Judges: Dwight
Filed Date: 10/20/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The action was commenced by the plaintiff’s testatrix in her lifetime for the rent of a house, and her executor has since been substituted as plaintiff therein. The complaint alleges a contract of lease, and occupation under it for a period of seven and a half months, whereby the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $60, of which no part had been paid except the sum of $1, and the justice gave judgment for the balance of $59. The answer contained a general denial, and the further defense, among others, that the defendant rented the house from the husband of the plaintiff, who was a part owner with her of the property; and payment of the rent to him. The plaintiff demurred to the last-mentioned defense, and that demurrer was sustained by the justice. This ruling was, at least technically, erroneous, because the practice in justice’s court permits of no demurrer to an answer except to a counterclaim. Code Civil Proc. § 2935, subd. 4. The evidence showed that the defendant applied to the plaintiff for the use of the house for a week or two, and desired to know how much she would ask for it by the month for a longer time. The plaintiff told her that she might have it for the short time mentioned for one dollar, and proposed to charge her eight dollars per month for it if she wanted it for the winter. The defendant agreed to pay her the one dollar for the week or two, but declined to rent it for a longer period at the price named. The defendant went into the house under the agreement made with the plaintiff, and paid her the one dollar agreed upon, but she remained in the occupation of the house for the period mentioned in the complaint. On the trial she offered evidence to show that after the expiration of the week or two she rented the house for the remainder of the time from the husband of the plaintiff, and joint owner of the property, and paid him therefor. This evidence was excluded by the justice, and it must have been chiefly on the ground of this ruling that the judgment was reversed in the county court. We think the ruling was error for which, the judgment was properly reversed. Of course, 'if there had been an agreement between the parties for the renting of the property for the longer period mentioned, and the defendant had gone into occupation under that agreement, she would not have been at liberty during such occupation to dis