From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Doyle v. Mullaney

Supreme Court of Montana
Jan 20, 1931
295 P. 760 (Mont. 1931)

Opinion

No. 6,676.

Submitted December 16, 1930.

Decided January 20, 1931.

Landlord and Tenant — Unlawful Detainer — Husband and Wife as Defendants — Presumption of Tenancy — Payment of Rent by Husband for Wife — How Presumption Overcome — Evidence — Insufficiency. Unlawful Detainer — Landlord and Tenant — Parties to Action — Husband and Wife. 1. The unlawful detainer statute has application only to cases where the parties sustain the relation of landlord and tenant, and if the action is sought to be maintained against the lessee (a single woman at the time the lease was executed) and her husband jointly, plaintiff must show that the latter was also a tenant. Same — Landlord and Tenant — Presumption of Tenancy — When Presumption of No Avail. 2. While a presumption of a tenancy arises where entry and occupancy are with the permission of the owner, the presumption is of no avail where the lease was made with one other than the one sought to be held as tenant, in the absence of proof that he was holding as subtenant or agreed to pay the rent. Same — Landlord and Tenant — Presumption of Tenancy Arising from Payment of Rent — How Overcome. 3. The presumption of the relationship of landlord and tenant arising from the payment of rent may be overcome by a showing that the rent was so paid either by mistake or on account of another. Same — Landlord and Tenant — Payment of Rent by Husband of Lessee Wife — Insufficiency of Evidence to Show That Husband was Tenant. 4. Under the above rules, held in an action in unlawful detainer, that where a lease of residence property was made with a woman before her marriage, the bare fact that the husband sometimes thereafter paid the rent for his wife was insufficient to establish the relationship of landlord and tenant between plaintiff and the husband, made a co-defendant in the action. Same — Service of Notice to Quit on One of Two Alleged Tenants — Sufficiency as to Both — Instruction Held Inapplicable Under Evidence. 5. Where an unlawful detainer action was brought against husband and wife (the contract of lease having been made with the latter before her marriage) on the theory that both were tenants of plaintiff, an instruction that service of notice to quit upon one of two tenants, addressed to both, was sufficient to bind both, was erroneous as inapplicable where there was no evidence that the husband was a tenant of plaintiff. Same — Husband and Wife as Defendants — Evidence Held Insufficient to Show Service of Notice on Wife or to Show Husband to have Been Tenant — Verdict for Plaintiff Improper. 6. Where the evidence in an unlawful detainer action against the lessee (wife) and her husband, who became such after execution of the lease, as to service of notice to quit upon the former was of such a character as not to warrant a finding that she was served with such notice, and insufficielnt to show that the latter was plaintiff's tenant, the verdict against them was not supported by the evidence, and an order granting them a new trial was proper.

Appeal from District Court, Silver Bow County; Jeremiah J. Lynch, Judge.

Mr. E.D. Elderkin, for Appellant, submitted a brief and argued the cause orally. Mr. J. Frank Sullivan, for Respondents, submitted a brief and argued the cause orally.


Plaintiff, on July 31, 1929, commenced three separate actions in unlawful detainer in the justice court of Silver Bow township. For the sake of convenience we shall refer to them as the first, second and third actions.

The first action was to recover possession of a certain house situated at 20 West Silver Street in Butte, together with past due rent in the sum of $220 and $25 damages, which amounts were asked to be trebled. The complaint in that action alleged that plaintiff leased the property by written instrument to defendant Ethel Warwick Mullaney, who was then Ethel Warwick; that the lease was made on June 7, 1926, for a period of two years, at a monthly rental of $20, payable monthly in advance; that since the making of the lease Ethel Warwick was married to defendant M.J. Mullaney; that M.J. Mullaney went into possession of the property and "by mutual agreement and consent became a tenant of said plaintiff"; that defendants are holding possession jointly as plaintiff's tenants; that the sum of $220 was due as rent when the action was commenced; that on July 25, 1929, demand in writing was made by plaintiff upon defendants "by serving a written notice on M.J. Mullaney" for payment, or that they surrender possession within three days, neither of which demands was complied with.

