Dallas Opera House Ass'n v. Dallas Enterprises, Inc.

288 S.W. 656
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1926
DocketNo. 7030.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 656 (Dallas Opera House Ass'n v. Dallas Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallas Opera House Ass'n v. Dallas Enterprises, Inc., 288 S.W. 656 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

The parties will be designated appellant and appellee. Both parties to the suit are private corporations. The appeal involves a proper interpretation of particularly paragraph 8 of a lease contract between appellant and appellee, which reads:

“(8) Said lessee shall, in case of fire, give immediate notice to the lessor, who, out of the proceeds of the insurance provided or paid for as aforesaid by the lessee, shall cause the damage to be repaired forthwith, provided the lessor shall deem such proceeds sufficient for such repair. If the lessor shall deem such proceeds insufficient for such repair, the lessor shall notify the lessee in writing to that effect, and thereupon the lessee shall have the right within fifteen days from the receipt of such notice, but not thereafter, to deliver to the lessor a contract in writing whereby the lessee shall undertake to repair such damage properly, and to complete the same free from lien, liability, or expense of any kind to the lessor, and to indemnify the lessor against any lien, liability, or expense, for the proceeds of such insurance which shall be paid to lessee, provided, however, the lessee shall at the same time or within five days thereafter, and not afterwards, furnish to the lessor bond,, or other security, satisfactory to the lessor, for the complete fulfillment of said contract; otherwise, this lease shall terminate. The rent shall not abate, in whole or in part, in case of fire, unless and until the lease is terminated as aforesaid.”

The subject-matter of the suit is $20,000 of United States Liberty bonds and accrued in-’ terest thereon. The bonds were deposited, under a written escrow agreement executed simultaneously with the lease contract, with Dallas Trust & Savings Bank, depositary, to secure the performance of the lease agreement, and provided for the return of the bonds to appellee, in the event of a breach of the lease contract by appellant, and that, in the event of a breach of the contract by appellee, the bonds and interest were to become the property of appellant.

Appellee pleaded both the lease and the escrow contracts, and alleged the occurrence of a fire on December 27, 1921, completely destroying the building on the leased property; that appellee notified appellant of the fire on *658 the following day, but that appellant, in violation of its obligation under the lease contract and particularly paragraph 8 above quoted, failed and refused to repair the damage caused by the fire, and failed and refused to decide whether it deemed the insurance proceeds sufficient or insufficient for repairing the building, and refused to give appellee an oppQrtunity to elect to repair the building, using the proceeds of the insurance for said purpose; and that, by reason of these facts, appellant breached the lease contract on February 1, 1922, thereby entitling .appellee to the bonds and the interest coupons due thereon.

Appellant denied that it had violated the lease contract. It asserted, on the contrary, that appellee had breached the contract by failure to pay the rent due February 1, 1922, and by renouncing custody of the building and repudiating the lease, and by defacing the building and removing and appropriating numerous parts thereof after the fire, and by cross-action sought to recover the bonds and interest thereon because of such breach of the contract by appellee.

The Dallas Trust & Savings Bank, depositary of the bonds, answered as a party defendant that it held the bonds and coupons in its possession, and would abide the judgment of the court.

The trial court interpreted the lease contract, and especially the paragraph quoted to require of appellant that whenever it knew, or had sufficient information from which to know, either that the proceeds of insurance would be sufficient to repair, or to know that the proceeds of insurance would be insufficient to repair the damage by fire, it was obligated to elect within a reasonable time whether it should repair the building, or notify appellee that it deemed the proceeds insufficient and permit appellee to repair the building, using the proceeds of the insurance for such purpose. After having so interpreted the contract, the court concluded that the following was the only issue of fact to be submitted to the jury:

“Was February 1, 1922, a reasonable time for the Dallas Opera House Association to elect whether or not it would repair the damage to its building located on Main and St. Paul streets, said damage occurring by fire on December 27, 1921?”

The jury answered the issue, “Yes.” Upon the jury’s verdict judgment was rendered for appellee against appellant and the Dallas Trust & Savings Bank for title and possession of the bonds and accrued interest thereon, and against appellant on its cross-action.

We háve reached the conclusion that the trial court correctly construed or interpreted the contract, and that the evidence supports the jury’s finding of fact, and therefore affirm the judgment.

The testimony on the material issue is undisputed. The lease contract covered what was once known as the Dallas Opera House, and more recently known as the Capitol Theatre. It began June, 1, 1921, and was for a term of five years, ending May 31, 1926, and provided for monthly rent of $2,250, or an aggregate rent during the five years of $135,000, besides taxes and premium on as much as $50,000 of fire insurance, which ap-pellee was also to pay. The building was insured for $77,500 at the time of the fire. For the purposes of the lease it was completely destroyed by fire December 26-27, 1921. The day following the fire appellee notified appellant of it, and discussed with appellant’s president the matter of rebuilding the house, and was informed that appellant’s board of directors would meet about January 10, 1922, and that after said meeting it would definitely inform appellee as to “what they were going to do.” On December 30, 1922, appellee wrote appellant, a letter, setting out in substance the provisions of paragraph 8 of the contract above quoted, and, further, that:

“The Capitol Theatre was badly damaged by fire Monday night, December 26. You stated to the writer this morning substantially that, while you were inclined to think that the Dallas Opera House Association would elect to repair the damage, its decision in the matter would not be reached until about January 10th. Dallas Enterprises, Inc., is under a very heavy daily expense -because of the fire and the interruption of its business in the Capitol The-atre, and must therefore insist upon its right under the lease contract to have the Dallas Opera House Association decide immediately and without any further delay whether it will proceed forthwith to repair the damage to the building.
“An immediate reply to this letter is requested and will be very much appreciated.”

On December 31, 1921, appellant replied to this letter of appellee, and stated:

“Dallas Opera House Association has employed contractors to estimate and report immediately the amount necessary for the repair of the damages by fire occurring to the Dallas Opera House property on the early morning of December 27th, and it will speedily notify you if it deems the proceeds of the insurance insufficient for the repair of the damage.”

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-opera-house-assn-v-dallas-enterprises-inc-texapp-1926.