Daniel v. Elk Refining Co.

103 F. Supp. 898, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4594
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedFebruary 9, 1952
DocketCiv. A. No. 1120
StatusPublished

This text of 103 F. Supp. 898 (Daniel v. Elk Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel v. Elk Refining Co., 103 F. Supp. 898, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4594 (S.D.W. Va. 1952).

Opinion

MOORE, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs bring this action for the purpose of obtaining the rescission of a lease made by plaintiffs to defendant, and covering a lot of land situate in Pineville, West Virginia, since improved by defendant by building a gasoline service station thereon, which station has been operated for nearly three years.

The lot in Pineville is owned jointly by plaintiffs. Emma J. Daniel also owns a lot in Oceana, West Virginia, which is a small town about 14 miles from Pine-ville, and in the same county. Defendant wished to procure a lease on the Pine-ville lot for the purpose of erecting thereon a gasoline service station. Its representative, George B. Chambers, went to see plaintiffs about leasing the Pineville lot. At the time, Emma J. Daniel was engaged in conducting a general store, which was located on still another lot which she owned in Oceana adjoining the other, and was living there, while F. L. Daniel was staying at Alderson, West Virginia.

Chambers agreed with F. L. Daniel on the terms of a lease of the Pineville lot, and this lease was signed in Beckley, West Virginia, by F. L. Daniel. At the time he signed and delivered to Chambers the lease on the Pineville lot, F. L. Daniel stated to Chambers that the lease would have to be satisfactory to his wife, or words to that effect. Chambers made no. inducement to obtain F. L. Daniel’s signature to the lease, other than the considerations set out in the lease itself.

Chambers took the lease on the Pineville lot, already signed by F. L. Daniel, to Emma J. Daniel for the purpose of procuring her signature thereto. He had already visited her store on several occasions to talk about the leases, and on each occasion she had given him to understand that she would agree to lease both the lot in Pine-ville and the lot in Oceana, but not the Pineville lot separately. The lease on the Pineville lot, as proposed and as afterwards executed, provided for a monthly rental of $75, the lot being worth, unimproved, approximately $12,000. The proposed lease on the Oceana lot, which was never executed, would have provided for a monthly rental of $50, the lot being valued at approximately $1,250, unimproved. Both were to be for a term of ten years, and at the end of that time the improvements were to belong to the lessors.

During the negotiations between Chambers and Emma J. Daniel, Chambers at one time suggested to her that she go with him to Charleston and see a filling station there which the Elk Refining Company had built, telling her that this was the type of building they intended to put on the Oceana lot, and that it was a better station than the one they were building, or had built on the Daniel lot at Pineville. This circumstance (the superiority of the proposed building at Oceana), together with an understanding that plaintiffs’ son was to manage the Pine-ville station, was a part of the negotiations whereby the rental of the Pineville lot was fixed at $75 a month, and that of the Oce-ana lot at $50 per month. It does not appear from the evidence whether the parties considered the marked difference in valuation between the two lots in fixing the respective rentals.

At the time Chambers came to see Emma J. Daniel with the lease on the Pineville lot, already executed by her husband, defendant had already partly completed the building on that lot. She again told him that she would not execute the Pineville lease unless the company also leased the Oceana lot. He told her at that time that the company would lease the Oceana lot and would erect a filling station on it and would pay a rental of $50 a month for the lot, with provision that the improvements made by the company would belong to the lessor at the end of ten years. When she asked Chambers why the lease on the Oceana lot should not be executed then and [900]*900there he said to. her in effect that the company had gone ahead with the improvements on the Pineville lot without a lease, and that she could trust the company to follow the same procedure with reference to the Oceana lot.

On the faith of Chambers’ promise and his statements which led up to and accompanied it, Emma J. Daniel signed and delivered to Chambers the lease for the Pine-ville lot.

All through these transactions and for some weeks or months thereafter, Chambers and his superior officers in the Elk Refining Company, had under consideration the idea of leasing Emma J. Daniel’s Oceana lot on the terms already mentioned, for use as a gasoline service station. However, there was no definite intention on the part of Chambers or any officer of the company with' reference to the leasing of the Oceana lot at the time the lease on the Pineville lot was delivered to Chambers by Mrs. Daniel. Defendant did not lease the Oceana lot, but on the contrary, about seven months later, it leased from a third party, for operation as a gasoline service station, another lot in Oceana, about 1000 feet distant from Emma J. Daniel’s lot.

I find from all the evidence in the case that Chambers’ promise to Mrs. Daniel that defendant would lease her Oceana lot on the terms specified in their negotiations, together with the other statements made by him as above related, were made for the purpose of obtaining her signature to the lease on the Pineville lot, and as an inducement to her to sign that lease; also that she relied on Chambers’ promise and his other statements, and that she would not have signed the Pineville lease if they had not been made; and further, that Chambers’ promise, in the light of all the surrounding circumstances and his other statements, amounted to a representation to Mrs. Daniel that defendant had decided to lease the Oceana lot, when Chambers knew that such was not the case.

At the close of the hearing I made the following findings of fact, which I now reiterate and adhere to:

"1. That F. L. Daniel and Emma J. Daniel were the joint owners of Lot No. 33 in Pineville, and that Emma J. Daniel was the owner of Lot No. 1 in Oceana.
“2. That at the time F. L. Daniel signed the lease to the Elk Refining Company for Lot No. 33 in Pineville, he stated to Mr. Chambers, agent for the Elk Refining Company, that the lease would have to be satisfactory to his wife, or words to that effect.
“3. That no promise or inducement was made or undertaken to secure F. L. Daniel’s signature to the lease.
“4. That Chambers did promise, as an inducement to obtain the signature of Emma J. Daniel to the lease on the Pineville lot, that the company would lease Lot No. 1 in Oceana and erect a filling station on it and pay a rental of $50.00 a month, and that that promise did induce Emma J. Daniel to sign the lease on the Pineville lot, and that without that inducement she would not have signed it.
“5. That there was no definite intention on the part of Chambers at the time, as distinguished from merely having the lot under consideration, that it would be leased from Emma J. Daniel.” (This last finding of fact was amplified by the further finding that both Chambers and the company expected to keep and did keep the Oceana lot under consideration for some time as a possible location, and that the evidence in the case does not justify a finding that Chambers, at the time he made the promise to Mrs. Daniel, had an intention not to lease the Oceana lot.)

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Bluebook (online)
103 F. Supp. 898, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-v-elk-refining-co-wvsd-1952.