Gardner v. Gleason

259 F. 755, 170 C.C.A. 555, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1680
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1919
DocketNo. 1386
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 259 F. 755 (Gardner v. Gleason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Gleason, 259 F. 755, 170 C.C.A. 555, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1680 (1st Cir. 1919).

Opinions

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court of Massachusetts vacating an order of the referee and determining the rent to be paid to the owners of a building on Washington street, in the city of Boston, during its occupation by a common law assignee and receivers in bankruptcy. The assignee occupied from April 18, 1916, to May 3, 1916,_ and-the receivers from the latter date to July 31, 1916; so that the occupancy by both was for 3% months.

The premises were leased in December, 1905, for a term of 10 years from January 1, 1907, to the George F. Quigley Company, a corporation of which Andrew Crawford was the treasurer, and this company had occupied the premises until 1909, when the bankrupt, the Crawford-Plummer Company, a corporation, of which the same Andrew Crawford was treasurer, took over its business and the possession of the premises, and paid rent to the owners in accordance with the terms of the lease. The record does not disclose any assignment of the lease to the bankrupt, nor any subletting to the bankrupt, nor any surrender of the lease and a verbal letting by the owners to the bankrupt, but does disclose that the bankrupt was in possession of the premises from some time in 1909 to April 18, 1916, and paid rent to the owners in accordance with the terms of the lease.

It appears from the summary of testimony before the referee that one of the representatives of the owners wrote to one of the receivers two days after their appointment, stating in substance that he had been informed that he and another had been appointed receivers of the Crawford-Plummer Company, and also:

“We would like to know wliat your plans are in regard to occupying the property.”

To this the receivers replied that they expected to continue the business of the Crawford-Plummer Company in the Boston store, but did not know how long it would be advisable to continue the business as receivers, and that, if an arrangement could be made for new leases of the property, allowing them a reasonable time to vacate, it might be arranged to their advantage and that of the landlord. At this time it was evident that the receivers thought that the Crawford-Plummer Company were lessees of the property, because they state that, if they vacate the property, it would be—

“upon some arrangement disposing of the remaining portion of the term of the Crawford-Plummer Company’s lease, and any proposition looking toward the suivender of possession of the Boston store and the purchase of the unex[757]*757pired portion of the Crawford-Plummer Company lease would be carefully investigated by us, and, if it seems to tbe advantage of the estate, we will at once seek the permission of the court to take advantage of the offer.”

On May 16, 1916, Mr. Albert A. Gleason, with a Mr. Reid, both representing the owners of the premises, called upon one of the receivers to inquire their intentions in regard to remaining in occupancy of the premises and the rental to be paid, and, finding that they intended to remain for the present, Mr. Gleason told him the rental was $20,000 a year and taxes and repairs; that the taxes for 1915 were about $6,390 and said:

“If you remain in the premises we shall expect you to pay the same rental that the tenant paid.”

To which the receiver replied:

“That he thought it was customary in such cases for the receivers to pay the same rental as had been paid by the tenant.”

Mr. Gleason afterwards called upon the other receiver and gave him the same information in regard to the rental that had been paid by the bankrupt, and told him:

"That he thought that the fair value of the premises would be at the same rate that the tenant had paid.”

Neither of the receivers was informed, however, in regard to the relationship of Crawford with the Quigley Company or the CrawfordPlummer Company. Although there was other correspondence between the representatives of the owners and the receivers, no agreement was made in regard to rental; but the receivers paid them $3,000 on account of the rent, stating that the balance would be left for future adjustment. The rental reserved in the lease was $20,000 per annum and all water rates and taxes which might be assessed upon the premises during the term and the cost of necessary repairs. The taxes for the year 1915 were $6,393, water rates during the occupancy by the assignee and receivers $30, and repairs $27.

The learned referee found that the reasonable rental value of the premises during the occupancy of the assignee and receivers was greater for a term of years than that reserved in the lease, but that for a temporary occupancy their rent might he as low as $100 per week. This finding, however, in regard to the value of the rental for temporary occupancy, was based upon the testimony of a real estate agent who had charge of the property, and who, after consultation with the owners, made an arrangement with the purchaser at auction of the balance of the goods which the receivers had been unable to sell, by which the purchaser might remain upon the premises, for the purpose of getting rid of the goods which he had bought, for a rental of $100 per week, which the agent said was the “usual price under such circumstances.”

The agent, at the request of one of the guarantors on the lease, placed “To Let” signs upon the store before the occupancy by the assignee, and testified that he had received no satisfactory proposition to lease the premises down to the date of sale, and he testified:

[758]*758“I understood, of course, that while the ‘To Let’ sign was in the window,, the occupants were merely tenants at sufferance, and that they were to remain-only unless or until the owners got a satisfactory offer to rent the premises by lease.”

There was no evidence that any such agreement had been made by the owners and the receivers, and the referee’s finding, that it was understood that the receivers were to vacate the premises whenever a. satisfactory offer to rent or lease was received by the petitioners, is-only his conclusion from the above testimony. The referee has found that the assignee and receivers carried on t-he business in the store, and that it was of advantage to the bankrupt estate that the business be continued in the store which the bankrupt had occupied. He certified, that, under all the circumstances, $1,500. a month, including water and repairs, seemed to him equitable and just rental for the premises, and that rent for 3%'months at this rate would amount to $5,110, and, deducting the amount already paid by the receivers on account, he-found the balance to be $2,100, and ordered that sum to be paid.

[1, 2] Both the receivers and the owners of the premises petitioned the court to review this order of the referee, and it then became the duty of the referee, under General Order in Bankruptcy No. 17 (89' Fed. viii, 32 C. C. A. -xix), to—

“forthwith certify to the judge the question presented, a summary of the evidence relating thereto and the finding ánd order of the referee thereon.”

The only question certified by the referee was:

“What should be allowed for the rent of the premises occupied by the assignee and receivers from April 18, 1916, to and including August 1, 1916?”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 F. 755, 170 C.C.A. 555, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-gleason-ca1-1919.