Flint P. Smith Building Co. v. Industrial Savings Bank

188 N.W. 350, 218 Mich. 374, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 590
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1922
DocketDocket No. 105
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 N.W. 350 (Flint P. Smith Building Co. v. Industrial Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint P. Smith Building Co. v. Industrial Savings Bank, 188 N.W. 350, 218 Mich. 374, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 590 (Mich. 1922).

Opinion

Moore, J.

The chancellor filed a written opinion in this case reading as follows:

“Plaintiff, a corporation, is the owner of lot 10, block 1, in the city of Flint, Michigan, having a frontage of 33 feet on Saginaw street and a depth of about 150 feet along Union street on which there is a 9-story office building known as the Flint P. Smith Building with basement, the ground floor of which Was constructed especially for a banking business with lobby in front leading to the elevators and the bank. September 23, 1912, the then owners of said property, grantors of plaintiff, leased to the Industrial Savings Bank for the purpose of conducting a general banking business, the ground floor in the rear of the lobby in the Flint P. Smith Building, the vaults in the basement to said building, with the right to ingress and egress thereto, and so much of. said basement as may be necessary to use said vaults, the use of the lobby in said building for ingress and egress to the rear thereof, with the right to use the windows therein for advertising banking business of said Industrial Savings Bank, and also the right and privilege of using the front of said building to display the sign or signs of said bank for the period commencing with the time when said building should be made ready for occupancy by said bank and extending to and including June 30, 1939.
“By the terms of the lease lessor agreed to heat said leased premises when necessary, and to furnish said lessee with city water and janitor service for the corridors of the bank. The premises leased to the bank were completed ready for occupancy May 1, 1913, and they took possession on that date. The term for Which said premises was leased was divided into 5 rental periods, the first 4 periods to consist of 5 years each and the fifth period for the unexpired portion of the time. The rent for the first period was fixed by the lease at $2,000 per year, payable monthly in advance.
“By the terms of the lease, the rent for the remaining rental periods is to be determined for each term in advance by agreement between the parties, and in case the parties were unable to agree upon the rent to be paid, then each of said parties should select one [376]*376arbitrator, and the two arbitrators so selected should select a third, and the three arbitrators so selected should fix and determine the rent to be paid by the bank to the lessors for the ensuing rental period; that the arbitrators chosen to fix the rent for any rental period should as a basis for fixing the rent for that period, take into consideration the character of the property rented, its location, the heating and services rendered by the lessors, the increase or decrease in the population of the city and the then general rental values of business property in the business district in the city of Flint, and the finding of the arbitrators chosen to fix the rent for each rental period should be final and binding upon all of said parties for the period for which it was fixed, and during such rental period said bank should pay to the lessors, and the lessors should receive the rent so fixed and determined by the arbitrators chosen for that period.
“The first 5-year rental period having expired on the 30th day of April, 1918, and the owners of said building and said Industrial Savings Bank not being able to agree upon the rent which should be paid by said bank to said owners for the ensuing 5-year period, thereupon in pursuance of the terms of said lease the owners of said building and said bank proceeded to have the rent fixed by arbitrators chosen in the manner prescribed in said lease, and John J. Carton, Charles M. Greenway and John L. Pierce were chosen as arbitrators. The arbitrators so chosen were unable to agree on the rent to be paid by defendant to plaintiff for said premises, for the 5-year rental period commencing May 1, 1918, Messrs. Carton and Green-way signed an award fixing the amount at $6,000 per year, and Mr. Pierce signed a statement to the effect that he refused to concur in said award, giving his reasons therefor. Plaintiff, claiming that the award is void because not concurred in by all three of the arbitrators, filed this bill to have the same judicially determined to be void, and to have the court determine the rent that should be paid by defendant to plaintiff for the 5-year period commencing May 1, 1918. Defendant in its answer insists that the award, though concurred in by only two of the arbitrators, is valid and has tendered the rent at the rate fixed by the award, which plaintiff has refused to accept.
[377]*377“I am of the opinion that the award is invalid. That in submitting this matter to three arbitrators it was contemplated by the parties that they should have an award concurred in by all of them. A majority of the arbitrators may not render a valid award. Lattin v. Gamble, 154 Mich. 177. Our statute provides for an award by a majority of the arbitrators. 3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 13852. This is a part of the statute providing for a statutory award. I think in other States where there is a similar statute the decisions of the court are uniform to the effect that the statute applies to statutory awards only.
“It is suggested in the bill that there were some acts on the part of Mr. Carton, one of the arbitrators, on account of which the award should be held invalid. There is nothing in the testimony that should give rise to even a suspicion of misconduct on the part of Mr. Carton, and I base my conclusion that the award is invalid entirely on the fact that it was concurred in by but two of the arbitrators.
“We now come to the real live issue in this case, viz., what rent should be paid by defendant to plaintiff for the 5-year rental period from May 1, 1918, for the premises occupied by it, and the services rendered by plaintiff. This must be determined by conditions that would affect the rental value existing May 1, 1918, and which might reasonably be expected to obtain during the 5-year period in view of past events and future probabilities. The court in fixing the rental must be governed by the limitations in the lease placed on the arbitrators in that regard. I find myself embarrassed at the threshold of this inquiry. One who can forecast rental values in Flint in abnormal times for a period of 5 yéars must have occult power.
“Counsel in the case in elaborate and well considered briefs reach results that are $8,000 apart on the yearly rental. I knew they would not intentionally lead the court astray. The testimony of 12 reputable business men of Flint varies from $4,800 to $18,000 per year as to what the rent should be fixed and determined as of May 1, 1918, on the basis stipulated in the lease for the 5-year period. I have read the testimony with care, and I am unable to find a test which, when applied, satisfies me that I have [378]*378reached a result that may be more than approximately mathematically correct.
“There was no building! in Flint May 1, 1918, with which the building in question could be compared. It was sui generis. Comparing rental value per square foot space in this building and old buildings that were required to be completely remodeled before suitable for occupancy by merchants pretending to be up-to-date, throws but little light on the merits of this controversy.

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Related

Flint P. Smith Building Co. v. Industrial Savings Bank
203 N.W. 490 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 N.W. 350, 218 Mich. 374, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-p-smith-building-co-v-industrial-savings-bank-mich-1922.