School District No. 43 v. Veach

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

The sole question presented for our consideration is the alleged error of the court in not directing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff because, as it contends, the undisputed testimony shows that the defendants purchased the property in controversy with full knowledge of the possession of the tract by the plaintiff, and that the defendants were not innocent purchasers. There was testimony tending to show that prior to 1892 there was a schoolhouse on the realty in dispute which was moved off and a new one built projecting from adjoining land about 10 feet upon the premises here involved. This was used for school purposes until some time in November, 1911, when the district, having built a new schoolhouse about 40 rods distant, took out of the old structure all the furniture of any value, installed it in the new building, and left the former unoccupied until the autumn of 1913. During this time most of the windows were broken by boys throwing stones through them, and tbe walks leading to it were torn up. On December 28, 1912, tbe defendants bought from their immediate grantor tbe land including tbe plat in question and paid $1,500 in cash. Before buying they caused tbe record of conveyances to be examined and an abstract made which failed to disclose any title in tbe plaintiff or any connection with tbe title on its part. It is conceded, as stated above, that tbe lease was never recorded. Tbe testimony tends to show that it was not until about two months after tbe de*365fendants purchased that they were informed of the existence of the lease in question. They took possession of the land soon after they bought, and fenced it to the exclusion of the plaintiff. Other testimony tends to show that, after the old building had remained idle more than a year, the plaintiff established in it a cooking school as part of its curriculum.

The contention of the plaintiff is that, under all these circumstances thus narrated, the defendants were put upon inquiry which would have disclosed the lease mentioned, and that hence'the court should have directed a verdict for the plaintiff. Conceding as a ■postulate that the lease was established and that the plaintiff had previously used the ground on which to erect a schoolhouse, we may well say that there is evidence of facts which would put the defendants upon inquiry when about to purchase the land: Stannis v. Nicholson, 2 Or. 335; Bohlman v. Coffin, 4 Or. 314; Musgrove v. Bonser, 5 Or. 317 (20 Am. Rep. 737); Exon v. Dancke, 24 Or. 113 (32 Pac. 1045); Cooper v. Thomason, 30 Or. 173 (45 Pac. 296); Ambrose v. Huntington, 34 Or. 490 (56 Pac. 513); Randall v. Lingwall, 43 Or. 383 (73 Pac. 1). This, however, is not all the case. The ultimate question to be determined is the title to the property. All the inquiry could have disclosed was the existence of the lease in question. Whether that document was still in force was not to be determined by its mere execution. Remembering that it was to operate only so long as the premises described therein “may be used for a site on which to build a district schoolhouse,” we find that there was evidence which was sufficient to go to the jury on the question of the surrender of the premises. It is not disputed that the plaintiff had built a new schoolhouse some distance from the tract *366described in the complaint. The jury was authorized from the testimony already mentioned to believe that the use of the property as a schoolhouse site had been discontinued by the plaintiff, and it was without controversy that the defendants as successors in interest of the lessor in the fee had taken possession of the locus in quo. Without commenting on the weight of the testimony, which is beyond our province, we can only say that whether the lease was terminated by a surrender resulting by operation of law from the acts of the parties is a question of fact to be determined by the jury: Brewer v. National Union Building Assn., 166 Ill. 221 (46 N. E. 752); White v. Walker, 31 Ill. 422; Kneeland v. Schmidt, 78 Wis. 345 (47 N. W. 438, 11 L. R. A. 498). Under such conditions, it was incumbent upon the Circuit Court to submit the question to the jury accompanied by proper instructions. We presume the court’s directions to the jury were sound because the plaintiff has pointed out no error in them. Further than this, we cannot set aside the verdict because we are not able affirmatively to say there is no evidence to support it.

In brief, all that an inquiry under any condition of the case would have disclosed was the existence of the lease. Whether the tenancy under it still ■ continued depended upon the equivocal situation disclosed by the ■testimony, calling for a solution by the verdict of the jury. The court was not authorized to say as a matter of law that the plaintiff’s estate was still in effect or had been surrendered.

Finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.

Aeeirmed. Rehearing Denied.

Mr. Chief Justice McBride, Mr. Justice Moore and Mr. Justice Ramsey concur.