Baldwin Wescott consented to sublease, and •therefore as he is not entitled to recover, none of the plaintiffs can do so.
*500Upon the whole case, we are of the opinion that the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff, and hold that judgment should have been rendered for tbe defendant.
Reversed and rendered.
Tyson, C. J., and Haralson and Simpson, JJ., concur.