Dreyfuss v. Process Oil & Fuel Co.
Dreyfuss v. Process Oil & Fuel Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs sue to recover possession of premises heretofore leased by them to defendant. The grounds are that the lease, which was for three years, has expired, or if not that at all events defendant has forfeited it by failure to pay the rent promptly, and again, by subleasing a part of the premises in violation of an express stipulation to the contrary in the lease. The property consists of one side of a double building. The plaintiffs are Samuel Dreyfuss, and the widow and the heirs of Jules Dreyfuss. They were represented throughout the matters involved in this suit by Jules Dreyfuss, one of the Jules Dreyfuss heirs. We gather that Samuel Dreyfuss owns a half interest and the other plaintiffs the other half interest.
The question of whether the lease has expired or not depends upon whether the defendant has a right of renewal at the same rental; and the existence of this right depends, in turn, upon whether a certain inter
The lease as appearing in the record reads that it is to “end on 1st Aug. 1916, with privilege of refusal at the end of that time at rental to Be agreed upon.” This''italicized clause is said by defendant to have been added after the lease had been signed and without defendant’s consent or knowledge. It appears in the contract as an interlineation in handwriting; the rest of the contract being typewritten. The contract was in duplicate, and a copy was left with defendant, and the interlineation appears in both copies, but defendant says that it was not there when the contract was signed by defendant; that Mr. Albert Dreyfuss who brought the two copies to defendant for signature took away both copies for having them signed by Mr. Samuel Dreyfuss, and that when he returned one of them to defendant, defendant simply filed it away without examination, and discovered only much later that the interlineation had been made. Mr. Gribble, former president of defendant company, so testifies. Mr. Roberts, present president of the defendant company, testifies that he and other directors, including Mr. Gribble, having had occasion to examine this lease at a directors’ meeting, Mr. Gribble was much surprised at seeing this interlineation in it.
Mr. Albert Dreyfuss testifies positively that this clause was in the lease when defendant signed it. Mr. Samuel Dreyfuss testified that no one else had signed the lease when it was brought to him by Mr. Albert Dreyfuss for signature, and that he refused to sign it unless this clause was inserted in it; and that he signed it with the understanding that this clause would be inserted.
Mr. Gribble testified that when the lease was brought to him by Mr. Albert Dreyfuss for signature, it was not; signed by Mr. Samuel Dreyfuss; that Mr. Samuel Dreyfuss was at that time absent from the city.
In that statement Mr. Gribble is corroborated by Mr. Houston Barnes, who was a clerk in the office of the defendant company at the time the lease 'was signed, and was a witness to the signing of it by Mr. Gribble, and himself signed it as a witness.
But the judge of the city court before whom this case was first tried, and the attorney who represented plaintiffs at that trial, testified that on that occasion Mr. Barnes testified that when the lease was presented to Mr. Gribble for signature it had been signed by all the other parties.
The record in this case fails to show, we think, that the defendant has a contract without this clause in it, because it fails to show that Samuel Dreyfuss, one of the co-owners, ever consented to the contract without this clause in it. True, defendant produces a contract signed by Samuel Dreyfuss, but the contract thus produced contains this clause.
“After discontinuing a suit, the plaintiff may bring the action anew: Provided he has paid the cost of the first suit.”
A suit cannot be said to have been “discontinued by the plaintiff” when it has been dismissed at the instance of defendant. The exception was properly overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DREYFUSS v. PROCESS OIL & FUEL CO.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Alteration of Instruments Where a lease provided that at the end of the term the lessee should have the privilege of renewal “at rental to be agreed upon,” the quoted words being interlined and the lessors sued to recover possession on the ground that the lease had expired, the burden was on them to show that the interlineation was in the lease at the time it was signed. 2. Alteration of Instruments &wkey;>29 — Evidence — Weight and Sufficiency. Where the evidence conflicted as to whether the interlineation was in the lease when defendant signed it, but it appeared that a duplicate was in defendant’s possession without complaint until the question of renewal came up at the end of throe years, and though defendant claim-■eel to have written plaintiffs about this interlineation, when it came to defendant’s attention, the letter was never answered, and defendant was unable to produce the letter, plaintiffs sustained the burden of showing that the interlineation was in the lease when it was signed, especially as fraud is not lightly to be supposed. 3. Alteration of Instruments &wkey;>18— Effect ON YilXDITT OF INSTRUMENT. Assuming that the interlineation was not in the lease when signed by defendant, where it appeared without dispute that one of the plaintiffs refused to sign it, unless the clause in question was inserted, and that it was inserted to obtain his signature, the alteration resulted in there being no lease at all, since when parties agree to reduce their contract to writing, the contract is not perfected, and there is no- contract until the writing is duly executed. 4. Landlord and Tenant &wkey;>76(3) — Subletting — Consent of Lessor. A lessor’s consent to and acquiescence in the subletting of the ground floor of a building for a garage business to a corporation in which it. was interested was not a consent to a subletting of an upper floor to R. individually for living purposes. 5. Landlord and Tenant Under a lease giving the lessee an option to renew it at a rental to be agreed upon, the lessee lost its right to renew by its refusal to consider the lessor’s repeated offers to agree upon a price for renewal. 6. Landlord and Tenant &wkey;>150(l) — Duty to Make “Ordinary Repairs.” The closing up of an opening with brick and the installation of wooden partitions in a building were not “ordinary repairs” within Rev. Civ. Code, arts. 2693, 2710, requiring the lessor to make necessary repairs. [Ed. Note. — Por other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Ordinary Repairs.] 7. Landlord and Tenant &wkey;>157 (6) — Improvements by Tenant — Right to Compensation. Under Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2726, providing that a lessee has a right to remove improvements and additions which he has made to the thing let, providing he leaves it in the state in which he found it, but that if additions be made with lime and cement, the lessor may retain them on paying a fair price, a lessee making improvements has no right to claim compensation for them at the termination of the lease, hut only a right to remove them if it can be done so as to leave the premises in the condition in which they were when leased. 8. Landlord and Tenant Under Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2694, providing that if a lessor does not make necessary repairs, the lessee may call on him to make them, and that if he refuses or neglects to make them, the lessee may himself cause them to be made and deduct the price from the rent due, lessors were under no liability for repairs made by the lessee where they were not put in default. 9.Costs A suit dismissed on defendant’s exception to the jurisdiction of the court is not “discontinued by plaintiff” within Code Prac. art. 492, providing that after discontinuing a suit, plaintiff may bring the action anew, provided he has paid tlie cost of the first suit.