Mrs. R. S. Robinson, the appellee, brought this suit against the appellants, J. O. and G. W. King, to recover an alleged balance due her by them for the rent of a certain storehouse in Alexander City for the year commencing on September 1, 1908, and ending on September 1, 1909. The evidence discloses that Mrs. Robinson is the mother of Elbert Robinson, Avho Avas a merchant, and was, at one time, an occupant of said store as his mother’s tenant by the year. .He paid, as rent, $15 per month at the end of each month, but he Avas a tenant not by the month but by the year. Elbert Robinson sold his stock of merchandise to J. O. King, one of the appellants, a few years before the commencement of this suit, and J. O. King continued the business in said store not as a monthly but as a yearly tenant. On this subject J. O. King testified that he “never did have any contract with plaintiff! or with J. A. Robinson [the plaintiff’s husband and agent in the management of the property] as her agent for the rent of this store building. I just bought out Elbert Robinson and went into the possession of the stock of goods bought of him, together with the house, and paid the rent by the month each year, taking Elbert Robinson’s contract for the storehouse and lot from September to September.” It appears that some time in the summer of 1908 — probably in August — the said J. O. King associated his brother, G. W. King (the other appellant here), with him in the business, and
It appears from the undisputed evidence that from September 1, 1908, to January 1, 1909, the appellants remained in the undisturbed possession of said store and paid the monthly rent therefor just as had been done during the preceding years. It further appears that some time in December, 1908, appellants bought a stock of merchandise from one Moon, and that when this was done they immediately moved their stock of goods from appellee’s store into the Moon store and continued the business in the Moon store from that time on. On the subject of what occurred when the goods were removed from appellee’s store, appellee’s husband, who Avas her agent authorized to attend to the matter, testified that the first thing he “knew that they were not going to occupy the house Avas when they bought out the A. L. Moon stock about the latter part of December, 1908, and commenced to move the goods out of the house that I had rented them, into the building formerly occupied by A. L. Moon. J. O. King told me, when I asked him Avhat it meant, that they had bought the A. L. Moon stock of hardware, and Avas moving into the store formerly occupied by A. L. Moon, and that they would not need the house I rented them any longer.” The evidence further shoAvs, without conflict, that the appellants, when they left the store, locked it
As J. O. King, one of the appellants, had, for several years, been a yearly tenant of appellee, and as the partnership of J. O. & G-. W. King simply succeeded to the business of J. O. King and the business of the partnership Avas continued after September 1, 1908, in the store of appellee, under the law appellee had a right to treat the continued occupancy by the partnership of her store as a tenancy for another year, and such was the situation betAveen the parties unless there was an agreement to the contrary. — Rhodes Furniture Co. v. Weeden & Dent, 108 Ala. 252, 19 South. 318.
If the above was the real situation of the parties, then the appellee is entitled to her rent for the entire year. Confessedly appellee treated the term as for a year and did nothing to cause appellants to abandon the premises before the expiration of the year. — Rhodes Furniture Co. v. Weeden & Dent, 108 Ala. 252, 19 South. 318.
