Grant v. Long

92 P.2d 940, 33 Cal. App. 2d 725, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1939
DocketCiv. 2337
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 940 (Grant v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Long, 92 P.2d 940, 33 Cal. App. 2d 725, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 299 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an action for declaratory relief, and certain defendants have appealed from the judgment giving plaintiff the right to the free use of an apartment in the U. S. Grant Hotel in San Diego and free service and meals and refreshments (not including alcoholic beverages) for herself and her guests during the remainder of her life.

Appellants’ principal attack on the judgment is based on the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings, and the insufficiency of the findings to support the judgment. To properly understand and consider the issues thus raised requires a somewhat detailed statement of the evidence. We will, however, largely disregard the sharp conflicts in the evidence and confine ourselves to a summary of that which supports the findings and judgment.

Prior to 1909, U. S. Grant, Jr., owned an eleven-story hotel building on property facing on Broadway, between Third and Fourth Avenues, in the city of San Diego. In May, 1909, the U. S. Grant Hotel and Office Building Company was organized. We will hereafter refer to this corporation as the Hotel Company. In June, 1909, U. S. Grant, Jr., conveyed *728 the hotel property to the Hotel Company which has owned it ever since.

U. S. Grant, Jr., owned 16,000 shares, being all the issued capital stock of the Hotel Company, from which certain qualifying shares were issued to certain directors. In hereafter noting the various changes in ownership of the stock we will not take into consideration the qualifying shares standing in the names of directors but actually owned by others.

A bond issue in the sum of $600,000 was secured by a first lien on the hotel property. A second bond issue in the sum of $1,000,000 was secured by a second incumbrance on the property. A relatively small amount of these second mortgage bonds had been sold to the public. The balance of them, over $900,000 in par value, were owned by U. S. Grant, Jr. These bonds were regarded as an adjunct to ownership of the stock. When a sale of stock was made it carried with it a transfer of an equal proportionate amount of the bonds.

Shortly after the incorporation of the Hotel Company,-the U. S. Grant Company was organized. It was a family estate company, used for the purpose of holding the property of U. S. Grant, Jr., for the protection of his children, the issue of a marriage prior to his marriage to America W. Grant.

Prior to April 27, 1910, the Grant-Holmes Hotel Operating Company was organized. On that date it was given a lease on the hotel property, with the exception of some first floor stores. It was given a second lease for thirteen years on October 11, 1917. This lease did not contain any reservations of any hotel rooms. This company continued to operate the hotel until 1921, when it was seemingly permitted to go out of existence. The lease seems to have been abandoned by common consent.

U. S. Grant, Jr., was president and director of the Hotel Company, and of the U. S. Grant Company, up to the time of his death on September 26, 1929. He held the same positions in the Grant-Holmes Hotel Operating Company until it passed from the picture.

U. S. Grant, Jr., married America W. Grant in 1913. Shortly after their marriage they occupied a suite in the U. S. Grant Hotel. After a few years this suite was enlarged. They continued to occupy it until the death of Mr. Grant. They spent about $4,000 in remodeling four hotel rooms into a convenient living apartment which was separated from the *729 balance of the hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Grant were charged no rent for their apartment and were furnished free service and free meals and refreshments for themselves and their guests. After the death of Mr. Grant, Mrs. Grant continued to occupy the apartment and received like accommodations and service without charge. On March 11, 1935, the board of directors of the Hotel Company passed a resolution permitting her to use her apartment free of rent and allowing her complimentary charges of twenty-five dollars a week in lieu of the previous service of unlimited free meals and refreshments for herself and her guests. This was occasioned by the sudden growth of Mrs. Grant’s complimentary charges. In 1932 and 1933, they averaged about $750 per year for meals and refreshments. In January, 1935, her service for wines and liquors alone amounted to $198.55, and in February of that year, to $204.04.

This action on the part of the Hotel Company precipitated a controversy with Mrs. Grant. She maintained that what she had been receiving from the Hotel Company was a matter of right based on contract. The Hotel Company claimed it was a matter of accommodation under a revocable license.

In March, 1936, the Hotel Company caused Mrs. Grant to ' be notified that thereafter she would be charged $350 per month rent ftir the apartment and the value of the meals and refreshments furnished to her or her guests. This action followed.

After a protracted trial the court found that Mrs. Grant had a legally established right to the free use of the apartment and to free service, meals and refreshments, not including alcoholic beverages, for herself and her guests during the rest of her life. This appeal followed.

We must summarize the transfers of the stock and the second mortgage bonds of the Hotel Company in order to give a proper picture of the transactions which the trial judge took into consideration in rendering his judgment.

Mrs. Grant testified that in 1914, or 1915, she purchased from her husband, for $80,000, one-half of the issued stock and one-half of the second mortgage bonds of the Hotel -Company which were owned by him. On a statement prepared by an officer of the Hotel Company early in 1925, which showed the interest payments upon and ownership of these bonds, U. S. Grant, Jr., wrote the following: “U. S. Grant *730 Jr.’s % long since transferred to America W. Grant. U. S. Grant, Jr.” This statement was produced from the files of the Hotel Company.

No stock was transferred of record to the name of Mrs. Grant until August 12, 1920, when a certificate for five shares was issued to her. On March 8, 1923, a certificate for 3,997 shares was issued to U. S. and America W. Grant. On December 26, 1925, this certificate was canceled and one for 3,998 was issued to America W. Grant.

In 1914, 8,000 shares of the capital stock of the Hotel Company was issued to the U. S. Grant Company. This carried ownership of a proportionate share of the second mortgage bonds.

In the fall of 1919 Baron Long and E. L. Potter purchased from Barker, Holmes, the Barker Company, and U. S. Grant, Jr., stock of the Grant-Holmes Hotel Operating Company which equalled one-half of the issued stock of that company. The other half of the stock stood in the name of U. S. Grant, Jr.

Baron Long took over the active management of the hotel for the Grant-Holmes Hotel Operating Company in 1919, or • 1920.

At the time of this transfer of ownership and management, U. S. Grant, Jr., discussed with Baron Long the continuance of the use of the hotel apartment by himself and Mrs. Grant. Mr. Long testified that he replied to the questions of Mr. Grant as follows: “I said, ‘You are president of this company, Mr. Grant, and that entitles you to all privileges here.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 940, 33 Cal. App. 2d 725, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-long-calctapp-1939.