Hempstead Theatre Corp. v. Metropolitan Playhouses, Inc.

16 Misc. 2d 781, 183 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3873
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1958
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Misc. 2d 781 (Hempstead Theatre Corp. v. Metropolitan Playhouses, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hempstead Theatre Corp. v. Metropolitan Playhouses, Inc., 16 Misc. 2d 781, 183 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3873 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Samuel C. Oolemak, J.

Two clauses of the agreements, it seems to me, dispose of the controversy between the litigants. [783]*783The first is contained in the consolidation agreement of March 21,1947, subdivision V of article First, and the second, in clause Fourteenth in each of the separate leases of the same date. The provision in the consolidation agreement defines “ Gross Receipts ” upon which the percentage rental amount was to be paid (in addition to a fixed rental) as follows: “‘gross receipts ’, as used in this agreement, shall be deemed to include all income and revenue arising from the operation of each of the demised premises, less such gross receipts taxes as may be levied, imposed or assessed against such gross receipts, including all receipts of whatsoever kind derived from each of said demised premises, and without limiting the generality of the foregoing, shall include: (1) all box office receipts excluding taxes on admissions; (2) all rentals and/or income derived from apartments, stores, offices or rentable space contained in said theatres, and all income derived from concessions and advertising; (3) all net receipts derived from the sale of admission or coupons outside of the box office.”

The other clause deals with subletting and assignment: ‘ ‘ The Tenant shall be permitted to freely assign this lease or sublet the whole, or any portion of the demised premises, together with all the equipment and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and may freely mortgage, pledge and hypothecate the same, subject to the lien(s) or prior existing mortgage(s), if any, and subject to any future mortgage obtained by the landlord, in an amount not exceeding the amount permitted to the landlord by this lease, without the written consent of the Landlord, provided, however, that notwithstanding any assignment, subletting or mortgage, the Tenant shall still remain liable for the faithful performance of all of the provisions of this lease, and shall continue liable for the rent, as though no assignment or subletting or mortgage had been made ’ \

The controversy revolves upon the manner in which sales of candies and refreshments are to be computed to determine the percentage rental. It arises as follows:

The plaintiffs, landlords, leased four theatres to the defendant Metropolitan by the consolidation agreement and by four separate leases, one for each theatre. Metropolitan sublet to the defendant Skouras. Skouras entered into a “ concession agreement” with the defendant Circuit Vendors, Vendors paying a fixed annual amount for the candy and refreshment concession. The amount Skouras received from Vendors it paid to Metropolitan, and Metropolitan in turn paid the plaintiffs the appropriate percentage on the amount received. The percentage was 20% for each of the years in question (art. [784]*784First, III [A], of the consolidation agreement). Metropolitan paid this amount on the assumption that the annual concession fee it received from Skouras was ‘ income derived from concessions.” But, say the plaintiffs, there was no concession in fact from Skouras to Vendors; Skouras received for itself the full receipts from the sale of candy and refreshments and Metropolitan should have reported those receipts to the plaintiffs and paid the proper percentage on them, that is, 20%, as part of “ all receipts of whatsoever kind derived from each of said demised premises ”. I agree with the plaintiffs.

Vendors is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Skouras, organized by Skouras and having only a nominal capital. It exists only in name; it does not maintain its own organization; it has no independent corporate life; apparently there has been only one formal meeting of Vendors,— the organization meeting; there are no minutes of any contractual or financial arrangement between Skouras and Vendors, although they were borrowing and lending one another large sums; no minutes on how Vendors was to carry on the candy and refreshment business. The executive officers of Vendors who were also officers or directors of Skouras received their compensation from Skouras,— nothing from Vendors; the managing employees of Vendors received their compensation from Skouras. Vendors limits its “ activities ’ ’ to the Skouras theatres; those ‘ ‘ activities ’ ’ in turn are limited to purchasing the candy with funds “ borrowed ” from Skouras; Vendors keeps no records of the cost of operating the refreshment stands. The actual operations of the display and sale of candy were carried on in the theatres by the regular staff of Skouras theatre employees, who were paid by Skouras, because this method was considered more advantageous to Skouras. “We all in the business ”, George Skouras said on his examination before trial, speaking of terminating an arrangement with an existing bona fide concessionaire, “ felt that we would do substantially more if we ran [it] ourselves rather than through a concessionaire ’ ’. The decision to terminate the existing concession and to interpose Vendors was Skouras’ decision, he added, although nominally Vendors was to buy out the concessionaire paying with funds borrowed from a bank, repayment to the bank being guaranteed by Skouras. Indeed, there was no ‘ ‘ concession ’ ’; Skouras ‘ ‘ ran it themselves ” using the name of Vendors whose corporate existence for present purposes should be ignored. (Cf. Rapid Tr. Subway Constr. Co. v. City of New York, 259 N. Y. 472, 487, 488; Berkey v. Third Ave. Ry. Co., 244 N. Y. 84, 94; Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U. S. 349, 361, 362; Hollander v. Henry, 186 F. 2d [785]*785582, 584, 585; Luchenbach S. S. Co. v. Grace & Co., 267 F. 676, 681; Lehigh Val. Ry. Co. v. Dupont, 128 F. 840.)

"What, then, are the consequences? If we ignore Vendors,— Skouras was selling its own candy and was receiving “ gross receipts ”, and those receipts should have been reported by Metropolitan to the landlords. If there had been no sublease to Skouras, Metropolitan would have been required to pay a percentage of the gross receipts on the candy sales as part of the rental and, by reference to clause Fourteenth in the separate leases, the interposition of Skouras does not diminish Metropolitan’s liability: “ Notwithstanding any * * * subletting, the Tenant shall still remain liable for the faithful performance of all of the provisions of this lease, and shall continue liable for the rent, as though no * * * subletting * * * had been made.” To be sure, if Metropolitan, without subletting, had granted a bona fide concession, its liability to the plaintiffs would have been limited by what it received; the lease so provides: ‘ ‘ income from concession ’ ’. And we may assume the result would be the same if Skouras had granted a bona fide concession; that is the defendants’ position and, similarly, the plaintiffs’. Indeed, the defendants in their brief say that the only question in this case that could be raised would seem to be whether the said license concession fees provided in the agreements between Circuit Vendors and Skouras were, as alleged in the answer “fair and reasonable” under all the circumstances, and ‘ arrived at fairly and equitably and in good faith and in accord with standard practice and usage in such business ”. But that question cannot arise here as there was no concession.

Metropolitan cannot say that if there were no concession it would not have had to pay on the basis of “ gross receipts ”.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Misc. 2d 781, 183 N.Y.S.2d 972, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hempstead-theatre-corp-v-metropolitan-playhouses-inc-nysupct-1958.