Walshe v. Endom
Walshe v. Endom
Opinion of the Court
Defendant leased to plaintiff a certain store building in the city of Monroe at $50 per month, with option to purchase at any time between certain fixed dates at $6,500. Plaintiff having decided to exercise the option, and called upon defendant to execute a title in his favor, and defendant having refused, plaintiff brought suit for specific performance. The defense to the suit was that defendant was only half owner of the property, the other half owners being his children, and that he was therefore unable to specifically perform. That defense was sustained by this court. Walshe v. Endom, 124 La. 697, 50 South. 656. Plaintiff then brought the present suit in damages for breach of contract.
Under these circumstances, we do not think the payment of rent operated an abandonment or waiver of the option. Abandonment or waiver, or renunciation, must be voluntary, whereas the payments were in a sense compulsory.
This defense can hardly be serious. Even if it were true (and it is not) that plaintiff was secretly acting for another, of what concern would that be to defendant?
The evidence does not show any such knowledge on the part of the plaintiff. It shows the contrary.
The damages claimed by plaintiff are itemized in the petition, as follows:
$5,500, the difference between the actual value of the leased property and the price stipulated in the lease contract and option to purchase.
$2,475, paid by plaintiff to defendant as rent, in monthly installments of $50, between May 15, 1904, and July 1, 1908.
$439.34, the accrued interest on the $6,500 judicially deposited June 27, 1908, and November 15, 1909.
$750, as attorney’s fees for prosecuting suit No. 5889 in the District and Supreme Courts.
$136.50, costs incurred in suit No. 5889 in the district court, including cost of printing brief, together with the traveling and hotel expenses of his attorney.
Of these damages plaintiff is entitled to recover only the difference between the contract price and the value of the property, which the trial judge found to be $2,000, but which we find to be $3,500.
The property has continued to belong to the defendant, and whatever plaintiff may have paid for the enjoyment of it as lessee or otherwise was due to the defendant as owner of the property.
Eor any losses which plaintiff may have suffered as the result of having sought to compel specific performance such as loss of interest on the $6,500 deposit, attorney’s fees and costs, plaintiff has but himself to blame, for he should not have brought that suit, as appears from the judgment in the suit.
The judgment appealed from is increased to $3,500, with legal interest on $2,000 thereof from June 30, 191.0, the date of judgment in the lower court, and like interest on the remainder thereof from this date, and, as thus amended, is affirmed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Landlord and Tenant (§ 92*) — Option to Purchase — Waiver—Acts Constituting. A tenant with ontion to purchase exercised the option, but, on the landlord’s refusal to convey, he sued for specific performance and deposited in court the agreed price, and thereafter paid the rent due under the lease for fear the landlord would sue for rent. The court denied specific performance. At the expiration of the lease the tenant retained possession, but refused to pay rent claiming ownership, and the landlord sued for rent and recovered judgment which was paid. Held, that the payment of rent was compulsory, and did not operate as an abandonment or waiver of the option. [Ed. Note. — Eor other cases, see Landlord and Tenant, Cent. Dig. §§ 290-294; Dec. Dig. § 2. Landlord and Tenant (§ 92*) — Contracts —Enforcement—Damages. That a tenant obtaining a lease with an pption to purchase secretly acted for another does not prevent him from suing for breach of contract to convey on his exercising the option. LEd. Note. — For other cases, see Landlord and Tenant, Dec. Dig. § 92.*] 3. Landlord and Tenant (§ 92*) — Breach of Contract — Damages. Where a tenant in a lease with the option to purchase from a landlord owning only a half of the property did not know of the landlord’s want of title, he could recover on his exercising the option the difference between the contract price and the value of the property, but he could not recover the loss in unsuccessfully suing to compel specific performance, nor the rent paid after his exercise of the option and during the time he remained in possession. [Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Landlord and Tenant, Cent. Dig. §§ 290-294; Dee. Dig. § 92.*]