The second action was for restitution of a house situated at 22 West Silver Street, for $225 past-due rent and $25 damages, which were sought to be trebled. The complaint in this action was identical with that in the first action, except that the lease was oral and for "the term of one month," was made on April 8, 1923, at a monthly rental of $15, payable monthly in advance.

The complaint in the third action was identical with that in the second, except that it involved a house at 24 West Silver Street, with a monthly rental of $30, under oral lease made May 1, 1923, with a balance due when the action was commenced of $390.

The cases were appealed to the district court of Silver Bow county and were ordered consolidated and tried together. They were tried to the court sitting with a jury, Honorable Frank L. Riley, Judge presiding. The jury found for plaintiff and against defendants, resulting in judgment in her favor for treble the amount of rent demanded, and for possession of the property. The defendants moved to set aside the verdict and for a new trial. Affidavit of disqualification was filed against Judge Riley, and the causes were transferred to department No. 2, presided over by Honorable Wm. E. Carroll, who, deeming himself disqualified, transferred the same to department No. 3, presided over by Honorable Jeremiah J. Lynch, who heard and granted the motion. This appeal is from the order granting a new trial.

The motion was based upon several grounds, among which were insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, that the verdict is against law, and errors in law occurring at the trial.

The evidence, so far as deemed necessary to relate it, shows that plaintiff leased the property as alleged to defendant Ethel Warwick Mullaney; that the rent alleged to be due under each lease was still owing and unpaid; that separate written notice relating to each lease was served upon M.J. Mullaney on July 25, 1929. The notices, except for the description of the property, the amount of rent due, and the time of its accrual, were identical. That served in the first action was as follows:

"Notice to Quit.

"To Ethel Warwick Mullaney, Mickey Mullaney, Tenants in Possession.

"You are hereby required to pay the rent of the premises hereinafter described and of which you now hold possession, amounting to the sum of Two Hundred Twenty Dollars, from the 7th day of Sept., 1928, to the 7th day of August, 1929, or deliver up possession of the same, or any rent due and unpaid from you, or we shall institute legal proceedings against you to recover possession of said premises with treble rent. Said premises are situate in the City of Butte, Montana, and described as follows; to wit: That certain four-room frame dwelling, Butte, Montana, and known by the street number as 20 West Silver Street, Butte, Montana.

"Dated Butte, Montana, July 26, 1929.

"[Signed] SOPHIE DOYLE, Owner."

Our statute providing for unlawful detainer actions has to do [1] with cases only where the relation of landlord and tenant exists ( Centennial Brewing Co. v. Rouleau, 49 Mont. 490, 143 P. 969), and, to maintain an action against the spouse of the lessee, plaintiff must show that the spouse was also a tenant ( Sandlin v. Anders, 205 Ala. 453, 88 So. 560).

The only evidence tending to support plaintiff's claim that the relation of landlord and tenant existed between plaintiff and defendant M.J. Mullaney is the testimony of plaintiff to the effect that M.J. Mullaney married Ethel Warwick Mullaney, went into possession of the property, and sometimes paid the rent to plaintiff. At the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence defendants moved for a judgment of nonsuit for failure of proof, which was denied. Defendant M.J. Mullaney testified that he married defendant Ethel Warwick Mullaney on June 17, 1926, and that whenever he paid the rent he did so for his wife. He denied that he ever occupied any of the property. Defendants renewed their motion at the close of all of the evidence, and it was again denied. We think the motion should have been sustained as to defendant M.J. Mullaney. The evidence is insufficient to establish the relationship of landlord and tenant between plaintiff and defendant M.J. Mullaney.

