Harris v. Bedell Co.

222 A.D. 467, 226 N.Y.S. 513, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8090
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 222 A.D. 467 (Harris v. Bedell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Bedell Co., 222 A.D. 467, 226 N.Y.S. 513, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8090 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The defendant, the Bedell Company, is a corporation engaged in dealing on a large scale in women’s ready-to-wear apparel, having been located at New York city in that line for thirty years. It conducts business in twelve different States.

The codefendant, the Ormond Realty Company, is a corporation utilized by the Bedell Company for handling its real property holdings. Both companies are practically owned by Alfred M. Bedell, their president, who holds all except directors’ qualifying shares.

The main place of business of the Bedell Company is its building at No. 19 West Thirty-fourth street, borough of Manhattan, city of New York. When it first located there it leased, through the Ormond Realty Company, the first three floors of No. 19 West Thirty-fourth street, running through to Thirty-fifth street. Two or three years later it leased the entire premises, and in 1919 the Ormond Realty Company took the fee title.

The company’s business was increasing and expanding during the period 1914-1918; and to acquire additional space the Bedell Company in 1916 rented, by taking an assignment of an existing lease, the adjoining building to the east, No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street, proceeding to occupy the ground floor and part of the basement in connection with its business.

No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street is a five-story building, 25 feet wide and approximately 100 feet deep.- The Bedell Company acquired it by taking an assignment of an existing lease, between Revillon Freres, Inc., and the London Feather and Novelty Company expiring April 30, 1927.

Two years later, January 18, 1918, the Bedell Company leased to the plaintiff the second, third, fourth and fifth floors and the roof of No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street for a period of nine years and three months, from February 1,1918, to April 30,1927, at an annual rental of $10,000. This sublease was expressly made subject to the lease from Revillon Freres to the London Feather and Novelty Company, which also expired April 30, 1927.

At the time of plaintiff’s sublease, in January, 1918, the Bedell Company was contemplating the erection of a new building covering not only No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street but also the property in the rear, running from Thirty-fourth street to Thirty-fifth street. It was to meet this contingency that the renewal clause was inserted in plaintiff’s sublease.

The sublease to plaintiff dated January 18, 1918, is plaintiff’s Exhibit 1. The renewal clause is as follows:

Twenty-fifth: It is agreed between the parties hereto that in the event that the landlord secures a renewal of its present lease or [469]*469at the end of the term makes a new lease covering the building 17 West 34th Street, the tenant shall have the option of renewing this lease for the renewal period granted the landlord, and if the tenant elects to exercise such option, he shall do so within thirty (30) days from receipt by him from the landlord of written request for decision at to whether or not the option is to be exercised. The terms of such renewal lease of the tenant shall be similar to his present lease, except that if the rent paid by the landlord for the renewal period be different from that now paid by the landlord, then the rent to be paid by the tenant shall bear the same proportion to the rent payable by the landlord under the renewal as the rent payable by the tenant under his present lease bears to the rent payable by the landlord under its present lease.
“If, however, at least six months prior to the expiration of this present lease the landlord shall have acquired the premises 17 West 34th Street and shall actually have filed plans for the erection of a new building covering same, and shall have given written notice to the tenant herein of such intention, then the option of the tenant to renew this lease, as above provided for, shall cease. * *

The essential facts are not disputed. They are chiefly matters of record established by documents filed in public offices and admitted in evidence.

At the time of plaintiff’s sublease in January, 1918, there were two principal obstacles to the erection of the contemplated new building on the expiration of plaintiff’s sublease. One was a lease of possibly forty-two years on No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street, running from the owner, Peck, to Frank Brothers and held by Revillon Freres, whereby the rights of the London Feather and Novelty Company, defendants’ assignor, expired April 30, 1927. The other was that Revillon Freres, who occupied the premises in the rear of No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street known as Nos. 26-28 West Thirty-fifth street, had a lease of twenty-one years on that property.

To provide for the imperative need of its expanding business, the Bedell Company proceeded to overcome these obstacles in the following manner:

In 1921 it caused the Ormond Realty Company to acquire from Revillon Freres their outstanding twenty-one-year leasehold on Nos. 26-28 West Thirty-fifth street, by paying them a premium of $500 a month additional rental. After acquiring the leasehold in the rear, the Bedell Company on May 1, 1923, acquired the lease from the owner of No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street and subsequently terms for sixty-three years were provided for in an agree[470]*470ment between the Bedell Company and the owner, Peck, modifying that lease.

On April 28,1926, the Bedell Company caused the Ormond Realty Company to file with the department of buildings plans for a new thirteen-story building to occupy the premises No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street as well as the premises in the rear on Thirty-fifth street. These plans provided for demolishing the existing buildings, excavating the site, and removing the east wall of No. 19 West Thirty-fourth street, so as to throw all the floor area of both buildings into common use, at an expenditure of about $700,000. As the plans involved not only the erection of a new building but an alteration of an existing building they had to be and were filed as “ alteration plans ” under the Building Code. A permit was finally issued by the building department on January 19, 1927.

As far back as 1925 Mr. Bedell had informed the plaintiff that he had decided to put up a new building and endeavored to persuade the plaintiff, for certain advantages, to vacate No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street before the end of his lease on April 30, 1927, but these efforts were unsuccessful.

On May 17, 1926, more than six months before the expiration of the plaintiff’s sublease, the Bedell Company served the following notice upon the plaintiff, due service thereof being admitted: “ 1. We have acquired the premises 17 West 34th St., (2) We have filed plans for the erection of a new building covering said premises, and intend to erect said building, and consequently (3) in accordance with the provisions of our lease to you of part of 17 West 34th Street, you will not have any option or right to renew said lease and said lease will expire April 30th, 1927.”

No attention was paid to this notice until December 2, 1926, when plaintiff wrote the Bedell Company that as it was not the owner in fee of No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street, he claimed the right to a renewal.

The plaintiff had during the period of his lease occupied the floor above the ground floor of No. 17 West Thirty-fourth street for his optical business. The upper floors he rented to tenants.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Fisher v. Sherman
21 N.E.2d 467 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1939)
Bedell Co. v. Harris
228 A.D. 529 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
222 A.D. 467, 226 N.Y.S. 513, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-bedell-co-nyappdiv-1928.