This action was brought by defendant in error against plaintiff in error, as the surviving partner of the firm of Gray & Allen, upon a parol lease for one year — to recover a balance of rent, agreed to be paid monthly, for a certain property in the city of Omaha. It appears that Gray & Allen had previously occupied the premises under an unexpired lease to other parties. It is substantially alleged in the petition that the lease to. Gray & Allen was made by parol, under which they occupied the premises for some time, and that they then abandoned the same and refused to pay the rent agreed to be paid; that the rent for the month of April was paid by them, and that about the first of June suit was brought against them, before a justice of the peace, to recover the rent for the month of May, and judgment thereon was, on or about the eleventh day of August, rendered for that month’s rent. It is further alleged that, at the *440request of Gray & Allen, the defendant, during the unexpired term of the lease, received from other parties, for the use of the premises, a certain amount of rent on account of the plaintiff in error. The plaintiff in error pleaded specific denials to the allegations of the petition, and averred that Gray & Allen were notified by defendant- to vacate the premises, and that they did so on the fifth day of May, 1874. The new matter set up in the answer is denied by the reply. Upon the issues raised by these pleadings the cause was tried", and the j ury by their verdict found them in favor of defendant in error, who was plaintiff in the court below.
The first proposition urged upon the court in the argument for the plaintiff is, that the defendant having prosecuted an action to recover the rent for the month of May, and having obtained a judgment for that month’s rent, such judgment is a bar to this action, and therefore the court erred in admitting any testimony under the defendant’s petition^ and in rendering judgment upon the verdict.
I think, upon a careful examination- of the authorities cited in support of this proposition, it will be discovered that the general doctrine enunciated by them is to the effect, that when the contract, in all its essential parts, is in substance an entirety, a judgment recovered for a breach of any part of such contract will operate as a bar to any future action thereon.
In Bendernagle v. Cocks, 19 Wend., 207, it is said: “ In respect to separate and independent contracts the books agree that separate actions, whether the proper form be covenant, assumpsit, or debt, may be brought at the pleasure of the party, subject only to the power of the court to direct them to be consolidated in proper cases. Phillips v. Berick, 16 John., 136. Badger v. Titcomb, 15 Pick., 409. Rex v. The Sheriff of Hertfordshire, 1 Barn. & Adolp., 572. With respect to in*441stallments of money due at successive days under the same contract, a difference is taken, that if the action be debt it must be brought for the whole. Rudder v. Pierce, 1 H. Bl., 550. But if it be covenant or assumpsit, the action may be for each successive installment as it falls due. Cook v. Whorwood, 2 Saund., 337. 15 Pick., 409. And so without doubt as to any other breaches of several covenants or p romises contained in the same contract, provided the action be brought before the subsequent breaches are committed. The cases all agree that, where the demand is entire, a recovery for part, bars a suit for the whole.”
In the case at bar, the monthly rents to be paid are divisible, and for each successive month’s rent", as it falls due, an action of assumpsit would lie, and so will an action under our system of code procedure. If the owner of property shall lease the same for one year, or a term of years, for a certain monthly rent to be paid for the use and occupancy of the same, would it be morally right and honest or just, upon any principle of legal science, for a court by its sie rolo to establish the doctrine that upon failure of the tenant to pay the rent monthly according to the contract, the landlord cannot by any legal proceeding collect such rent as it falls due without forfeiting that for the remainder of the term by a plea in bar of a former recovery? We cannot give our assent to the establishment of such a rule in the administration of the law. But how can the proposition contended for be maintained under the pleadings in this case? The answer contains specific denials of the allegations of the petition; and although some new matter is set .up, yet it contains no averment of a former recovery as a bar to this action. No such issue is raised by the pleadings, and we think it is quite clear that a party cannot avail himself of the benefits of a plea in bar by exceptions to testimony, or by motion subsequent *442to the trial. In A. & N. R. R. Co. v. Washburn, 5 Neb., 124, it is said the “ statute is intended to require each party to make a plain, concise, and distinct statement of the facts he intends to prove in order to maintain his cause of action or his defense to the action, and thereby inform the adverse party of the precise grounds upon which he intends to rely, * * * and in this regard it is restrictive in its operation in the admission of evidence.” Therefore, “ every defense to an action, whether partial or entire, must be set up in the answer.”
The second proposition urged in the argument for the plaintiff is, that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, “that it is not denied, but stands admitted, that Bonner would have given seventy-five or eighty dollars a month for said building; you therefore must deduct the amount which Bonner was willing to pay, from any claim the plaintiff (defendant in error), might have against Allen. There is no proof that using the building for a meat market would have injured it in anywise;” and in giving the following: “It was the duty of the plaintiff (defendant in error) to let the building after it was vacated by Gray & Allen to as good advantage and in as profitable a way as would be done by an ordinarily careful and prudent man, but she was not obliged to let to tenants whose business was of such a character as would be of permanent injury to the property in a greater degree than ordinary business.” The instruction asked is based on testimony substantially as follows: James Bonner testified that in a conversation with the “ governor ” he offered him seventy-five or eighty dollars rent for the premises, but the “ governor” said the property belonged to Mrs. Saunders, and he did not like to have a market in it; and on cross-examination he says the “governor” objected to his going in to keep a meat market in it.
Was this offer to pay so much rent monthly, qtiar*443terly, or for one year? The record does not show. Alvin Saunders testified that he told Bonner that he thought it would damage the building to have it rented for a butcher shop. Now it appears from the testimony that Alvin Saunders objected to the premises in question being used for a meat market on the ground that it would damage the building. And though the evidence may be very slight, still it should be submitted to the consideration of the jury, for it is not the province of the court to draw inferences from the evidence, however slight it may be, or determine what it does or does not prove. Therefore, we think the instruction asked was properly refused. But, it may be inquired, en passant, how does this testimony affect the rights of the defendant? Who is the “ governor ” to whom James Bonner made the offer? He may be Alvin Saunders, and Alvin Saunders may be the husband of the defendant, and may have been her agent in charge of the property; but the record does not state any such fact, and it is not the province of the court to put such facts into the record by presumption.
/The charge given by the court to the jury, we think correctly states the law of the case, and had direct application to the evidence; but if viewed merely as an abstract proposition of law without any evidence to which it may apply, it could not prejudice any rights of the plaintiff in error, nor in any way mislead the jury, and therefore furnishes no ground for the reversal of the judgment. In Caw v. The People, 3 Neb., 369, it is said that “ many cases are to be found wherein it is held that even an erroneous instruction, on a point entirely outside of the case, as made by the evidence, furnishes no ground for the reversal of a judgment otherwise correct.” 1 Ohio State, 66.
The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.