Benjamin v. Northwestern Fire & Marine Insurance

137 N.W. 183, 119 Minn. 27, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 421
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 19, 1912
DocketNos. 17,630, 17,631—(192, 193)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 183 (Benjamin v. Northwestern Fire & Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Northwestern Fire & Marine Insurance, 137 N.W. 183, 119 Minn. 27, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 421 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Brown, J.

Levi M. Stewart in his lifetime owned certain real property in the city of Minneapolis, and in the year 1892 sold the building situated thereon to James H. Bishop and others, and at the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, executed to them a ground lease-of the land for the term of one hundred years. The contract provided for a yearly rental of $1,000 for the first five years, payable quarterly in advance, and imposed also upon the lessees the obligation of paying-all taxes and assessments against the property. It further provided that at the end of the first five-year period, and at or near the end of each succeeding five-year period, there should be a readjustment of the rent to be paid, in the manner and upon the basis therein mentioned. A subsequent readjustment was had, as so provided for, and at the time the controversy in this action arose the successors of the lessees-were paying rent at the rate of $800 per year. The lease was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Hennepin county on June 16, 1892. In March, 1906, the lessees, Bishop and others, assigned and transferred the lease, and all their rights and interests therein, to the Northwestern Fire & Marine Insurance Company, a corporation, defendant herein, and that company thereby assumed all obligations imposed by the contract upon their assignors. Since that transfer the insurance company has remained and still is in possession of the property, paying, as heretofore stated, rent at the rate of $800 per year, quarterly, and the lease is in full force and effect.

Thereafter, and in April, 1910, Stewart executed and delivered to-plaintiff, Dora Y. Benjamin, a second lease of the same premises for the term of one thousand years, at the annual rental of $900 per year, payable quarterly in advance. The lease was substantially like the former lease to Bishop, except that a readjustment of the rent to be paid was required to be made at intervals of ten years, which, as in the other lease, was to be based upon the valuation of the land exclu[29]*29sive of' buildings. By the terms of the prior lease, when the parties fathed to agree upon terms of readjustment, the rent was fixed upon the basis of six per cent of the valuation of the property, determined in the manner therein provided. In the second lease the basis of the rent was five and one-half per cent of such valuation. •So that in the course of a short time the second lessee would have the benefit of the difference. The second lease was expressly made subject to the prior lease, and provided for the payment of the stipulated rent of $900 per year in quarterly instalments, and also the payment of all taxes and assessments against the land. It was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds. At the time this lease was executed, Stewart delivered to.plaintiff a written document in and by which be directed all tenants then in possession of the premises under the prior lease to pay to plaintiff, Mrs. Benjamin, all rent and taxes accruing after March 7, 1910.

Stewart died on May 3, 1910, leaving a last will and testament by which.he disposed of all bis property. David D. Stewart and Charles Morse were duly commissioned executors of the will, and on April 18, 1911, under license of the probate court, sold and conveyed the property covered by the leases to John and Samuel Friedman. This conveyance by its terms was expressly made subject to all rights under the existing leases, which were, together with all rights thereby conferred upon the lessor, Stewart, assigned as part of the transaction of sale, to the Friedmans. The deed and lease assignments were duly recorded. Thereafter the Friedmans entered into an executory contract for a sale of part of the premises to one Samdal, for the expressed consideration of $303,000, which Samdal subsequently assigned to defendants George G. and Herman L. Benz. This contract was thereafter, on March 8, 1911, fully performed by the conveyance of the property to the Benzes; the executory contract and the deed of conveyance being expressly made subject to the existing leases, which were both assigned to them. The rent under the second lease fell due •on the first days of March, June, September, and January, and fell due on the prior lease on the eighth days of these months.

After the death of Stewart, which occurred about six weeks after the execution of the second lease, Mrs. Benjamin regularly paid to [30]*30the executors the rent due under the second lease, namely, $225 per quarter. Some doubt arose on the part of the officers of the insurance-company, tenant under the first lease, respecting the rights of Mrs. Benjamin, and they insisted upon paying the rent to the executors. The executors received it when due, on the eighth of the month, but immediately paid it over to Mrs. Benjamin. So that Mrs. Benjamin paid the rent due under her lease on the first of the month, and the-executors returned to her on the eighth the amount paid by the insurance company. After the conveyance of the property to the Benzes, a further question arose as to the rights of Mrs. Benjamin, they insisting that she had no present estate or interest under her lease, and they demanded payment of the rent under the first lease direct to* them. Mrs. Benjamin also demanded this rent, offering to pay to Benz, as she had theretofore paid to the executors, the rent called for by her lease. In view of these conflicting demands, the insurance-company declined to pay it to either, and these actions were brought to recover the same, and to determine the respective rights and liabilities of the parties.

The action wherein Mrs. Benjamin is plaintiff involves the rent due March 8, 1911, and the action wherein George G. and Herman L. Benz are plaintiffs, and Mrs. Benjamin is defendant, involves the* rent due June 8, 1911. The same questions are presented in each case. The trial court, upon the facts stated, held that Mrs. Benjamin had a present vested interest in the property, a right to collect the-rent due from the insurance company, and judgment was awarded in her favor accordingly. A motion for a new trial in each action was made and denied, and the Benzes appealed.

1. The contention of appellant, aside from the errors urged in support of the motion for a new trial, is that the lease to Mrs. Benjamin vested in her no present estate or interest in the property, that she-acquired at most rights to accrue in the future, and is not entitled to the rent due under the prior lease. This is founded upon the general rule that, where the owner of real property grants to one person the right of possession for a term of years and subsequently leases, the property to another, to commence at the expiration of the first grant, no reversion or other present right passes to the second lessee, [31]*31except the right of possession in the future, leaving the lessor in control of the property, with the right to collect and receive the rents, issues, and profits accruing therefrom. The situation thus created is-termed an interesse termini. 1 Taylor, Landlord & Tenant (9th Ed.) 72. Whether the rule applies to the case-at bar is the principal question before us.

The question is solved, it would seem, by an answer to the further question whether the parties intended the second lease to go into effect, presently, or that the operation thereof should be postponed until the expiration of the term of the first lease, then having eighty-two years-to run.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 183, 119 Minn. 27, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-northwestern-fire-marine-insurance-minn-1912.