Florence Lustig Crossman, A/K/A Florence Lustig, Trading and Doing Business as Florence Lustig v. Fontainebleau Hotel Corp.

273 F.2d 720, 80 A.L.R. 2d 415, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 1959
Docket18105_1
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 273 F.2d 720 (Florence Lustig Crossman, A/K/A Florence Lustig, Trading and Doing Business as Florence Lustig v. Fontainebleau Hotel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florence Lustig Crossman, A/K/A Florence Lustig, Trading and Doing Business as Florence Lustig v. Fontainebleau Hotel Corp., 273 F.2d 720, 80 A.L.R. 2d 415, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinions

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant, Florence Lus-tig Crossman, operates women’s dress •shops in Miami Beach, Palm Beach, and Bal Harbour, Florida, in New York City, .and in other places. The defendant-•appellee is the Fontainebleau Hotel Corporation of Miami, Florida. The Fon-tainebleau Hotel opened for business in December 1954.

Lustig filed suit for a declaratory .judgment against Fontainebleau October 19, 1959, in the Southern District of Florida asserting that she was the as-signee of a lessee’s interest in a lease for shop space in the hotel, and that the lease had a renewal clause. She attached to the complaint a long, unsigned, and unwitnessed writing, said to represent the lease. The complaint seeks to enjoin ■any unlawful detainer or dispossessory action in the state courts of Florida to oust her from possession of the premises pending. a determination of her rights.

Fontainebleau Hotel moved to dismiss on the ground that the lease was not executed in compliance with the Florida Statute of Frauds. In reply, Lustig contends that possession, payment of the rent, and expenditure of $50,000 for improvements take the contract out of the Statute of Frauds. The district court granted the motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim entitling the plaintiff to relief, and Lustig appeals from the order of dismissal.

.After suit was instituted, but before the order of dismissal was submitted, the hotel brought a dispossessory proceeding in a Florida court to oust Lustig as a tenant holding over beyond her term. The Florida court determined that the federal order of dismissal was res ju-dicata and ordered Lustig evicted. Lus-tig then asked for an injunction to stay the execution of the state court judgment.

The matter came before us for oral argument on appellant’s application for an injunction to stay the state proceeding. The entire record being before us, however, at the request of the Court, in order to expedite decision of the case on the merits before determining the propriety of the injunction against a state court, counsel for both sides agreed to argue the merits of the appeal from the order of dismissal. The Court is of the view that the judgment should be reversed and the case remanded.

I.

The complaint alleges the following facts.

January, 1955, about a month after the Fontainebleau Hotel opened, Florence Lustig and her husband, Crossman, who [723]*723was also her manager, were staying at the hotel. They were approached by a Mr. Ben Jaffe, an officer, director, and large stockholder of the hotel, who was handling the leasing of store space in the hotel. Jaffe told Lustig that the lower lobby, where all of the shops were to be located, had not been completed and that the management was anxious to have tenants in promptly; it was the height of the season in Florida. Jaffe, Lustig, and Crossman agreed orally on the terms of a lease. Then, in order to expedite the opening of the shopping area in the Fontainebleau, so that the hotel guests would have the benefit of complete facilities, at Jaffe’s request Lustig agreed to move in immediately and to take possession of the premises for the operation of a fine dress shop before formal execution of any lease. Based on the oral agreement and on Jaffe s assurances that all would ^ be satisfactory, Lustig took possession of ^ the premises. Using the hotel s architect and general contractor, she spent $50,000 on fixtures and improvements, a part of which was not removable. To bind the transaction , ,. ... , Lustig gave the hotel $5,000 as a good , ,,, ,, faith deposit, an amount still held by the hotel

After Lustig commenced construction of the improvements, the hotel presented a lease that allegedly was not in accordanee with the original understanding of the parties. Lustig, through her husband, Crossman, and the hotel, through Jaffe, made pencilled corrections in the lease to reflect the original understand-mg All of these changes were approved I It f, Crossman Jaffe then stated that the lease would be redelivered to the hotels attorneys to be redrafted m accordance with the pencil notations. No redrafted lease was ever submitted to Lustig.

The lease shows the lessee to be Florence Lustig of New York, Inc., a New York corporation authorized to do business in Florida. The plaintiff is the sole stockholder, a director, and dominant party in that corporation. All of the rights of the corporation in the lease were transferred to her. She has occupied the premises and paid the rent since March 1, 1955, when the shop opened as “Florence Lustig”.

July 20, 1958, Lustig notified the lessor jn writing of her election to exercise the option to renew the lease. In August iggg the hotel’s attorneys’ letter to the corporation denied that there was any option to renew the lease. In July 1959 a letter from the hotel demanded possession of the premises no later than September 1, 1959. In September Lustig wrote the hotel tendering a check for $2,000 for the rent for the first month of the alleged new five-year term. The check was returned. The lessor again demanded possession of the premises, but extended the deadline for removal to October 31, 1959.

The face of the correspondence shows that the hotel addressed its letters to Florence Lustig, Inc. There are, however; references to Florence Lustig individually as the tenant. The record does nQ^. disciose bow the letters from the lesgee to the hotel were signed.

T ,. Florence Lustig alleges that she took . „ ,, . , . , possession of the leased premises and ., ,, , , , , pai d the rent. The shop was operated under her name. Prior to raising the issue 0f an alleged invalid assignment, as a defense in this case, the hotel had done nothing to indicate disapproval of Florence Lustig as a tenant,

The Florida statute of Frauds provides videos

"No estate or interest of freehold, or for a term of more than one or any uncertain interest of, in or out of any messagCs, lands, tenements or hereditaments shall be created made granted, transferred or released in an other man. ner than by instrument in writing> signed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses by the party creating, making, granting, conveying, transferring or releasing such estate, interest, or term of more than one year * * *F.S.A. § 689.01

[724]*724A statute of frauds makes no exception in favor of a plaintiff who has rendered his own performance in part or in full. But by a course of judicial development, it has become established law for equity courts to hold the statute inapplicable when a contracting party has partially performed his share of the bargain. Corbin states the general principle as follows: “Nevertheless, it is established law that, after certain kinds of part performance by a purchaser, the court will specifically enforce the vendor’s promise to convey land. * * * Part performance of a contract for the transfer of land does not take the case out of the statute; but it may be of such a character that it will take the statute out of the case. * * * The part per-formanee doctrine applies to a contract for * * * any of the lesser interests in land; and cases are numerous in which it has been applied to oral leases of land, even though they are for so long a period as to be clearly within the one-year clause of the statute as well as within the land clause.” 2 Corbin, Contracts § 420 (1950).

The lessee concedes that the writing relied on here does not meet the formal requirements called for in the statute for a valid five-year lease.

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273 F.2d 720, 80 A.L.R. 2d 415, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florence-lustig-crossman-aka-florence-lustig-trading-and-doing-business-ca5-1959.