It appears from the evidence, without dispute, that in the latter part of August or the first part of September, 1908, after the above partnership had been formed by the appellants, the appellants and the appellee, through her husband, had a talk about the rental of the store for the next year, and there was evidence tending to shoAV that it Avas agreed betAveen them that the rent to be paid should be $17.50 per month instead of $16 per month as formerly; but on this latter subject there
When it is remembered that tbe appellee’s husband and appellants in tbe above conversation were discussing tbe question as to whether tbe appellants would retain tbe bouse, not for a month, or a limited period, but for a year, and that tbe appellants remained in tbe bouse, not by virtue of an agreement on tbe part of appellee’s husband that be would let them have tbe Rush room, but that be thought be could do so, and that he would try to do so, it is evident that appellants, when they held over, under such circumstances, after September 1st, were bound to retain tbe store and pay tbe rent for another year at appellee’s election. — Wolffe v. Wolff & Bro., 69 Ala. 549, 44 Am. Rep. 526. If appellee bad agreed that, if appellants would keep tbe store, she toould let them have tbe Rush room, instead of that she thought she could do so, an entirely different conclusion could be reasonably drawn from tbe evidence. When appellee’s husband said to appellánts: “Stay on in tbe bouse that you are in and I will try to get you tbe Rush room. I do not think be will continue in business very long. I think I can get you bis room” — tbe period under discussion was a year, and as tbe appellee did nothing to mislead appellants and made no contract with appellants that she would deliver to them tbe
There was no offer on the part of appellants — and none is claimed — to surrender possession on September 1st. There is no evidence tending to show that they would have done so, or that they intended to do so. “In all such cases, where there is a holding over by the tenant, the right of the landlord to insist upon the continuance of the tenancy is in no wise affected by the fact that the tenant refuses to renew the lease and gives notice that he expects to vacate the premises within a few days. Though he may expressly refuse to promise, the law raises such obligation on his part by necessary implication, if the landlord elects to still regard him as a tenant.” — Wolffe v. Wolff & Bro., supra. The plain truth about this matter is — and no other reasonable conclusion can be drawn from the evidence — that the appellants did not deliver and did not intend to deliver to appellee the possession of the store on the 1st of September. They probably thought that, unless they expressly bound themselves to keep it for a year, they could abandon it at pleasure; but the law fastened upon their acts in keeping the store a rental for a term of one year, and there is no evidence from which a reasonable conclusion can be drawn that appellee said or did anything estopping her from claiming the rights which the law, on account of such holding over, conferred upon her. — Wolffe v. Wolff & Bro., supra.
We agree with counsel for the appellants that the court had no authority to direct the jury as to the character of the verdict which they should render in this case. A verdict is not a verdict until it is affirmed by the jury in open court. “Where the jury reaches an agreement after the judge has left or adjourned the
Of course, if the parties to this cause had elected to treat the delivery by the jury to the sheriff of their verdict as the final action of the jury, and the verdict, without a reimpaneling of the jury, had been received by the court and entered in the minutes of the court as the verdict of the jury, no one would, after this had been done, have been heard to complain. When, however, upon the reassembling of the court, the jury again took their seats in the jury box, and the sheriff handed back to the jury the papers in the case, in the presence of the court and of the parties to the cause, and the jury, in open court, formally announced the result of their deliberations, the formalities of law in regard to the reception of verdicts were in all things properly observed. When, hoAvever, a jury returns into court with a verdict, that verdict does not become in fact a verdict until it is received by the court. Until the court receives it the case remains with the jury.
In the case of Reg v. Meany, 1 Leigh & C. 213, 9 Cox C. C. 231, Pollock, J., said: “A judge has a right, and in some cases it is his bounden duty, whether in a civil or a criminal cause, to tell the jury to reconsider their verdict. He is not bound to receive their verdict unless they insist upon his doing so.”' — Proffatt on Jury Trial, § 458.
While, in England, judges possess much greater powers over juries than in Alabama, nevertheless, in Ala
In the present case, the court declined to receive the first verdict of the jury and had them to retire and reconsider their verdict. The appellants were present and made no objection and reserved no exception to this action of the court. The court directed the jury, when they retired, in substance, to reverse their findings on the facts and to bring in a verdict for the appellee instead of for the appellants. Any question as to the propriety of the action of the trial court in this regard is not before us, as the appellants made no objection to this action of the conrt. As the verdict of the jury only became a legal verdict when it was accepted by the court, there was no verdict in this case until the jury returned into court with the verdict which was accepted by the court and entered on its minutes. As the appellants, by seasonable objections and exceptions, failed to reserve for our consideration, in the manner provided by law, any question as to the action of the trial court in relation to this matter, we have no authority to review its action in that regard.- — Cardwell v. State, 1 Ala. App. 1, 56 South. 12.
For the reasons above announced, we are of the opinion that the judgment of the conrt below must be affirmed.
Affirmed.