Lippold v. Messner
Lippold v. Messner
Opinion of the Court
Action by appellee, as landlord, against appellants, as tenants, to recover possession of a theatre building in the city of Attica, Indiana, upon the ground that the lease, which was made a part of the complaint, had expired before the beginning of the action.
The action was begun before a justice of the peace and appealed to the circuit court where judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for possession and $520 damages.
The only error relied upon for reversal is the action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial, appellants contending that the judgment was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to law. It appears by the undisputed evidence that appellant’s lease of the premises involved expired August 1, 1922, and that their failure to deliver possession after the expiration of the lease resulted in this action.
On April 27, 1922, appellee rented said real estate by written lease to the Hornbeck Amusement Company, such written lease containing, among other things, stipulations that the lease should be for a period of one year from August 1, 1922, with a provision that the lease should commence thirty days from the date the lessees obtained possession of the premises and should continue one year from that date and that the lessor should not in any way be responsible or under any obligation to turn over the property on any specific date or time, and, further, that the property should be turned over to the lessees when vacated by appellants whose lease was to expire August 1, 1922, and that, in the event the lessor should be unable to deliver possession of the premises before September 1, 1922, he should then refund to the lessees the rent paid and cancel the lease if the lessee so elected. It is the contention of appellants that appellee, having conveyed a leasehold interest in the property to another, cannot maintain this action, but
In Vincent v. Defield (1893), 98 Mich. 84, 56 N. W. 1104, the action was by a landlord against a tenant holding over. ■ The defense was that the landlord had leased the premises to another to commence at the expiration of the lease to the current tenant, and that therefore the landlord had deprived himself of the right of action. The court, in disposing of the question says: “Defendant was a tenant under complainant. His lease expired April 30, 1892, but at the expiration of his term he refused to surrender possession, and complainant, on May 2, 1892, commenced this proceeding to oust defendant. It appears that, before the expiration of the term, complainant had entered into a lease of the premises to ' one E. for a term which was to commence May 1, 1892; and the sole contention is that complainant, by reason of the agreement with E., had not the right to possession when these proceedings were instituted. E. held a contract for possession of the premises. By the terms of that contract, complainant was obligated to put E. in possession. Until that was done, complainant could not enforce performance on the part of E., nor could he recover rent. E. had not leased subject to defendant’s tenancy, and was under no obligation to proceed against defendant. The operative character of the contract, so far as E. was concerned, depended upon defendant’s surrender. The failure to vacate deprived complainant of the ability to perform, and left it optional with E.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.