Giese v. Hanni

72 N.W.2d 752, 271 Wis. 184, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 332
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 752 (Giese v. Hanni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giese v. Hanni, 72 N.W.2d 752, 271 Wis. 184, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 332 (Wis. 1955).

Opinion

Brown, J.

There is little conflict in the evidence but the parties differ respecting the conclusions to be drawn from it.

The trial court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“Findings of Fact
“1. That on January 10, 1893, Frederick A. Quandt leased to the Rock Cheese Factory Company the following described piece of property, to wit: [Description by metes and bounds.]
“2. Tlaat said lease was given in consideration of the payment of one dollar and that the term in said lease was defined as follows: ‘For and during the term so long as the premises is used for manufacturing cheese or butter and cream purposes, otherwise the premises herein described revert to Frederick A. Quandt or his heirs, executors, or assigns again.’
“3. That the Rock Cheese Factory Company erected on the leased premises a cheese factory and used the same continuously and appropriately until it assigned its lease to G. Hanni & Sons on or about March 1, 1953. That since March 1, 1953, the defendants G. Hanni & Sons have continuously used said premises for manufacturing cheese.
“I find as
“Conclusions of Law
“1. That the lease covering the following described property to wit: [Description given] which lease was originally made on January 10, 1893, when Frederick A. Quandt leased same to the Rock Cheese Factory Company and which lease was assigned to G. Hanni & Sons Company on March 1, 1953, has never been terminated but is in full force and effect.”

None of these are attacked except the finding and conclusion that since March 1, 1953, G. Hanni & Sons Company *186 have continuously used said premises for manufacturing cheese and the lease has never been terminated but is in full force and effect. Appellants submit that this finding is contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence and the conclusion that the lease has not been terminated (by Hanni’s failure to perform the condition) is error.

The evidence shows without any important variance that about March 1, 1953, Rock Cheese Factory Company assigned its lease to Hanni and sold Hanni its cheese factory and the personal property there for $7,500. Until about July 10, 1953, Hanni operated the Rock factory but from then until January, 1954, Hanni received no more milk and processed no more cheese there. The cheese-making equipment remained in the factory and Harold Hanni, son of G. Hanni, and employed by G. Hanni & Sons Company, occupied the living quarters in the factory. Beginning in January, 1954, and continuously thereafter, G. Hanni & Sons Company brought to the Rock factory cheeses whose manufacture had been started two or three days earlier in the company’s other factory. They stayed in the Rock factory from eighteen to twenty-one days where, at intervals of two or three days, Harold Hanni rubbed them with salt water by hand and turned them over. This is the curing process and is a necessary part of the manufacture of cheeses. After the curing was completed, the cheeses were prepared for shipment in the Rock factory. This process turned out Stein cheese, a special variety which must be kept separate during its manufacture from other cheeses, because its bacteria flavors other kinds of cheese which come near it. G. Hanni & Sons Company uses the Rock factory exclusively for the production of Stein cheese, for which the factory is especially suitable.

The milk flow is very low, dropping down sharply about June 10th until the middle of August. The months of big flow begin in December and continue large until June. The *187 Ryser Company buys Hanni’s entire output and during the summer and autumn of 1953 G. Hanni & Sons Company did not have any milk left for the manufacture of Stein cheese after filling orders of the Ryser Company for Gouda cheese.

In February, 1954, appellants served notice on G. Hanni & Sons Company to vacate the factory. Letters on the subject had been sent by appellants to Hanni earlier.

The question to be determined is whether the admitted suspension of cheese manufacturing in the Rock factory from July 10, 1953, to November at the earliest, or January, 1954, at the latest, works a termination of the lease under the provision that the term is for “so long as the premises is used for manufacturing cheese, . . . otherwise the premises herein described revert to Frederick A. Quandt, or his heirs, executors, or assigns again.” We think it quite evident that not every cessation or suspension of manufacturing operations terminates a lease such as this. It is not within the contemplation of the parties that the tenant’s investment is at the mercy of chance to the extent that it shall be lost if, for instance, his cheesemaker quits or is discharged and cannot immediately be replaced, or milk is temporarily unobtainable. The cessation must be for such a time or under such circumstances as to indicate the tenant’s intention not to comply with the condition of user. We have held that a suspension of operations because of unfavorable, temporary conditions is not a breach of condition resulting in a reversion of the property where there is present the intention of the tenant or grantee to resume the specified use as soon as feasible and within a reasonable time. Thus, in the case of Koonz v. Joint School Dist. (1950), 256 Wis. 456, 458, 41 N. W. (2d) 616, the facts showed a conveyance of certain land for school purposes with a right reserved in the grantor “ ‘. . . in the event that the said school district shall cease to use the said parcel of land for the purpose above named.’ ” The district built a schoolhouse on the property and conducted a school in it for some *188 thirty years. Then, for approximately five years, the district transported its scholars to the school of a near-by village and paid their tuition there. During this time the annual district school meetings were held in the building, the school equipment was kept there and the building was used for the storage of grain belonging to the son of the grantor. For a time the district advertised the building for sale but no sale took place. Each year the district obtained from the supposed owner of the reversionary interest a waiver of his rights. In holding that the premises did not revert to the grantor under these circumstances, we said:

“These facts clearly indicate that the school district had no intention of abandoning the local school. It was transporting the children until such time as they might again find it practicable to instruct the children locally. It is common knowledge that for a few years there may be very few children in a neighborhood and later on the juvenile population may be greatly increased. The district voted on a year-to-year basis whether to operate the school or to transport the pupils.” (p. 461.)
“In Mills v. Evansville Seminary (1883), 58 Wis. 135, 143, 15 N. W. 133, the conveyance was given with a right of reversion if it ceased to be used for seminary purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 752, 271 Wis. 184, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giese-v-hanni-wis-1955.