Fedun v. Mike's Cafe, Inc.

204 A.2d 776, 204 Pa. Super. 356, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 595
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
DocketAppeal, No. 257
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 204 A.2d 776 (Fedun v. Mike's Cafe, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fedun v. Mike's Cafe, Inc., 204 A.2d 776, 204 Pa. Super. 356, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 595 (Pa. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

Montgomery, J.,

On December 19, 1960, Michael Fedun and Pauline Fedun, owners by the entireties of premises known as 244 North Eighth Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, confessed judgment in the amount of |4,996.16 against Mike’s Cafe, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation, Samuel Gomer, and Morris Gomer, lessees, based on a ten-year lease, allegedly in default, which had been entered in[359]*359to among the parties on September 1, 1951. On September 27, 1962, Samuel Gomer and Morris Gomer filed a petition to open the judgment but no such petition was filed in behalf of the corporate defendant. After an answer was filed by Michael and Pauline Fedun, Michael Fedun died on February 3, 1961, thereby vesting title in the surviving spouse to the property and to the judgment.1 Thereafter depositions were taken of Pauline Fedun (appellant hereafter), Samuel Gomer and Morris Gomer (appellees hereafter), and other witnesses in behalf of the appellees. The judgment subsequently was opened. At the time of the trial before Hon. Keller H. Gilbert, sitting without a jury, no testimony was received in evidence; but it was stipulated by the parties that the matter should be disposed of by the court on the record and the depositions, subject only to the objections appearing in the depositions. Judgment for the appellees having been entered by the lower court, the appellant is now requesting judgment in her favor or a new trial.

The damages awarded in the judgment were for unpaid rent from July 1, 1960, through August 31, 1961, the expiration date of the ten-year term of the lease, in the sum of $3,500; unpaid excess water and sewer rentals from January, 1957, to February 15, 1960, in the sum of $1,094.16; electrical repairs, $227; and attorney commissions, $175; or a total of $4,996.16.

Appellees contested the claims for two reasons, viz., (a) the landlord had assumed possession and leased the premises to a new corporation, 244 Bar, Inc., during the period of the alleged default in rentals2 and [360]*360(b) tbe appellees (Gomers) had sold the restaurant and taproom business at the leased premises on October 16, 1956, to Charles Brown, who took possession with the full consent of appellant and her husband, and said Charles Brown had occupied said premises thereafter until February, 1960, when he sold the business including the lease to the 244 Bar, Inc., also with the consent of appellant and her husband.3

It is appellees’ contention that in November, 1960, there was no rent due and thereafter the old lease was revoked by the new lease to the 244 Bar, Inc. They also testified in their depositions that they had been released from the old lease in 1956 when they sold the business to Brown, although such release was not alleged in their petition to open the judgment.

The question of whether or not the new lease to the 244 Bar, Inc., effective January 12, 1961, affected appellees’ liability under the original lease or the judgment thereon is not properly before us on this appeal. Judgment having been confessed on December 19, 1960, prior to the effective date of the new lease, January 12, 1961, appellant’s rights were fixed, if at all, to the full amount of the lease in default on that date; and at the time of execution on such judgment, the appellees would have an opportunity to contest the matter of the new lease and its effect on the judgment. Executions are within the equitable control of the court from which they are issued. 7 Standard Pennsylvania Practice 270, Execution §5.

[361]*361Although the lower court made no specific findings of fact to support its judgment for the appellees, in its opinion filed after this appeal was taken it stated:

“In September 1956 a meeting took place in the leased premises between plaintiffs Michael Fedun and Pauline S. Fedun and defendants Samuel Gomer and Morris Gomer, when defendants informed plaintiffs they wished to terminate all their liability under this lease, and that such liability would be assumed by one Charles Brown, to whom they were about to sell the said restaurant and taproom business. The plaintiff-lessors orally agreed to terminate the lease as to defendant-lessees upon sale of the business to Brown as stated and, upon defendants’ request, plaintiffs signed a paper to that effect. . . .
“The new tenant, Charles Brown, to whom defendants on October 16, 1956, sold their said business, took possession of the leased premises in due course, with the full consent of the plaintiffs, and occupied the same until February, 1960, when, again with the full consent of plaintiffs, he sold this business to still another buyer, namely, the 244 Bar, Inc., to whom, on November 21, 1960, Michael Fedun, one of [the] plaintiffs, admittedly executed a new lease for a five-year term beginning January 12, 1961.
“After the sale to Brown as aforesaid of their business on October 16, 1956, defendants Samuel Gomer and Morris Gomer, who are brothers, dissolved their partnership and separated.”

It was solely on the basis of this finding of a release that the lower court rendered judgment for appellees. The assessment of damages was not seriously questioned by appellees and, although Judge Gilbert refers to a partnership existing between the appellees, the record clearly shows that this business was a corporate operation and not a partnership. The liquor license was in the name of the corporation from 1951 [362]*362until December 30, 1960, when its transfer to 244 Bar, Inc., was approved by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. Samuel Gomer testified that, “I think we signed it [the lease] as a corporation, and my brother and I signed as guarantor, or something like that.” Morris Gomer testified, “Yes, after we sold to Charles Brown, we would be released of all obligations and responsibilities to Mike and Pauline, because they had their equity in the taproom. They had enough security there and they did not need us to be responsible for anything, especially when a man pays that amount of money for a taproom.” Furthermore, the original lease continued until 1961, according to appellees, since it is their contention that it was revoked in that year by the operation of the new lease to the 244 Bar, Inc. We are, therefore, constrained to view this as a situation on that basis. Under these circumstances the Gomers did not transfer the business to Brown, as they say, but only their stock in the corporation. Although the depositions do not disclose this fact, such allegation is found in appellant’s answer to appellees’ petition. Furthermore, there is no evidence or allegation that Brown ever personally assumed the responsibilities of a lessee of the premises; neither did the 244 Bar, Inc. do so until it signed the new lease.

There is otherwise no basis in the record nor is there any reason for presuming that the parties dealt with the corporation, Mike’s Cafe, Inc., as a partnership or sole proprietorship, or that we should ignore the existence of the corporation. No harm will result to any third party by our recognizing the corporation, except as to the Gomers individually, and they, themselves, have virtually conceded that the corporation continued in existence through 1960, at least. It is only when justice or public policy demands it and when the rights of innocent parties are not prejudiced thereby nor the theory of corporate entity made use[363]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 A.2d 776, 204 Pa. Super. 356, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fedun-v-mikes-cafe-inc-pasuperct-1964.