Amick v. Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co.

453 P.2d 412, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 181
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1969
Docket951
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 453 P.2d 412 (Amick v. Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amick v. Metropolitan Mortgage & Securities Co., 453 P.2d 412, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 181 (Ala. 1969).

Opinion

DIMOND, Justice.

Appellee Metropolitan Mortgage and Securities Company, Inc., obtained a judgment against appellant in the amount of $22,667 representing unpaid rentals for premises leased from Metropolitan for the period June 1, 1965 through June 30, 1966. Appellant’s first point on this appeal is that the rent for the period involved had been suspended and abated by reason of Metropolitan’s failure to repair the leased premises which had been damaged by an earthquake on March 27, 1964.

Pertinent here is section 3.a. of the lease which provides:

It is mutually agreed by and between the lessor and the lessee that :
a. if during the term hereof the demised premises or any part thereof be rendered *414 untenantable by public authority, or by fire or the elements, or other casualty, a proportionate part of the rent herein reserved (whether paid in advance or otherwise) according to the extent of such untenantability, shall be abated and suspended until the premises are again made tenantable and restored to their former condition by the lessor; and if the premises or a substantial part thereof are thereby rendered untenantable and so remain for a period of 30 days, the lessee may at its option terminate this lease by written notice to the lessor. In connection with the foregoing it is agreed that lessee’s decision shall be controlling as to whether or not the premises are fit or unfit for occupancy by it * * *.

Regarding this section the trial judge said:

I conclude that covenant 3.a. does not operate to give the lessee an option to unilaterally void the lease or abate the rent by deciding without more that the premises are not fit for its occupancy. If the building or part of it became un-tenantable as a result of the earthquake, then lessee is entitled to an appropriate remedy provided for under covenant 3.a.

The issue here is whether the trial judge was correct in his interpretation of section 3.a. of the lease, or whether appellant’s decision that the premises were not fit for occupancy, i. e., were untenantable, was decisive of the question as to tenantability.

We agree with the trial judge that the lease provision in question did not give the lessee the right to abate the rent by deciding without more that the premises were unfit for occupancy. The premises must in fact be unfit for occupancy, or un-tenantable, before there could be an abatement of the rent. It would make little sense to allow the lessee to abate the rent if he simply chose to characterize the premises as untenantable when, in fact, they were not untenantable at all. The provision which makes the lessee’s decision controlling reasonably can only be construed as granting this right to the lessee where there is room for an honest difference of opinion between the lessor and the lessee as to whether the premises are fit for occupancy by the lessee. It is a question of fact as to whether such a difference of opinion may clearly exist.

Appellant relies on the testimony of witnesses produced by him to support his contention that the damage to the premises by the earthquake made them untenantable. One witness testified that his observation of displacement of the T-beams indicated structural damage. This witness had not inspected the building to determine its condition and did not know how the beams were fastened to the supporting walls. Another witness testified as to cracks and water marks on the walls. He knew nothing about the construction of the building and had never seen the plans. Appellant testified that it was obvious that the building was damaged by looking at it and that he believed the building to be untenantable from his own observations. He did not go into any detail as to the nature of the damage. Finally, another witness testified that he observed that the interior walls and partitions of the leased premises were separated, that some of the interior walls were out of line, and that in at least 10 or 12 places the plaster on the ceiling had fallen and loose plaster fell from time to time.

On the other hand a witness for Metropolitan, a civil engineer named Dickinson, had made a careful examination of the building. He testified that the T-beams were supported by pilasters which became chipped during the earthquake, but that they were structurally sound and the beams were not damaged; that the cracks in the wall were superficial in the masonry or the plaster and did not occur in the load-bearing walls; that there was nothing structurally wrong with the building; and that the most obvious damages, and the only ones where he recommended repairs need be made, were superficial cracks in the plaster or dry wall.

The judge found that Dickinson was a qualified and objective witness and gave his testimony full credit. He concluded that some of the testimony relating to damages offered by appellant was exaggerated. The *415 judge’s ultimate finding was that appellant had not established that the leased premises were untenantable after the earthquake. He was influenced in making this finding, not only by his judgment as to the credibility of witnesses, but also by reason of the fact that appellant’s predecessor in interest, the state of Alaska, had remained in the occupancy and possession of the premises from the time of the earthquake in March 1964 until June 1965-, a period of 14 months.

It is the trial judge’s function to judge of the credibility of the witnesses. 1 We may not reject the judge’s estimate of their credibility except in the unusual case where circumstances are such as to force us to the conclusion that the judge’s determination of credibility was clearly mistaken. 2 That is not the case here. We cannot find that the trial judge’s determination to give full credit to Metropolitan’s witness, Dickinson, and little credit to appellant’s witnesses was not justified. What this means is that the judge’s estimate as to credibility is binding — it means that as a matter of fact the testimony of Metropolitan’s witnesses as to the minor nature of the earthquake damage was worthy of belief, whereas that of appellant’s witnesses was not. This in turn means that as a matter of fact the damage was not so extensive as to make the premises unfit for occupancy, and that as a matter of fact there was not room for an honest difference of opinion between the lessor and the lessee as to whether the premises were untenantable. This being so, appellant as lessee did not have the right under section 3a. of the lease to make a controlling decision as to fitness for occupancy. The judge was correct in finding that the rent had not abated and was due and owing for the period involved.

The original owner of the leased premises was the M & J Investment Company which went into bankruptcy. Metropolitan purchased the property from the bankrupt estate, and the trustee in bankruptcy conveyed the property to Metropolitan by deed on October 30, 1965. Appellant contends that since the trustee in bankruptcy did not assign to Metropolitan any rents due the trustee or the M & J Investment Company, Metropolitan had no right to recover rent for the period prior to its purchase of the property, i. e., from June 1 to October 30, 1965.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 P.2d 412, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amick-v-metropolitan-mortgage-securities-co-alaska-1969.