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ARK.] LEERY V. FULLERTON. 371 LEERY V. FULLERTON. Opinion delivered October 31, 1921. 1. LANDLORD AND TENANT-FORFEITURE OF LEASE.-A lessor may dis-affirm a lease contract and regain possession of the land if the lessee, either in words or by equivalent acts, has repudiated or abandoned the contract, even though the lease does not provide for a forfeiture upon failure to comply with its terms.
372 LEEILY V. FULLERTON. [1.50 2. LANDLORD AND TENANTFORFEITURE OF LEASE.—Where a contract of lease provided that the lessee should prepare and execute a certain lease and he failed and refused to execute it, the lessor was entitled to treat the contract as abandoned and bring unlawful detainer for the land. 3. TRIALAMBIGUOUS INSTRUCTIONGENERAL OBJECTION.—A general objection is insufficient to call attention to an ambiguity in an instruction. 4. APPEAL AND ERRORINVITED ERROR.—One cannot complain of an erroneous instruction given at his adversary's request when he requested an instruction containing the same error. 5. TRIALINSTRUCTIONNECESSITY OF REQUEST.—Appellant cannot complain of the trial court's failure to give a certain instruction, in the absence of any request therefor. Appeal from White Circuit Court; J. M. Jackson, Judge; affirmed. Brundidge . & Neelly, for appellant. Where the contract contains no provision for forfeiture of the lease, the tenancy cannot be terminated by breach of covenant by the lessee. 134 Ark. 21; 135 Ark. 536. There being no provision for forfeiture, appellant's peremptory instruction should have been given. 100 Ark. 567. Instruction No. 1 was erroneous in that it left out of consideration whether or not there was a proviso in the contract for forfeiture in the event the same was breached by defendant, and the further fact of whether or not appellant was prevented from planting all the 'berries called for by the agreement, on account of weather conditions. John, E. Miller and C. E. Yingling, for appellee. This suit was not based on appellant's failure to comply with a written contract, but his failure to comply with an oral agreement. His was a tenancy at sufferance. 24 Cyc. p. 1401. Appellant did not plead any special contract or circumstances to defeat appollee's right of possession, nor was be nicpiroci to assurn-: the harden of proof in this
ARK.] LEEHY V. FULLERTON. 373 respect, and he should not now be heard to complain that the jury decided these issues against him. 36 Ark. 518. Appellant repudiated the contract by ) refusing to plant the required amount of berries, and the appellee therefore had the right to rescind. 41 Ark. 532; 22 Ark. 258; 97 Ark. 541 ; 24 Cyc p. 1417. Appellant in failing to plant the required crop thereby refused to pay rent. This, with his refusal to quit possession, was ground for an action of unlawful de-tainer. 57 Ark. 301 ; 97 Ark. 541. Appellant's peremptory instruction was properly refused. Instruction No. 1 was properly given, it stating the law of the case as found in 36 Ark. 518 and 41 Ark. 532. HUMPHREYS, J. Appellee instituted suit against appellant in the White Circuit Court to recover the possession of forty acres of land, alleged to be unlawfully -detained by appellant, on account of his failure and refusal to enter into a written lease in accordance with an oral agreement entered into between said parties. Appellant filed an answer denying that he failed and refused to enter into a written lease for the land in accordance with the oral agreement, but alleged that on the contrary be had reduced the agreement to writing, and that it bad not been executed because appellee refused to sign it ; that, pursuant to the oral understanding, he had entered into possession of the premises and carried out all the terms of the Jease until interrupted by a demand tor possession of the premises and the institution of this suit by appellee. The cause was submitted upon the pleadings, evidence and instructions of, the court, which resulted in a finding and judgment in favor of appellee for the possession of the land. It was agreed between the parties that a written lease should be executed to the effect that appellant should plant as much as he could of a certain block of x acres in strawberries in the spring of 1920, should
