Interstate Co. v. Bry-Block Mercantile Co.

30 F.2d 172, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1676
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedMay 30, 1928
Docket1001
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 172 (Interstate Co. v. Bry-Block Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Co. v. Bry-Block Mercantile Co., 30 F.2d 172, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1676 (W.D. Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

Statement of Facts.

ANDERSON, District Judge.

Plaintiff has filed its bill of complaint, with supporting affidavits and a prayer for a *173 temporary injunction, and defendant has moved to dismiss for legal insufficiency. Therefore the facts to be stated are taken entirely from the plaintiffs pleadings, whore naturally their statement is fully as strong as the ultimate facts could possibly warrant, and in addition thereto the inferences and deductions therefrom are to be taken in favor of plaintiff. Whatever facts the ultimate record 'may disclose on final hearing, at this stage of the hearing the facts — at least those facts to be considered by the court — are as follows:

The complainant is a Delaware corporation engaged in the restaurant business, and the defendant is a Missouri corporation, with its principal place of business in Memphis, where it conducts a largo department store. The matter in dispute involves more than $3,000, exclusive of costs and interest, and consists of an equitable claim to a leasehold interest in real property situated within the Western division of this judicial district.

Prior to January 1, 1927, the Britling Cafeteria rented space and conducted a restaurant in Dry’s store. Its lease and contract expired on that date and were not renewed. The defendant desired the restaurant to be continued for the convenience of tlie patrons of its store. The president of the Bry-Block Company at that time was J ohn Meneh, and E. M. Salomon was its first vice president. Before the expiration of the Britling- eon-tract, Meneh went to St. Louis and there began negotiations with H. C. Koehler, senior vice president of plaintiff, for the latter to take over the restaurant, rent the premises occupied by it, and boy the Britling fixtures. The terms of the trade were substantially agreed on, and among others the plaintiff was to have a five-year lease, with an option to renew for another five years, and the management of the defendant was to assist plaintiff in obtaining the Britling fixtures and equipment at a lair price.

On January 12, 1928, plaintiff reduced this agreement to writing and Koehler, accompanied by Aymar, another vice president of plaintiff, took the contract to Atlanta, where Meneh, the defendant’s president, was visiting- on business, and there the represented tives of the two concerns went over it in detail; Meneh stating that the contract contained the agreement previously entered into, but that he wanted it to conform, in verbiage, to a contract between the Nugent Company, of St. Louis, and the defendant, and he also wanted its approval by the general counsel of the defendant in New York. He told the representatives of the plaintiff, however, that he would sign the contract, containing the stipulations as written, except for formal changos to make it conform to the Nugent contract, requested them to act as though the contract were already signed, and urged them to hasten the opening of the restaurant.

Plaintiff, on the request of defendant’s president, and with the assistance of Meneh and other officials of the defendant, purchased the Britling equipment for $11,000. This equipment was adapted for use in the premises where it was located, was not susceptible of use elsewhere, and some of it was in the form of fixtures attached to the premises, which probably, in law, would be the property of the landlord. The complainant also spent some $3,000 or $1,000 in cleaning, renovating, and redecorating the rooms where the restaurant was to be conducted, opened the restaurant and conducted it at a loss till nearly the time when the bill was filed in this cause, when the business began to get on a paying basis.

Meneh seems to have consulted the counsel for his-firm in New York, and was there directed by counsel, and by the chief stockholders in defendant’s corporation, to sign the lease, but, as ho says in his affidavit, “by default and oversight” he neglected to do so. Mench’s connection with the company was rather suddenly terminated shortly thereafter, and he was succeeded by Salomon as president. The bill alleges, and the court must accept the allegation as true, that Salomon was entirely familiar with the agreement between Meneh and Koehler, was present at some of the negotiations and was informed of every step of: the transaction.

Some time after Salomon became defendant’s president, a correspondence started between him and Koehler, about a gas bill of the restaurant; Salomon contending that the contract between the two companies provided that defendant should pay only for illuminating gas, and Koehler arguing that, insomuch as no illuminating gas was used in the restaurant, the lighting being entirely by electricity, the contract necessarily referred to gas used for cooking purposes. As is not infrequently the ease where business men conduct an argument by letters, instead of talking the matter over face to face, the correspondence started off in a most pleasant and friendly manner; then the tone of the letters became colder and colder, and finally wound up with Koehler demanding that Salomon sign the lease he had tendered Meneh, and Salomon informing Meneh that he had no lease, and giving him some 30 or 60 days notice to vacate.

*174 The restaurant company then filed its bill of complaint, asking for a permanent and temporary injunction to prevent the plaintiff being dispossessed, and praying that, by equitable estoppel, the lease tendered Meneh by Koehler either be treated as signed, or that by mandatory injunction Salomon be directed to sign the lease. To this the defendant filed a motion “to dismiss the original bill herein because the relief sought therein is based on an alleged oral lease for more than one year, which said oral' lease, even if made, is void because it is for more than one year and not in writing, signed by the parties, as required by the statute of frauds of Tennessee, being section 3142 of the Code.”

Other questions are raised by the bill of complaint, such as the sufficiency of the notice to vacate, the rule as to tenancies from year to year, etc.; but these are not necessary to discuss. The whole matter turns on the question of whether the doctrine of equitable estoppel, in Tennessee, can be applied by a court of equity, in contravention of the exact wording of the statute of frauds. It. is true that plaintiff;, by amendment to its bill, sets out the letters from Salomon to Koehler, as taking the case out of the statute of frauds; but that matter is easily disposed of, for the reason that these letters nowhere set out the details of, or indeed' even recognize the existence of, the written, but unsigned, contract tendered Mench by Koehler.

■ Contentions of the Parties.

(A) Plaintiff contends that, though the statute of frauds is applied very strictly in Tennessee, the doctrine of equitable estoppel is recognized and applied in proper eases involving the statute of frauds, and relies on Williams v. Conrad, 11 Humph. (Tenn.) 412; Patton v. McClure, Mart. & Y. (8 Tenn.) 333; Heiskell v. Cobb, 11 Heisk. (Tenn.) 638; White v. Motley, 4 Baxt. (Tenn.) 544; Woods v. McGavock, 10 Yerg. (Tenn.) 133.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 172, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-co-v-bry-block-mercantile-co-tnwd-1928.