Gill Mortuary v. Sutoris, Inc.

485 P.2d 1377, 207 Kan. 557, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 1971
Docket46,029
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 485 P.2d 1377 (Gill Mortuary v. Sutoris, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill Mortuary v. Sutoris, Inc., 485 P.2d 1377, 207 Kan. 557, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 439 (kan 1971).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

The action in district court was one to compel specific performance of two leases of billboard space on each side of a business building or, in the alternative, for damages for failure to perform.

Trial was to the court. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained defendants’ motion for involuntary dismissal. Plaintiff appeals from that order.

The matters at issue can best be understood by reciting the findings made by the trial court:

“2. ’Gill Mortuary’, the name by which the plaintiff is designated in this *558 action, is the business name employed by Millie E. Gill in the operation of a mortuary located at 243 North Emporia Avenue, Wichita, Kansas. Hugh W. Gill, Jr. is employed as the manager of said mortuary, and is the agent for its owner.
“3. Clinton A. Park was president of R. W. Park & Sons, Inc., a corporation, which for many years owned and operated an establishment for the sale of grave stones and monuments in a store building located at 1707 East Douglas Avenue, owned by said R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. and legally described as follows, to-wit: [description].
“4. Prior to 1962, R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. leased space atop said building to the Coca Cola Bottling Company for its billboards. On December 21, 1962, R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. entered into two lease agreements with Hugh Gill, Jr., in the name of Gill Mortuary, as lessee.
“5. Under one of said leases (Plaintiff’s Exhibit #2), Gill Mortuary was granted the right and permission to occupy space described in said lease as the ‘West side of roof at 1707 East Douglas’ for a term of sixty (60) months, unless sooner terminated as provided in said lease, commencing on January 1, 1963. Under the other said lease (Plaintiff’s Exhibit #3), Gill Mortuary was granted the right and permission to occupy space described in said lease as the ‘East side of roof at 1707 East Douglas’ for a term of sixty (60) months unless sooner terminated as provided in said lease, commencing on February 3, 1963.
“6. Although not expressly stated in said leases, the Court finds that it was the intent of the parties thereto for Gill Mortuary to be granted the right and permission to erect ‘electrical displays’, i. e. illuminated billboards, on the west and east sides of the roof of said buildings where there had been Coca Cola signs previously, for a monthly rental stipulated in said leases. Large, illuminated billboards advertising the Gill Montuary were erected under said leases, on the east and west sides of the roof of said building at 1707 East Douglas Avenue in Wichita, Kansas.
“7. In each of said leases, Gill Mortuary was granted an option to renew the agreement for a period of sixty (60) months, provided ‘said option to be exercised in writing at least ninety (90) days prior to expiration of this lease’.
“8. It was further provided in each lease that in the event R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. might sell, lease or rent tire property at 1707 East Douglas, after the lease, or extension thereof, had been in effect thirty-six (36) months, said lessor could terminate the lease by giving lessee ninety (90) days notice. The Court finds that it was the intent of the parties to said leases that the same could be terminated at any time after said leases had been in effect for thirty-six (36) months, in the event the property was sold, leased or rented, whether or not the leases were still within the basic sixty-month term or had been extended.
“9. On or about June 22, 1966, R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. listed the property for sale with Bill Earnest, a realtor associated with the B. J. Watkins Realty Company. This realtor negotiated with Sutoris, Inc., defendant herein, for the purchase of the property owned by R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. At about the same time, Sutoris, Inc. completed the purchase of all the separate properties on the *559 south side of the 1700 block of East Douglas, adjoining the R. W. Park & Sons, Inc. property on both sides.
“10. Said Bill Earnest informed Paul E. Sutoris, president of Sutoris, Inc., of the provisions for termination contained in said leases.
“11. On December 6, 1966, Clinton A. Park, on behalf of R. W. Park & Sons, Inc., and Paul E. Sutoris, on behalf of Sutoris, Inc., executed a real estate contract (Plaintiff’s Exhibit #1), which included, among other things, a provision that the buyer would honor ‘an existing lease on a sign which has approximately two (2) years duration left; all income from said sign to go to the sellers who agree to remove and relocate said sign, at seller’s expense, so as not to deter or distract from the buyer’s proposed use of the property.’
“12. Clinton A. Park promptly informed Hugh Gill, Jr., of the sale of the premises, and Hugh Gill, Jr., agreed to have the signs removed. Hugh Gill had knowledge that the building would be demolished by Sutoris, Inc.
“13. Thereafter, Clinton A. Park, on behalf of R. W. Park & Sons, Inc., executed a General Warranty Deed, dated March 16, 1967, conveying the property to Sutoris, Inc., without reservation or exception. The deed was recorded the same date.
“14. Following delivery of the deed to said property to Sutoris, Inc., and more than ninety days after notice was given to him by Clinton A. Park of the sale of said property, Hugh Gill had the billboards removed, at the expense of Gill Mortuary. Rental for the space occupied by said signs was paid each month until said billboards were removed, and Gill Mortuary was not in default in the payment of the rent under said leases at the time the billboards were removed.
“15. Thereafter, the building at 1707 East Douglas and the other buildings on the south side of the 1700 block on Douglas Avenue were demolished and the entire tract of land cleared. Sutoris, Inc., then commenced construction of a large, substantial and attractive brick building of special design and decor for the purpose of operating a car wash enterprise. Said building, completed at die time of this trial, occupies most of the south side of the 1700 block on East Douglas Avenue, without distinction as to previous boundaries. The present use of the land, and the improvements constructed thereon, are wholly and distinctly different from the prior uses and structures thereon, and are not identifiable therewith.
“16. From the evidence, the Court finds that no person informed Sutoris, Inc., or its officers, employees or agents, of any intention by the plaintiff to re-establish the Gill Mortuary billboards on the premises purchased by Sutoris, Inc., from R. W. Park & Sons, Inc., or claimed any continuing leasehold estate in the premises, until February 8, 1968, at which time the building constructed by Sutoris, Inc., was substantially completed.
“17.

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Bluebook (online)
485 P.2d 1377, 207 Kan. 557, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-mortuary-v-sutoris-inc-kan-1971.