DocketNumber: No. 1696
Citation Numbers: 28 App. D.C. 391, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 5255
Judges: Iviccomas
Filed Date: 12/4/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The appellant claims that the court below eri:ed in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant, and in directing a verdict for the plaintiff, and also in directing the jury to find the sum of $129.50 as intervening rent. There was no proof of title in MeFarlane or his wife or in a third person, nor of payment of rent by McFarlane after the payment of two months’ rent to Bond. The default of McFarlane in performing his undertaking under the lease, and the repeated failure to pay the remainder of the sum-, which might have secured a conveyance of the premises by Bond to McFarlane, and the defendant’s own proof that in June, 1905, the attorneys of both parties requested Bond to convey the premises to Kirby, — indicated that there was no conditional purchase by appellant, and that both parties to the lease so agreed. This situation disposes of most of appellant’s contentions, though it is true that neither the deed to Bond nor the deed to Kirby were introduced to show legal title in either. In this proceeding, however, the lease was in evidence, as was also the assignment thereof to the appellee. The right of entry and of suit for possession of the demised premises had accrued to the appellee as assignee of the lease, and, as we have said, the failure on the part of the appellant to pay, and his consent by his attorney that Bond should convey not to him, but to the appellee, make it unnecessary that we proceed to •consider whether, if the appellant had performed, the conveyance to Bond, not offered in evidence in this suit nor directly' involved, was a mortgage, and not a deed. In this proceeding , the assignee of the lessor pursued his remedy against a tenant