Block v. Bell Furniture Co.

162 A. 414, 111 N.J. Eq. 551, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 767
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 162 A. 414 (Block v. Bell Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Block v. Bell Furniture Co., 162 A. 414, 111 N.J. Eq. 551, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 767 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The matter comes before us on an appeal by Hoffman Realty Company, a corporation, from an order of the court of chancery entered on the opinion of Yice-Chaneellor Church affirming a disallowance by Harry G. Hendricks, then receiver of the Bell Eurniture Company, of certain parts of appellant’s claim.

Bell Eurniture Company, a New Jersey corporation, in a friendly proceeding instituted in chancery by its president under section 65 of the General Corporation act, as amended by chapter 300 (P. L. 191& p. 535), was found to be conducting business at a great loss and prejudicially to its creditors and stockholders and, on May 22d, 1931, the receiver was appointed. The defendant corporation was the occupant of premises at 161-163 Springfield Avenue, Newark, which it held as the assignee of a long term lease made between its assignor, The Donald Company, as tenant and the appellant, owner, as landlord. The receiver, after his appointment, continued possession until July 2d, 1931, when he elected not to take over the leasehold and abandoned the premises.

On July 22d, 1931, the landlord, by a writing dated a day earlier and served on the defendant company and its receiver, demanded the restoration of the premises to substantially the same condition as they were in at the commencement of the term and gave notice that the landlord had elected to re-enter *553 as agent of the tenant, would apply any rent received to the payments due under the lease and would hold the obligated parties, including the receiver to the extent of the assets in his possession, liable for any deficiency.

The first item of appellant’s claim is: “Rent for the month of July, amounting to $1,458.33, of which sum two-thirty-firsts thereof, or $94.08, is owing by said receiver as part of his cost of administration.” Paragraph 1 of the lease, as modified, called for a rental payment in monthly installments of $1,458.33 on the first day of each month in advance until May 1st, 1945. The item was disallowed in tolo but the receiver concedes that $94.08 is a fair charge for the use and occupation had by him on July 1st and July 2d. The last mentioned sum is therefore out of the controversy. Whatever might have been said on the liability of the receiver to pay the balance of the month’s rent as an administration expense, for the reason that he was in occupation on the first day of the month when the rent, according to the lease, became due, is beside the point because (1) the claim is not so grounded and (2) the landlord itself, exercising an election under the lease, re-entered the premises as agent of the tenant before the month was ended and relieved the receiver of whatever possession or right of possession he might otherwise have been chargeable with. The tenant on whose behalf the appellant, as agent, re-entered was the defendant company, not the receiver who, in electing not to take over the leasehold and in abandoning the premises, was within his authority. Stockton v. Mechanics and Laborers Savings Bank, 33 N. J. Eq. 163; Clark on Receivers 442. The rent for the month of July thus falls in the same category with other future rents under the lease. Por the reasons hereinafter stated the claim, except to the extent .of $94.08, was properly rejected.

The second item is the sum of $1,447.14, excess 1931 taxes under paragraph 2 (b) of the lease. Paragraph 2 provided that in addition to the rental payments of $1,458.33 per month, and as part of the total rent to be paid by the tenant, the tenant agreed to pay (a) water rents, (b) taxes in excess *554 of a fixed amount and (e) the cost of plate glass insurance. Paragraph 2 (b) reads as follows:

“2. In addition to the foregoing rental and as part of the total rent to be paid by the tenant, the tenant agrees to pay: * * * (b) The amount of all taxes which may annually during the term of this lease be assessed against the demised premises in excess of the taxes for the year 1923 (which taxes amount to the sum of $3,102, and which shall be borne by the landlord), and also the amount of all municipal assessments which may be levied against the demised premises, said additional payments to be made on the first day of the month succeeding the date of the -issue of bills for said taxes and assessments respectively.”

After an intervening clause (c) setting forth the details of the payment of the plate glass insurance was subdivision (d) as follows:

“(d) On failure of the tenant to make payments when due for water rents, or plate glass insurance, or excess taxes and municipal assessments, as hereinbefore provided, the landlord may pay the same for and on behalf of the tenant, and the amount of each payment shall be regarded as so much additional rent due and owing to the landlord by the tenant on the first day of the month succeeding such payment, and the landlord may have all such remedies against the tenant, and the tenant’s goods, because of its failure to pay the same, as is now, or may hereafter be provided by law for the landlord in other cases of non-payment of the monthly rentals hereinbefore mentioned.”

The tax bill for 1931 taxes was issued by the municipality during the month of April, 1931, and under the cited paragraph the tenant was obligated to pay the amount claimed on May 1st, 1931, as part of the total rent. The receiver allowed one-half of the item and disallowed the remainder. It is contended by the receiver and by other claimants of the fund that this disposition was correct, upon the theory that 2 (b) and 2 (d) must be read together; that the obligation was upon the tenant to pay only if and when the landlord itself paid the tax; that there is no proof that the landlord paid the second half of the year’s tax and that consequently no liability as to that portion fastened on the tenant. We do not so construe the contract. Paragraph (b), considered by *555 itself, is a complete and mandatory obligation upon the tenant to pay, as a part of its rental obligation, the full excess in the annual tax on the first day of the month succeeding the date of the issue of the tax bill. Paragraph (d) recognizes and emphasizes that obligation and is specifically grounded on the fact that an omission in this respect is a failure by the tenant in its contract. The latter paragraph begins thus: “On failure of the tenant to make payments when due * * *.” There would be no failure if the tenant were not under a duty, and the only duty that can be read in these words is the duty to pay the excess tax on the day when the tenant had obligated itself to pay. The excess tax payment in its entire amount was due from the tenant, under the facts of the case, on May first. Due to whom? Those who seek affirmance of the decree below say that if due, it was due only to the city under paragraph (b) and that it did not become due to the landlord until the latter acted under paragraph (d). This distinction, we think, is specious. The contract concerning payment of the tax, to whomever payable, was for the benefit of the landlord, one of the contracting parties, and not at all for the benefit of the city. The municipality is not concerned with inter-party arrangements between successive owners, or between landlord and tenant, or otherwise, as to who shall pay a tax.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A. 414, 111 N.J. Eq. 551, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-bell-furniture-co-nj-1932.