Gerould Co. v. Arnold Constable & Co.

65 F.2d 444, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1933
Docket2803
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 444 (Gerould Co. v. Arnold Constable & Co.) 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
Gerould Co. v. Arnold Constable & Co., 65 F.2d 444, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034 (1st Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WILSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree in equity by the Gerould Company, Inc., a New York corporation, intervener in an equity suit between the appellee and the trustee in bankruptcy of the A. E. Little Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts. The District Court ordered the Gerould Company, Inc., to surrender to the appellee certain premises which the Gerould Company, Inc., occupied in a department store conducted by the appellee in the city of New York.

In 1915, Arnold Constable & Co., Inc., hereinafter referred to as the Arnold Constable Company, entered into an agreement in writing with Alexander E. Little and George E. Noyes, copartners doing business under the name and style of A. E. Little & Co., in which it was provided that it leased to the copartners “a certain store consisting of the ground floor with mezzanine and basement and second story over the same,” which was a part of the main store occupied by Arnold Constable Company, to be used exclusively for the sale of shoes and millinery, all of which were to be branded “Arnold Constable & Co.,” and for the sale of rubbers, findings and certain other accessories connected with the shoe and millinery business.

In the instrument the Arnold Constable Company is described as lessors, and the co-partners are described as lessees. The instrument provided that the copartners should pay as rental a certain percentage of the gross receipts.

The instrument, however, further provided that Arnold Constable Company should take charge of all moneys, furnish office help, guarantee payment of all merchandise sold by A. E. Little & Co. on credit, take proper charge of all merchandise sold, prepare the same for delivery, and deliver the same free of charge to customers within the limits of its delivery system, and account for all moneys received for the same at stated periods. The part of the store occupied by the copart-ners and later by the corporation, A. E. Little Company, was in outward appearance a part of the general store of Arnold Constable Company, and was at all times accessible to the manager of the Arnold Constable Company. The comptroller of the Arnold Constable Company testified that the employees of the A. E. Little Company were under the general supervision of the Arnold Constable Company, and the manager of Arnold Constable Company visited the shoe and millinery departments several times a day and often gave directions to the employees of those departments, if they should inquire. The copartners agreed to collaborate with the Arnold Consta^ ble Company as to advertising, and guaranteed under the agreement that the gross revenue of the shoe and millinery business should be not less than $35,000 the first year, and $42,500 each year thereafter during the continuance of the agreement, or until the A. E„ Little Company should be able to add the well-known “Sorosis” shoe to their trade.

It was further agreed that the copartners might form a corporation, which they later did, which is herein referred to as A. E. Little Company, for the conduct of the shoe and millinery business, but further provided that they should not assign or transfer the agreement except to such corporation.

In 1917, the Gerould Company was organized to conduct the millinery business previously conducted by the .copartners, and obtained a sublease, so called, from the A. E. Little Company of a part of the store occupied by the A. E. Little Company, agreeing to pay to the A. E. Little Company a percentage of its gross sales as rentals, and being the same percentage as the A. E. Little Company had agreed to pay to the Arnold Constable Company on its gross sales.

Without setting forth all the details of the arrangements and agreement between the Arnold Constable Company and the co-partners, Little and Noyes, it is evident that it was one of the not uncommon modern arrangements for the conduct of separate departments in a general department store, by turning over an entire department, like shoes or millinery, to some one familiar with that line of business and in whom the management of the general store has confidence, both as to their business acumen and integrity, retaining general oversight of the business, the business of the department in question being conducted so that to the public it is a part of the general store and under its sole management. Arkansas Valley Smelting Co. v. Belden Mining Co., 127 U. S. 379, 387, 8 S. Ct. 1308, 32 L. Ed. 246; Paige v. Faure, 229 N. Y. 114, 118, 127 N. E. 898, 10 A. L. R. 649.

Such arrangements may result in a leas® *446 of a part of a store, or, even if designated as a lease and the parties as lessor and lessee, the agreement may be of such a nature that by reason of the trust and confidence imposed in the so-called lessees it is something more than a lease and is not assignable, unless assented to by the lessor. Marcelle, Inc., v. Sol. & S. Marcus Co., 274 Mass. 469, 175 N. E. 83, 74 A. L. R. 1012; Nassau Hotel Co. v. Barnett et al., 164 App. Div. 203, 149 N. Y. S. 645. The usual test as to whether it constitutes a lease is whether the instrument gives the so-called lessee exclusive possession of the premises. Roberts v. Lynn Ice Co., 187 Mass. 402, 406, 73 N. E. 523. The A. E. Little Company from the record does not appear to have had exclusive possession of the premises described in the agreement.

Whether the oeeupancy of the designated portions of the store of the Arnold Constable Company was that of a mere licensee, or under an agreement under which the Arnold Constable Company as the owner or lessee of the entire building, reposing special confidence in the business ability and integrity of the other contracting parties, granted the use of a part of its store for the conduct by the copartners of a certain part of the general business of the Arnold Constable Company, does not affect the result in this case.

If the agreement contained some of the characteristics of a lease, in that it provided for the occupancy of a certain part of the store and the payment of rental in the form of a percentage of the gross receipts of the so-called lessee, and contained many of the customary provisions of a lease, it was clearly more than a mere lease. It was an agreement designed to regulate the various relations and points of possible friction arising out of an arrangement for conducting a business within a business, and in a manner so that to the public eye it was a single business, and was based on a confidential relation and the special ability of the so-called lessee to conduct that particular line of business, and to produce a certain gross revenue. Erom the nature of the relations between the parties indicated by this instrument, it is obvious, we think, that, as the District Court found, it was not within the contemplation of the parties that a substitution for the so-called lessees would be acceptable to the Arnold Constable Company unless with its approval, and this is plainly indicated by the provision that it should not be assigned to any one except to a corporation formed by the copartners to conduct said business.

This provision, we think, in view of the confidence imposed in the copartners, precluded any assignment of the agreement by the corporation formed by them. New York Bank Note Co. v. Hamilton Bank Note, etc., Co., 180 N. Y. 280, 73 N. E. 48; Wooster v. Crane & Co., 73 N. J. Eq. 22,

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 444, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerould-co-v-arnold-constable-co-ca1-1933.