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Wineburgh v. Toledo Corp.

Supreme Court of Ohio
Apr 27, 1932
125 Ohio St. 219 (Ohio 1932)

Summary

finding the stated term of a lease void for failure to comply with the requirements of a predecessor of section 5301.01 but finding against the landlord's attempts to collect on the implied year term because he had mistakenly sued at law rather than in equity

Summary of this case from Henderson v. Marquee Cinemas-Oh, Inc.

Opinion

No. 23126

Decided April 27, 1932.

Landlord and tenant — Defectively executed lease creates month to month tenancy, when — Section 8510, General Code — Tenant not liable for rent accruing after vacating premises, when — Action at law or for breach of contract not maintainable.

1. A defectively executed lease for a term of five years upon monthly rental creates a tenancy in the lessee from month to month; and where the tenant occupying under such lease vacates the premises at the end of a month, after fully prepaying the rentals then due, he is not liable to the lessor for the rental installments accruing after such vacation, in an action at law based upon such defectively executed lease. ( Richardson v. Bates, 8 Ohio St. 257, approved and followed.)

2. Where the plaintiff's petition is founded upon such defectively executed instrument, the fact that it contains a prayer asking that the unpaid rentals be awarded to him as damages for breach of contract does not change the character of the action.

ERROR to the Court of Appeals of Lucas county.

In the disposition of this case the Toledo Corporation, although an assignee of the lessor, will be referred to as the lessor, and Sidney H. Wineburgh, the plaintiff in error, will be referred to as the tenant lessee. The facts fall within a narrow compass, are without dispute, and are contained in the pleadings and answered interrogatories attached thereto. While there are two causes of action involving similar indentures the legal questions apply to each and are identical.

On July 12, 1923, the lessor leased to Wineburgh, the tenant lessee, a storeroom in Toledo for the term of five years, beginning November 1, 1924, and ending October 31, 1929, the rentals to be paid "in sixty equal monthly installments of five hundred dollars each on the first day of each and every month in advance." The lease was defectively executed. Although signed by the parties it had but one witness, and the acknowledgment was faulty as well. Under the lease the tenant took possession, paid rent in full at the rate of $500 monthly until September 1, 1928, when he vacated the premises. On July 27, 1928, the landlord had received notice from the tenant that he would vacate on or before August 31, 1928. The lessor, on October 8, 1929, sued the tenant and set forth in its petition the lease indenture; that the tenant had vacated the premises on September 1, 1928, against his landlord's consent, and had refused to pay the accruing installments of rent due monthly from October 1, 1928, to October 1, 1929, inclusive. The prayer of the petition was for damages because of breach of the lease agreement. These facts appearing, the defendant lessee moved for judgment on the pleadings. The motion was granted by the trial court and the petition dismissed. The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded.

This case is now in this court on error, certification thereof having been allowed.

Messrs. Fraser, Hiett, Wall Effler and Mr. Ross W. Shumaker, for plaintiff in error.

Messrs. Marshall, Melhorn, Marlar Martin, for defendant in error.


This is an action at law brought by a landlord against his tenant for the recovery of damages for breach of a lease indenture signed by the parties, the lease being for a term of five years, the rentals to be paid in monthly installments. It is conceded that the damages prayed for are the aggregate amount of unpaid rental installments called for by the terms of the indenture. Without the consent of the landlord the tenant, after fully paying all installments of rent then due, vacated the premises at the end of forty-six months and refused to pay future rentals. The lease indenture was defectively executed, being signed by but one witness. The acknowledgment was also defective.

Said lease being for a term of more than three years it became subject to the requirements of Section 8510, General Code, which provides that such leases must be signed by the lessor and acknowledged by the "lessor in the presence of two witnesses, who shall attest the signing and subscribe their names to the attestation." There was but one witness to this indenture. Such being the case, under the well-recognized rule heretofore adopted by this court, no recovery can be had in an action at law upon the defective instrument. In the case of Richardson v. Bates, 8 Ohio St. 257, the syllabus reads as follows: "The answer, setting up that the indenture was not attested nor acknowledged by the lessor, and therefore did not convey the term, and that the lessees were not indebted for any rent under the indenture, stated facts sufficient to constitute an equitable, and therefore a perfect, defense under the code."

Since that decision was made this court has held that an entry by a lessee under a lease, defectively executed, for a term of years, at an annual rental, creates a tenancy only from year to year; if at a monthly rental, the tenancy created is from month to month. Baltimore O. Rd. Co. v. West, 57 Ohio St. 161, 49 N.E. 344; Lithograph Building Co. v. Watt, 96 Ohio St. 74, 117 N.E. 25; Toussaint Shooting Club v. Schwartz, 84 Ohio St. 440, 95 N.E. 1158.

It is insisted by counsel for defendant in error that, although this be an action at law, it is not one for rentals, but for damages for breach of contract, and, as the prayer of the petition is for damages, an attempt is made to distinguish the case from Richardson v. Bates, supra. This argument is not tenable. The action is founded upon the defective indenture, and it is upon that indenture and its proof that the plaintiff must rely in order to recover. Furthermore the petition shows that, notwithstanding plaintiff prays for damages by reason of the breach of the agreement, the amount asked for is the exact amount of the accrued installments of rent payable under the void instrument. Calling the unpaid rentals "damages" does not change the character of the action, which clearly shows that whatever breach there was arose from the nonpayment of rentals.

In its opinion the Court of Appeals stated that, while recovery could not be had in an action at law upon the lease, since the defective lease had been signed by both of the parties, it might be regarded as a contract. The court said: "In other words, a written instrument in form a lease, signed by both the lessor and lessee, although invalid as a lease, is none the less a contract upon which a cause of action at law arises in favor of the lessor for a breach thereof by the lessee."

That statement of the law is not only not in accord with the former decisions of this court, but it tends to nullify the statutory requirements relating to the execution of such instruments; for if a recovery can be had upon defective as well as upon valid instruments properly executed, then there would be no necessity of obeying the mandate of the statute. Under the theory adopted by the Court of Appeals recovery could be had whether the statute was complied with or not, and Section 8510, General Code, would be wholly ineffective in accomplishing its purpose.

Whether reformation or other equitable remedy is available to the landlord under this or similar circumstances, it is not necessary to decide in this action, for that question is not here presented.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals will be reversed and that of the common pleas court affirmed.

Judgment reversed.

MARSHALL, C.J., MATTHIAS, DAY, ALLEN, KINKADE and STEPHENSON, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Wineburgh v. Toledo Corp.

Supreme Court of Ohio
Apr 27, 1932
125 Ohio St. 219 (Ohio 1932)

finding the stated term of a lease void for failure to comply with the requirements of a predecessor of section 5301.01 but finding against the landlord's attempts to collect on the implied year term because he had mistakenly sued at law rather than in equity

Summary of this case from Henderson v. Marquee Cinemas-Oh, Inc.

In Wineburgh, the Court rejected the proposition that a defectively executed lease could be regarded as a contract so as to allow a plaintiff to recover in an action at law.

Summary of this case from Akron Pregnancy Servs. v. Mayer Inv. Co.
Case details for

Wineburgh v. Toledo Corp.

Case Details

Full title:WINEBURGH v. TOLEDO CORPORATION

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Apr 27, 1932

Citations

125 Ohio St. 219 (Ohio 1932)
181 N.E. 20

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