274 LEEHY V. VULLEkTON. [150 cultivate four acres of strawberries already growing on the land, and should cultivate the balance of the land in corn; that appellee should receive one-fourth of the proceeds derived from the berries and one-third of the corn for the use of the land. Appellant took possession of the land and planted about an acre and a half of berries in the spring of 1920 and workea out the four acre tract, when appellee demanded possession of the lands and instituted this suit. The evidence is conflicting as to whose duty it was to prepare the written lease. Appellant prepared a written lease and left it at the McRae State Bank fel.- appellee to sign. The lease provided for the balance of the berries to be planted in the spring of 1921, and ap-pellee refused to read or sign it because it provided that the strawberries shovld be planted in the spring of 1921 instead of 1920. The evidence is also in conflict as to whether appellee planted all the strawberries . he could have planted in the spring of 1920 under the prevailing weather conditions. When the evidence was concluded, appellant requested a peremptory instruction, on the ground that the right of eviction did not exist in favor of the lessor in the absence of a clause in the contract providing for a forfeiture upon failure to comply with the terms of the lease, and it is now insisted that the court committed reversible error in refusing to give appellant's peremptory recpy .,st. This contention is not sound, for it is well settled that a lessor may disaffirm a lease contract and regain possession of the land if the lessee, either in words or by equivalent acts, had repudiated or abandoned the contract. Buckner v. Warren, 41 Ark. 532. The doctrine announced in the case cited was approved in the later ' case of Lindsey v. Bloodworth, 97 Ark. 541. In the latter case the court toOk occasion to say: "The other allegations of the complaint show that the appellant had violated the obligations of his contract with appellee in such manner as to evince an intention on his (appellant's) part not to pay the rents
ARK.] LEERY V. FULLERTON. 375 as stipulated for, and, in fact, to abandon the contract. The complaint is crude, but, taken as 'a whole, it certainly states facts to show that appellant had wholly abandoned the contract which created the tenancy, and that his holding thereafter was unlawful." The evidence in the instant case, as stated above, was in conflict as to whether appellant abandoned his contract by failing and refusing to prepare and execute a lease requiring him to plant. as many strawberries as he could in the spring of 1920 on a certain six-acre block in the forty-acre tract. If he did so fail.and refuse, it amounted to a repudiation of his contract, and an action in Unlawful detainer would lie. For this reason it was proper to refuse appellant's peremptory request. - Appellant insists that the court erred in giving ap-pellee's instruction No. 1, which is as follows: "You are instructed that if you find from the testimony in this case that the defendant failed' or refused to comply with the terms of the contract for the lease of the lands mentioned in this action through no fault of the plaintiff or her agent, then the plaintiff had the right 'to rescind shid contract and to treat the same as at an end, and your verdict will be for the plaintiff." The insistence is :that the instruction authorized a rescission of the contract' for a mere breach thereof. The instruction is ambiguouS in that it is doubtful whether it was intended to relate to the failure and refusal of appellant to execute a written contract or a fail- - ure and refusal to plant as many strawberries as he could on the six-acre block of ground in the forty-acre tract. The attention of the court was not called to this ambiguity existing in the instruction by specific objection. The objection interposed to it was general. But, even if inherently wrong, appellant waived the error by requesting an instruction upon the same issue. The court gave appellant's request No. 2, which contained a proviso submitting the identical issue to the jury.
376 [150 The provision is as follows : "Provided, you find that the defendant complied with the terms of the contract for the lease of the land." Appellant's last insistence for reversal is that an error was committed by the court in failing to tell the jury that a suit in unlawful detainer would not lie for a partial breach. It is true that a lessor cannot evict a lessee from the leased premises unless the lessee has repudiated the contract by word or act, but appellant never raised this question below. No request was made by appellant submitting the issue of the , effect of a partial breach to the jury. The case was tried and submitted upon the issues of whether appellant had failed and refused to execute a written contract in accordance with the parol agreement, and whether he failed to plant all the strawberries he could in the spring of 1920 on the six-acre 'block in the forty-acre tract. No error Appearing, the judgment is affirmed.
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