While "a presumption of a tenancy arises where an entry and [2, 3] occupancy is with the permission of the owner" ( Hamilton v. Crane, 62 Mont. 319, 205 P. 205, 206), yet this presumption is of no avail here as against M.J. Mullaney, where the proof shows that the leases were made to Ethel Warwick Mullaney, and where there is no proof that he is holding as a subtenant of his wife, or that he agreed to pay the rent. His occupancy stands on no different footing than would that of any other relative of Mrs. Mullaney living with her. The leases having been made to her, she is, in contemplation of law, the one in the occupancy of the premises, in the absence of any proof showing the assumption by her husband of the obligation to pay rent. The fact that he did pay the rent is, of course, a circumstance indicating that the relation of landlord and tenant existed, but "the presumption of the relationship of landlord and tenant arising from the payment of rent by an occupant may be overcome by showing that the payment was by mistake or by other circumstances proving it not to have been in recognition of the relation." (35 C.J. 959.) Here, the only proof showing the circumstances under which the rent was paid by Mr. Mullaney is his testimony that he did so for his wife. The payor of rent is not a tenant when it is shown that the rent was paid on account of another. (Tiffany on Landlord Tenant, sec. 18, p. 169.) The judgment against defendant M.J. Mullaney cannot stand.

The complaints, as above noted, proceed upon the theory that [4-6] both defendants were tenants of plaintiff, and that service of notice to quit upon one was sufficient to bind both. This was also the theory upon which the case was tried. Over objection of defendants, the court gave to the jury instruction No. 18, which was as follows: "That service in the manner required by law, as explained to you in these instructions, upon one of two tenants of a notice such as is described in the foregoing instruction, addressed to both, is sufficient to bind both, though both are in occupation of the premises." The objection was upon the ground that there was no evidence to which the instruction was applicable.

The court also instructed the jury, without objection, that, if they should find that M.J. Mullaney was not a tenant of plaintiff, their verdict should be in favor of both defendants. The court in giving this instruction evidently was of the view that there was no substantial evidence tending to show the service of notice upon defendant Ethel Warwick Mullaney.

We think the court erred in giving instruction No. 18, since there was no evidence showing that both defendants were tenants of plaintiff.

We may say, in passing, that we have not overlooked the evidence of plaintiff tending to show that notice was given to defendant Ethel Warwick Mullaney, within the rule announced in Earl Orchard Co. v. Fava, 138 Cal. 76, 70 P. 1073. But this evidence was denied by her. The verdict of the jury against her cannot be said to rest upon a finding that she was served with notice, but it is apparent from the instructions given and the theory upon which the case was tried that the verdict of the jury against both defendants was based upon the finding, unsupported by evidence, that M.J. Mullaney was a tenant of plaintiff. There being no evidence of this fact, the court properly set aside the verdict as against both defendants.

There is a serious question whether the complaints are sufficient to show that defendants' possession prior to the three days' notice was without plaintiff's permission so as to bring the case within section 9889, Revised Codes 1921, as held in Boucher v. St. George, 88 Mont. 162, 293 P. 315; but since the specific question has not been raised, and since the question may be eliminated upon another trial, we shall not discuss it.

The order granting the motion for new trial was proper and is affirmed.

ASSOCIATE JUSTICES FORD and MATTHEWS concur.


With the exception of the last paragraph, I agree with what is said in the foregoing opinion. The complaints are sufficient. (See Cowdery's Justice Treatise, sec. 1660; Bancroft's Code Practice and Remedies, pp. 4255, 4256.) Three days' notice was sufficient. In my opinion, Boucher v. St. George, supra, is based upon a misconception of our statutes, and is fundamentally unsound.


I concur with the views of Mr. Chief Justice CALLAWAY as above expressed.


Summaries of

Doyle v. Mullaney

Supreme Court of Montana
Jan 20, 1931
295 P. 760 (Mont. 1931)
Case details for

Doyle v. Mullaney

Case Details

Full title:DOYLE, APPELLANT, v. MULLANEY ET AL., RESPONDENTS

Court:Supreme Court of Montana

Date published: Jan 20, 1931

Citations

295 P. 760 (Mont. 1931)
295 P. 760

Citing Cases

State ex Rel. State High. v. Demarco

Grant v. White, supra, 42 Mo. at 290; Solomon v. Rogers, 210 Ala. 423, 98 So. 370, 371 [2, 3]; Auto Parts,…

Kransky v. Hensleigh

[1] Whenever the unlawful detainer statutes, sections 93-9701, R.C.M. 1947, et seq., are brought into…