Ingvoldstad ex rel. Meyer v. Kings Wharf Island Enterprises, Inc.

19 V.I. 624
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedAugust 2, 1983
DocketCivil No. 1983/36
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 V.I. 624 (Ingvoldstad ex rel. Meyer v. Kings Wharf Island Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingvoldstad ex rel. Meyer v. Kings Wharf Island Enterprises, Inc., 19 V.I. 624 (vid 1983).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

The plaintiff landlord (“Ingvoldstad”) seeks in this action the for1 feiture and termination of the amended lease held by the defendant [626]*626tenant (“KWIE”) on the premises known as the King Christian Hotel in Christiansted. She asserts various breaches of the amended lease agreement and claims that they are of such a serious nature that they entitle her to possession of the hotel property, which has been in the hands of KWIE and its predecessor in interest under the amended lease in question and its antecedents since the mid-1960’s. The draconian relief of forfeiture and termination will not be granted. However, the Court will fashion relief aimed at curing present and future defaults by the tenant in performance of required terms and conditions.1

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This is not the first time that Ingvoldstad has sought termination of the amended lease under which KWIE is now the tenant. The amended lease is for a period of thirty years ending in July 1996, with a ten-year renewal option in favor of the tenant. At the present time, the annual rental is $19,800, increasing to $24,780 a year in 1986. These payments are “net, net” to the landlord, i.e., the tenant is responsible for all taxes and other expenses.

Suffice it to say that various tenants herein, have expended considerable sums, in the seven figures, on the property which is an operating hotel with a quality restaurant and other sub-tenants. It has been vastly enhanced in value since the 1960’s, all through efforts of tenants.

On the first occasion in which the plaintiff sought termination of the lease, that relief was refused. deMouy v. Ingvoldstad, 1979 St. T. & St. J. Supp. 188 (May 22, 1979), although Chief Judge Christian in his lengthy opinion required certain action to be taken by the tenant.2

There is no question in the Court’s mind that from the first instance to the present, the landlord has sought to regain possession of the property because the landlord believes that the lease provides little or no economic benefit to herself. Such is her attitude that on November 3, 1980, she filed in this Court an action against the attorneys who represented the landlord in the creation of the lease which is the subject of this litigation. Ingvoldstad v. Estate of Warren Young, et al., 18 V.I. 346 (D.V.I. 1981). (The ultimate result [627]*627in that case, a dismissal with prejudice, is reported at 95 F.R.D. 79.) In her complaint in that case, the plaintiff alleged that the leases “were negotiated with terms substantially disadvantageous” to the landlord, and that she has suffered damages consisting of the “loss of the market value of her interest in said real property and loss of rentals and profits which otherwise would have been realized in the amount of $2,000,000.”

Still retaining that viewpoint, the plaintiff again seeks termination of the lease in the case herein. She alleges that since 1979 the tenant is once again in default under the terms of the lease as to the amount of insurance coverage, the obligation to repair and maintain the premises, the obligation to provide the landlord with certain receipts for expenditures, and the obligation to properly apply to various governmental agencies for permits where appropriate. There are other claims of default as well. None of them includes nonpayment of rent.

Supporting the Court’s view that all of the efforts of the plaintiff are directed at regaining control of the property she believes was too cheaply leased is the fact she has not availed herself of any alternate remedies available to her under Restatement of Property (Second), Landlord and Tenant, Section 13.1. These alternate remedies include the recovery of damages for tenant’s nonperformance, and the recovery of the reasonable cost of performing the tenant’s promise. As stated, her interest is less in holding the tenant’s “feet to the fire” of performance, than in extinguishing all of the tenant’s rights.

Since the amended lease provided in Paragraph 27 thereof for binding arbitration, the Court ordered a stay of proceedings herein, and submitted the matter to arbitration by a panel of three arbitrators selected in accordance with the amended lease. The arbitrators were directed to review each and every claim of default and make findings of fact as to each claim, reserving to the Court the ultimate issue whether any default warranted termination of the lease.

The arbitrators took evidence for several days, and on May 17, 1983, their report was filed with the Court. Synthesized for the purposes of this portion of the opinion, but expanded upon later herein, the arbitrators’ findings were:

(1) The insurance coverage on the property at that time did not meet the requirements of the amended lease.

(2) There was inadequate continuing maintenance of the property as required under the amended lease, although the structural integrity of the building has not been impaired, the maintenance required being “superficial” in nature. The existence of a present [628]*628danger of structural damage to the building from moisture resulting from the chill water system was not established.

(3) The landlord waived any claims for default arising out of the requirement that the tenant keep the landlord informed as to plans, specifications, etc.

(4) The tenant failed to furnish the landlord with cost information respecting repairs, renovation or new construction. (The tenant reports to the Court that such information has now been furnished to the landlord.)

(5) The tenant failed to obtain governmental permits for reconstruction of the windows fronting King St., and for extension of the pier, but failure thereof has not resulted in any action being taken by such governmental agencies to nullify the tenant’s own action.

After the receipt of the arbitrators’ findings, the parties were given an opportunity to brief the question of what result should issue from those findings.

II. APPLICABLE LAW

A discussion of the legal factors in this case returns us to basic principles of the law of equity. The landlord seeks nothing less than the forfeiture of the lease by the tenant, and the landlord’s own possession of the property. A basic principle is that equity abhors a forfeiture. Jones v. New York Guaranty & Ind. Co., 101 U.S. 622, 628 (1879). Applying that principle to the species of case before us at present, it has uniformly been held that courts, on the basis of equity, are vested with the discretion under some circumstances to decline to grant a lessor cancellation of a lease, although such right appears available to him. Hebert v. Brasseaux, 399 So.2d 778 (La. 1981). Likewise, in Food Pantry v. Waikiki Business Plaza, Inc., 575 P.2d 869, 875-876, (Haw. 1978), the Court recalled the following rule of equity:

And in the exercise of its general equity jurisdiction over forfeitures and penalties, it may afford relief against forfeiture for the breach of a covenant in a lease .... (Citations omitted.)
. . .

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Related

Sunshine Shopping Center, Inc. v. Kmart Corp.
85 F. Supp. 2d 537 (Virgin Islands, 2000)
Ingvoldstad v. Kings Wharf Island Enterprises, Inc.
593 F. Supp. 997 (Virgin Islands, 1984)
Lodge, Inc. v. Caravelle Restaurant, Inc.
20 V.I. 268 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
19 V.I. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingvoldstad-ex-rel-meyer-v-kings-wharf-island-enterprises-inc-vid-1983.