Flynn v. Mikelian

208 Cal. App. 2d 305, 25 Cal. Rptr. 138, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1789
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1962
DocketCiv. 25915
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 208 Cal. App. 2d 305 (Flynn v. Mikelian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn v. Mikelian, 208 Cal. App. 2d 305, 25 Cal. Rptr. 138, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1789 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

*307 FORD, J.

The primary question involved on this appeal is the nature of the rights of the plaintiffs, assignors of a lease of real property, at the time of the acts of the defendant lessor of which complaint is made. The appeal is from a judgment for the defendant.

On November 6, 1957, the defendant leased the premises involved to certain persons who thereafter assigned the lease to Zelman Soskin. On July 2, 1958, Soskin sold the business being operated on the property to the plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Flynn, and assigned the lease to them. The lease contained a provision which was in part as follows: “Lessee shall not assign this lease . . . without the written consent of lessor first had and obtained, and a consent to one assignment . . . shall not be deemed to be a consent to any subsequent assignment. . . .” Such written consent to the assignment to the plaintiffs was obtained. In the document in which such consent was evidenced was an agreement executed by the plaintiffs whereby they did “agree to be bound by the terms, conditions and covenants [of the lease] . . ., the same as if originally executed by them as Lessees.” On March 24, 1959, the plaintiffs sold the business to Clyde B. Wright and assigned the lease to him. In the document embodying the assignment was an agreement executed by Wright wherein he undertook “to assume and be bound by all of the terms and conditions of the said Lease which the Lessee therein agrees to be made and performed.” The consent of the defendant lessor was expressed in the following language: ‘ ‘ The undersigned Lessor hereby consents to the above Assignment of Lease to Clyde B. Wright waiving none of his and/or her rights thereunder as to the Lessee or the Assignee.”

The nature of the controversy is indicated by the following findings of fact of the trial court: 1. The rent due on September 1. 1959, was not paid. 2. On September 16, 3959, the defendant lessor discovered that the premises had been vacated by Wright and the defendant entered the premises after having a door opened by a locksmith. 1 3. Since September 16, 1959, the defendant has refused to deliver possession of the premises to the plaintiffs. 4. After September 16, 1959, the defendant removed the fixtures and equipment from the prem *308 ises and stored them for “the account of Soskin and/or Plaintiffs who then and there were the holders of chattel mortgages against said personal property. ’ ’

The pertinent evidence before the trial court will be stated. Mr. Flynn, one of the plaintiffs, testified that he and his wife entered into possession of the premises about August 1958. The premises consisted of a “beer bar cafe” and living quarters. As part of their transaction of purchase, the Flynns executed a chattel mortgage in favor of Soskin on property used in the business. Thereafter Wright took possession (he having purchased the business from the Flynns and the lease having been assigned to him by them). On subsequent occasions the plaintiffs went to the premises to try to collect money which' Wright owed to them on an obligation secured by a second chattel mortgage on the equipment of the business, On September 16, 1959, Mr. Flynn went there; the premises were closed and Wright was absent therefrom. The defendant was present and he talked to her. They watched the locksmith open the door and then they entered. Mr. Flynn did not notice the presence of any personal effects of Mr. Wright. When asked if he saw “any beer or any stock at all,” Mr. Flynn’s reply was that he saw a lot of empty bottles. He further testified that he asked the defendant how much money Wright owed her and she said that it was the amount of the rent for one month. After she stated that the only matter in which she was interested was the rent, he said that he would take care of it in a few days and he left. On cross-examination, Mr. Flynn testified that she did not say he could go back into the premises “in those words” and she did not say she would accept the rent from him. Thereafter the plaintiffs sent a check dated September 19, 1959, to the defendant for the sum of $220, the amount of the monthly rent. The defendant returned the check, enclosing it with a letter dated September 21 in which she stated that there had been some misunderstanding, that the rent had not been paid since August 1, 1959, and that “inasmuch as I have been required to repossess the property for nonpayment of rent, the lease has been forfeited.”

In a letter dated October 7, 1959, and addressed to Mr. Soskin and the plaintiffs by an attorney acting on behalf of the defendant, it was stated that the communication was to notify the addressees “that because of failure to pay rentals for the above referred to property and the abandonment thereof by *309 the Lessee, the owner of the property was required to reenter the property and terminate the lease thereon. ’ ’ It was further stated that a new lease had been made and that if the furniture, fixtures and equipment were not removed within five days, the defendant would cause that property to be removed and stored “at the Lessee’s expense and account.” In a prior letter of September 29, 1959, addressed to the same persons, the attorney had stated that the personal property was being held as security for the payment of rent due since July 1, 1959, and “also for the payment of damages to the said real property by the tenants.” Later, after such property had been stored in a garage, Mr. Soskin, the plaintiffs’ mortgagee, took possession of it.

Mr. Flynn testified that his attorney obtained Wright’s signature to a document dated September 19, 1959, part of which was as follows : “That the assignment of lease executed March 24, 1959, ... on the above mentioned premises from [plaintiffs] ... to Clyde B. Wright, is hereby cancelled and rescinded and is of no force and effect.” Thereafter the plaintiffs demanded, in writing, that possession of the premises be given to them by the defendant.

The defendant was called as a witness by the plaintiffs pursuant to the provisions of section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure. She testified that on September 16, 1959, Mr. Flynn walked up to her and said that he knew that Mr. Wright had abandoned the place; Mr. Soskin had so informed him. He asked her if he could come back and operate the business and she told him that he could not. She testified in part as follows: “A. This is what I was saying. Mr. Flynn wasn’t saying anything. I said, ‘This is the kind of people you recommend for me, to tell me they are good people; that they will do good business; they are going to be good tenant. ’ And I said, ‘This is what they give me in short time.’ I said, I said, ‘This is really bad.’ I said, ‘This is unfair.’ I just started crying. ... A. It was way after we went upstairs. We look[ed] all around the apartment where I really was deeply hurt more than ever. And he asked me if he—— ‘Has he been paying the rent ? ’ I said, ‘No kind of money mean [s] anything on this kind of condition.’ I said, ‘Even if he’d pay rent,’ I said, ‘that don’t mean nothing.’ I said—• he says if I let him to come back to run the place, everything will be all right. Right then, I tell Mr. Flynn, I said, ‘Well, Mr. Flynn,’ I said, ‘Well, Mr. Flynn,’ I said, ‘I don’t want you or your kind of people to deal with. Look at all the experience, all *310 what I got here, ’ I said.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 Cal. App. 2d 305, 25 Cal. Rptr. 138, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-mikelian-calctapp-1962.