Goodyear Rubber Co. v. Goodrich Rubber Co.

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 30 Ohio Dec. 529, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 143
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433 (Goodyear Rubber Co. v. Goodrich Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Rubber Co. v. Goodrich Rubber Co., 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 30 Ohio Dec. 529, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 143 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Ford, J.

On March 3, 1911, the Loomis Realty Company leased the two west ground floor rooms of the Spencerian Building, on Euclid avenue in the city of Cleveland, to the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company. In addition to the other usual clauses in a lease of this kind, there was the following provision:

“It is agreed that there shall be no sign placed on the building, except in the spaces provided for signs on the Euclid front; and that the party of the second part may desire to have lettering in gold or silver letters on the plate glass window or doors except that the party of the- second part is given the exclusive [434]*434right to place its own sign on the west side of the building, occupying a space not exceeding forty feet in depth from the front corner of the building and the full height of the building, which wall sign may be illuminated at the expense of the party of the second part should the second party so desire.”

The fair construction of this quotation the court believes is this: In the first.instance it was agreed that there should be no sign placed on the building. The expression, “It is agreed that there shall be no signs placed on the building,” is an agreement in which both parties were interested. The owner was interested in preserving the appearance of the building as a whole, that there should not be placed on the* building unsightly signs for advertising that would destroy the architectural appearance of the building, and that might prove to be detrimental to other occupants. The Goodyear Company had an interest in some degree in the same way, so that the space that it rented should not be rendered less valuable by reason of ostentatious or competitive signs placed close by. This agreement apparently went to the whole building, and is equivalent to establishing that there shall be no signs whatever placed on the building. The first exception is, that “except in the space provided for signs on the Euclid front, and that the party of the second part may desire to have lettering in gold or silver letters on the plate glass window or doors.” That exception seems to limit not only the Goodyear tenants, but every other tenant of the building, to placing signs in gold or silver leaf upon the windows or doors of the Euclid front.

Now comes a further exception, which is as follows: “Except that the party of the second part is given the exclusive right to place its own sign on the west side of the building. ’ ’ If the language of this last exception had stopped at that point, then the Goodyear Company "would have had no limitation whatever as to the size of the sign that it might have placed, under this exclusive right, on the west side of the building. It might have occupied the entire west side of the building. The balance of the language used in this second exception is as follows: “occupying a space not exceeding forty feet in depth from the front corner of the building and the full height of the building." This last language, by fair construction, seems to be, therefore, a [435]*435limitation, which provides that, instead of occupying the whole' west side of the building, the lessee should only occupy a space forty feet in depth and to the full height of the building. The court concluded, therefore, that the fair construction of this language is, that the lessee was given the exclusive privilege to advertise upon the west wall of the Spencerian Building.

Shortly after the lease was entered into between the Loomis Realty Company and the plaintiff, the Loomis Realty Company entered into a lease with the Goodrich Rubber Company for the lease of a room in the central part of the building and having no relation to either the west wall or the east wall of the building as a whole, or, in other words, it occupied one of the rooms not bounded by any exterior side wall. In connection with this lease, the Loomis Realty Company gave to the Goodrich Company the right to put a sign occupying the middle portion of the west wall fifty feet in length and to the full height of the building. The plaintiff contends that this is a violation of its contract.

The Goodrich people, early in May, set about painting a sign on this last mentioned space, and completed the same between the 1st and 5th of May. The plaintiff brings this action to compel the defendant to dispense with this sign, and asks for a mandatory order to that end from the court.

The Goodrich Company filed an answer in which it says that the plaintiff should be estopped to ask for this action of the court, because, in the first instance, the plaintiff failed to record its lease, and, second, because it stood by knowing or claiming to know that it had the right to the exclusive control of the west side of the building for advertising purposes. The Goodrich Company makes this claim because it says that Mr. Hammerle, who was the sales agent in charge of the plaintiff’s store here, knew from the beginning that such work was going forward. So far as the evidence goes, it appears that Mr. Hammerle was merely the sales agent in charge of the store, his duties being limited to the duty of making sales of plaintiff’s line of goods. It does not appear, that he was familiar' with the terms of the lease; nor does it seem fair that the plaintiff should be held to be such an agent as that notice to him would be notice to the company. The evidence shows, however, that Mr. Hammerle, while [436]*436not knowing the facts in regard to the terms of the lease, did communicate the fact to his principal at Akron, and that the principal, with promptness, protested to both the realty company and the Goodrich Company.

Upon the whole, the court holds that the plaintiff can not be ' charged with standing by and keeping silent, and thus presenting such a situation as would operate as an estoppel against this plaintiff.

So that brings us back from the time that the sign was painted to the time that the Goodrich Company entered into its contract; and the question arises, whether, at the latter time, the plaintiff did something or failed to do something that misled the Goodrich Company into making a disadvantageous contract.

The Goodrich Company claims that the plaintiff misled it in this, that it did not have its lease recorded; but the court believes there is no virtue in this claim, for the reason that it does not appear from the evidence that the Goodrich Company exercised the diligence of making an examination of the records. In other words, it did not rely upon the state of the record. The purpose of the record, after all, is to give constructive notice; and if the Goodrich Company had actual notice, the state of the record in fact becomes a matter of no importance. The law is conceded to be, I believe, that ‘ ‘ a lease of a part of a building prima facie passes the outer wall adjacent to the rooms or apartment named, as a part of the premises leased; and consequently, the lessee has the exclusive right to the use of such wall for advertising purposes.” The Goodrich Company, at the time it made its contract, knew that the plaintiff was in possession, and knew that, under the law, unless there was a restriction, the plaintiff was entitled to the whole lower half of the west wall for advertising purposes, because its occupation extended the whole depth of the building; and when the Goodrich Company was contracting to occupy the middle portion of the last mentioned space for its sign, it was clearly put upon inquiry.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 433, 30 Ohio Dec. 529, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-rubber-co-v-goodrich-rubber-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1911.