Cissna Loan Co. v. Baron

270 P. 1022, 149 Wash. 386, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 694
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1928
DocketNo. 21163. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 270 P. 1022 (Cissna Loan Co. v. Baron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cissna Loan Co. v. Baron, 270 P. 1022, 149 Wash. 386, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 694 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Beals, J.

Cissna Loan Company, a corporation, plaintiff in this action, had, for many years prior to 1923, owned and operated “The Fair Department Store,” in the city of Bellingham, the corporation owning both the land and the building in which the business was conducted, as well as being proprietor of the department store itself. On May 24, 1923, plaintiff *387 sold its stock of goods as a going concern to defendant, who paid a considerable portion of the purchase price in cash, giving a chattel mortgage on the stock to secure the balance, which chattel mortgage has been fully satisfied and does not enter into the subject-matter of this litigation.

As part of the transaction, plaintiff leased the building in which the department store was conducted to defendant for a ten-year term. Among other provisions, the lease provided that defendant should

. . . maintain and conduct a department store in said building of the same general character as has been theretofore conducted therein by first party [plaintiff] and carry and maintain a stock of goods, wares and merchandise of the same general character as has been theretofore maintained by first party.”

The provision of the lease covering the matter of the rental to be paid to plaintiff reads as follows:

“On the 5th day of July, 1923, second party shall pay to first party as rental for the above described premises the amount of 2% per cent of the gross sales of the said department store business conducted and maintained by second party in said building up to July 1, 1923, and on the 5th day of each and every month thereafter, during the period of this lease, second party shall pay to first party as rental for the above described premises the amount of 2% per cent of the gross sales of said department store business conducted and maintained by second party in said building during the preceding calendar month. Provided, however, that if the aggregate gross sales, resulting from such business shall exceed the sum of $200,000 in any year of said term, an adjustment shall thereupon be made of said rental for such year and the said rental for such year shall be reduced to and be the sum of two per cent of the said gross sales for said year, and, Provided further, that the rental to be paid by second party for said premises shall not at any time be any less sum than the sum of Twenty-four *388 Hundred Dollars per annum, and an adjustment of said rent shall he made at the end of each and every year of the term of this lease.”

Immediately to the north of the building leased by plaintiff to defendant, is a building owned by one McArthur, the second floor of which building is approximately on a level with the balcony between the first and second floors of plaintiff’s building.

We deem the following to be the material facts giving rise to this litigation. Shortly after January 1, 1927, defendant rented the second floor of the McArthur building, caused openings to be cut in the wall between the two buildings so that persons could pass from the balcony of plaintiff’s building to the second floor of the McArthur building, and moved the ladies ready-to-wear and the millinery and corset departments of The Fair Department Store business into the McArthur building, and has ever since maintained those departments therein. The entrance to this portion of the department store business has at all times been through plaintiff’s building, all street displays of the merchandise for sale in the two departments referred to have been made in the show-windows of plaintiff’s building and all newspaper advertising by appellant refers to “The Fair Department Store.”

The parties to this action having disagreed over certain matters, plaintiff brought this action against defendant, seeking to recover judgment for rent of his building in an amount equal to two and one-half per cent on the gross sales made by the defendant of goods sold both within plaintiff’s own building and the McArthur building. Defendant answered denying any indebtedness to plaintiff other than in an amount equal to two and one-half per cent of the gross sales of goods sold within plaintiff’s building only; also alleging certain damages by way of counterclaim. The ac *389 tion was tried to a jury which, under a peremptory instruction from the court, found in plaintiff’s favor, upon the issue of the rent due, in an amount equal to two and one-half per cent of the gross sales of all goods sold both within plaintiff’s building and the McArthur building. The jury found in defendant’s favor upon the counterclaims, which findings are not attacked on this appeal. From a judgment entered by the court upon the verdict of the jury, defendant appeals.

Appellant assigns many errors, his principal contention being that the court erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to find in respondent’s favor for rent due respondent from appellant in a sum equal to two and one-half per cent of the gross sales of all merchandise sold by appellant, whether from respondent’s building or from the departments moved by appellant into the McArthur building.

The monthly rental to accrue to respondent is, according to the lease, to be computed at a percentage of the gross sales of the department store business conducted and maintained by appellant “in said building” during the preceding calendar month. Appellant contends that the lease is to be construed in favor of the lessee and against the lessor (Gates v. Hutchinson Investment Co., 88 Wash. 522, 153 Pac. 322; Salzer v. Manfredi, 114 Wash. 666, 195 Pac. 1046); and that, consequently, it must be held that respondent is not entitled to any percentage of the gross sales of merchandise sold in the McArthur building.

It appears that, during the month of April, 1927, the gross sales of merchandise from respondent’s building amounted to $4,572.83, and from the McArthur building to $2,928.70; for the month of May the sales from respondent’s building amounted to $5,335.25, and from the McArthur building to $2,856.80. It appears, *390 from these figures, that the two departments moved to the McArthur building were important departments and that the sales therefrom amounted to a considerable portion of the total sales made by the department store. "When appellant moved these departments into the McArthur building, appellant somewhat enlarged the space on the balcony, theretofore devoted to the business office of the store, a necessary part of the. business, but a department which did not engage in the selling of merchandise.

' i In our opinion the trial court was correct in giving the instruction of which the appellant complains. Respondent turned over to appellant a going business, a department store, including the two important departments now located in the McArthur building. Customers now obtain access to these departments by going through respondent’s building, using the stairs or elevator therein, the goods are displayed in respondent’s show windows and the entire business is administered and “conducted” within the demised premises.

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Bluebook (online)
270 P. 1022, 149 Wash. 386, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cissna-loan-co-v-baron-wash-1928.