Aaker v. Smith

196 P.2d 150, 87 Cal. App. 2d 36, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1290
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 2, 1948
DocketCiv. 13628
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 196 P.2d 150 (Aaker v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaker v. Smith, 196 P.2d 150, 87 Cal. App. 2d 36, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1290 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

The defendants, three partners operating a cocktail lounge in Albany, California, known as the “Palm Gardens,” appeal from a judgment awarding plaintiff $4,500 in damages for the breach by defendants of an oral annual year to year lease for certain restaurant premises and facilities located in the cocktail lounge. Defendants also notice an appeal from the order denying their motion for a new trial. That order is nonappealable, and the purported appeal therefrom should be dismissed.

The four basic contentions of appellants are (1) that respondent was in occupation of the premises only as a tenant by sufferance, and that such tenancy was properly terminated by a 30-day notice to vacate; (2) that if there was an oral annual year to year lease such agreement violated the statute of frauds; (3) that the findings that the appellants had committed acts amounting to a constructive eviction in violation of the terms of a one-year lease are totally unsupported, and (4) that in any event the entire transaction was illegal, being in violation of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act. (Stats. 1935, p. 1123, as amended; 2 Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 3796.)

The complaint alleged that “since the first day of September 1941, and during all the times herein mentioned up to November 27th 1945, the plaintiff herein was the lessee from defendants under a verbal annual one year lease from September 1,1941” of the restaurant premises involved; that defendants conducted an “on sale retail liquor business in the operation of a cocktail liquor lounge or bar” in the remainder of the same premises; “that plaintiff entered into the operation of said restaurant business on said premises on September 1, 1941 with the understanding and agreement with said defendants that there would be no rental charge to plaintiff in the conduct of said restaurant business therein by plaintiff in view of and for the reason that under the rules, regulations and laws of the State of California governing, controlling and having jurisdiction to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquor it was and is a necessary requirement that food be provided *39 for sale on premises where liquor is furnished and sold for consumption on the premises”; that for the first 12 months plaintiff operated the restaurant at a loss, but that she built the business until, for the past two years, she had been operating at a monthly profit of $500; that on October 10, 1945, defendants served her with a notice to quit the premises, which notice is attached to the complaint as an exhibit; that plaintiff refused to quit, and told defendants that “she would insist upon her rights under said verbal annual lease which did not expire until September 1, 1946.” The complaint then alleged, in substance, a constructive eviction. It sets forth a whole series of alleged acts and representations by defendants, which plaintiff alleges compelled her to abandon the premises on November 27, 1945. It was then alleged that her business was thereby lost for the nine remaining months of her alleged verbal lease—i. e., until September 1, 1946—at the profit rate of $500 per month. Her prayer was for $4,500 in damages, which amount, as above indicated, was awarded her.

The court’s findings followed, substantially, the allegations of the complaint. The conclusions of law are to the effect “that the plaintiff had a valid existing verbal lease upon the premises herein referred to, which did not expire until September 1, 1946”; that “the plaintiff was wrongfully evicted from said premises by the defendants through acts and conduct on the part of defendants designed by them to produce the wrongful eviction of plaintiff”; that by reason of the wrongful acts of defendants, plaintiff lost nine months’ profits, or a total of $4,500.

The findings to the effect that plaintiff had an oral lease which would not have expired until September l; 1946, are amply supported by substantial evidence. It appears that in August, 1941, the defendants Smith and Rose operated the cocktail lounge in question. Defendant Matheson did not become a partner until April of 1945. Prior to August, 1941, the two defendant partners had had various persons operating the restaurant located on the premises, but, apparently, none of these operators could make the restaurant into a profitable business. During the last week in August, 1941, the last operator walked out, and the restaurant was not functioning. Under these circumstances, plaintiff was approached by defendant Smith as a prospective operator of the restaurant. She testified that she had a conversation with Smith; that Smith suggested that she take over the operation of the *40 restaurant, which functioned in conjunction with the bar operated by defendants; that Smith told her that the restaurant part of the business had not been very good but that he could “work up a nice business if he could get someone in there”; that she asked Smith if she could have a written lease, but he replied that she could not because restaurants had to be run from the bar under the law; that “We talked then and agreed to have a verbal lease from year to year; that if the business picked up, the business would be good for me and good for him, and that we would if we went on—business would be better for us both”; that it was agreed at that time that she was to pay no rent other than 75 cents per day to pay the cost of operating the electric refrigerator; that this arrangement continued until August, 1944; that she was then told by their common bookkeeper that she was to pay $50 per month for the utilities and her portion of the sales tax; that she paid $50 per month for these purposes until she was evicted. She also testified that, under the above arrangement, she commenced operating the restaurant on September 2, 1941; that for about a year she operated at a loss, but that she gradually built the business up so that by 1945 she was averaging a profit of over $500 a month, making $6,076 profit in that year; that she operated the restaurant until November 27, 1945; that she was served with a notice to quit on October 10,1945; that she began having trouble with defendants about the last week of October; that there was a marked decline in business after she received the notice; that thereafter the “attitude” of the defendants toward her “appreciably changed. ’ ’

In discussing the nature of her tenancy, in addition to her testimony summarized above, the plaintiff stated that, subsequent to August, 1941, she talked to Smith about the continuation of her tenancy, and “Johnny told me I could be there as long as I wanted. He told me that a number of times, as long as I was happy there.”

Plaintiff’s witness, Cora W. Holling, testified that she had worked for plaintiff in the restaurant as a waitress; that sometime between January and June of 1942 she was present at a conversation between plaintiff and Smith; that plaintiff expressed to Smith doubts about continuing to operate the restaurant because of lack of business; that Smith urged plaintiff to continue on and “told her that if she stayed there he knew she would work up a good business and that she could stay *41 there as long as she liked from year to year, that she would find that business would get better as she stayed there.”

Smith admitted having a conversation with plaintiff in August, 1941, but claimed that the arrangement then made was that plaintiff could leave the project at any time.

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Bluebook (online)
196 P.2d 150, 87 Cal. App. 2d 36, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaker-v-smith-calctapp-1948.