Cook v. Jones

28 S.W. 960, 96 Ky. 283, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 960 (Cook v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Jones, 28 S.W. 960, 96 Ky. 283, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 130 (Ky. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered tiie opinion on the court.

Samuel II. Jones and Ms son, Samuel EL, Jr., were the owners of a lot of ground in Louisville, situated in the square bounded by Third, Chestnut, Fourth and Walnut streets, its frontage on Fourth being about one hundred and ninety feet, and extending back some two hundred and fifty feet; the frontage on Walnut was about thirty-three feet, with a depth of one hundred and eighty feet.

Prior to the rental contract, out of which this controversy grows, the premises fronting on Fourth street were occupied by a number of tenants, who had built, their own improvements, under an arrangement by which they'paid a ground rent to their landlord, based on the value of the lot occupied by them. The precise-terms of their rental contracts are not shown here, and we do not know upon what conditions, if any, the tenants might remove their improvements in the event their leases were terminated.

We find the .premises occupied by those who had erected valuable improvements thereon, under an arrangement, as we assume, which demanded some consideration and protection at the hands of the landlord,, [287]*287as a provision for their benefit was inserted in the lease we are about to consider. These prior leases were about to expire, and on May 5, 1881, the Jones’ leased the entire premises to the Louisville Coffin Company for a term of ten years from and after January 1, 1883, with the privilege of renewal for a term of five years, upon the same conditions, at the option of the company.

The business needs of the company, as we suppose, not requiring the whole of the property, it secured the right to sublet any part of it, but the following stipulations were inserted in behalf of the Fourth street tenants : ‘ ‘ And whereas, a portion of said ground, fronting on Fourth street, is occupied by divers persons; therefore, in order to protect their interests, said second parties (the Coffin Company) covenant to sublet to said persons, for a term not exceeding the’ term of ' this lease, the lots respectively occupied by them; and in estimaiing the rent to be charged to. and paid by said subtenants to said second parties, the ground occupied by them shall be appraised as. aforesaid, and as of the depth of two hundred and fifty feet, or to the east boundary of the ground hereby leased; and said subtenants shall pay three-fourths of six per cent, per annum of the value of the lots appraised as aforesaid, and upon the same terms and conditions as are reserved and made in this lease.”

On the first of January, 1883, the Coffin Company, in pursuance of its covenant, did lease to Charles Gfodshaw, one of the Fourth street tenants, the premises occupied by him “for and during the term of [288]*288ten years from and after January 1, A. D., 1883, with option to the said Charles G-odshaw to renew said lease for a term of five years, as specified in said lease to said Louisville Coffin Company, on the same terms and conditions as are specified in said lease to said Louisville Coffin Company aforesaid for subtenants.”

On February 7, 1883, Oodshaw, in consideration of the sum of thirteen hundred dollars, sold his house and all other improvements and appurtenances thereunto belonging, situated on the lot in question, to the appellant Cook, who took possession of the premises, and thereafter paid the ground rent to the company.

In 1884, the appellee, Sam. H. Jones, Jr., theretofore a minor, became of age and ratified the lease to the Coffin Company. His father died before this litigation began, and the son became the sole owner.

In 1888, the Coffin Company sold out its improvements on the property to the Hegan Mantel Company, known in the record also as Hegan Bros. The appellee joined in this contract, which was a transfer, not only of the improvements, but of the remainder of the Coffin Company’s unexpired leasehold, together with the privilege of renewal for five years as set out in the lease of 1881.” All the tenants on the premises, including the Hegan Mantel Company, prior to January 1, 1895, the termination of the original lease, applied to Pope, agent of Jones, as well as to the Louisville Coffin Company, for a renewal of their leases for five years.

On December 12, 1892, the Coffin Company wrote to [289]*289Jones: “We notify you that we will not exercise our option to renew the same for a further period of five years, except the Hegan Bros, lease, concerning which there is a special obligation in case they desire a continuance.”

On January 23, 1893, no contract of renewal having-been executed, the appellee sought to oust the appellant by a writ of forcible detainer.

A judgment of restitution was obtained from a magistrate’s court, which Cook traversed, and on a trial before a special judge of the Jefferson Circuit Court, a jury being waived, judgment was rendered for Cook, but a new trial was subsequently granted by the regular judge, and on a trial thereafter had before a jury, the court peremptorily instructed a finding for the appellee. Prom that judgment on that finding Cook appeals.

The rights of other Fourth street tenants appear to be dependent on the determination of this appeal, and the following map will explain their respective holdings :

[290]*290For the appellee it is contended that the Louisville Coffin Company alone had the right to exercise-the option to renew or extend the lease, and it having declined to exercise it, the appellee was entitled to-the possession of the premises; that even if, as contended by the appellant, Pope, as agent for Jones, had given assurances to the tenants that their leases would be renewed, yet he, Pope, had no authority to make an agreement to renew, and, in fact, made no such agreement or gave such assurances; that the* Coffin Company alone had the right to remove improvements, and was to do that the last year of the; lease, and all proof or showing as to the improvements' erected and owned by these tenants was irrelevant to-the issue, and properly excluded from consideration by the lower court; that under the lease there was but one right of renewal, and that was a right to-renew for the entire property, and not for a fragment of it. “By no species of ingenious jugglery,”' say counsel, “can it be worked ont that any subtenant had the right to renew lor his own fragment of land only, and no subtenant has ever sought to* renew for anything else but his own fragment.”

These contentions of counsel appear plausible, it seems to us, only upon a very strict and technical construction of the lease of the Coffin Company. It may be true that as the lessee might not elect to renew for a part of the premises, its assignees could not do so. But when the Coffin Company sold and transferred its entire interest in the premises to others, as was contemplated it might do under the lease, and which it might do without an express contract, its [291]*291right to exercise the option of renewal also passed by the sale and transfer, and it would seem strange if the assignees — representing the entire right of the Coffin Company — might not do what their assignor might do.

The rights of the landlord could be in nowise affected by the exercise of the option to renew, on the part of the assignees of the company, any more than if the option were exercised by the company itself.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 960, 96 Ky. 283, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-jones-kyctapp-1894.