Jenkins v. John Taylor Dry Goods Co.

179 S.W.2d 54, 352 Mo. 660, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 532
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 3, 1944
DocketNo. 38610.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 54 (Jenkins v. John Taylor Dry Goods Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. John Taylor Dry Goods Co., 179 S.W.2d 54, 352 Mo. 660, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 532 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

This cause originated when the inheritors of Andrew Paul Jenkins instituted an action to recover one month's rent, $833.33, from his original lessee, John Taylor Dry Goods Company, under a ninety-nine year lease. To the suit on the lease for the April 1942 rent the John Taylor Dry Goods Company answered that all obligations due by it under the lease had been fully discharged and paid and, after pleading the terms of the lease, set forth the circumstances upon which it relied as demonstrating that it had completely fulfilled its obligations to Andrew Paul Jenkins and his heirs under the lease. In addition John Taylor Dry Goods Company, by counterclaim and cross petition, set up that there were 790 more months (66 years) in the term of the lease sued upon and that despite the fact of its having fulfilled its obligations under the lease the inheritors of the leasehold were threatening suit for each month's rent as it came due and an injunction restraining the numerous threatened suits was asked. John Taylor Dry Goods Company also asked for a declaratory judgment as to the future rights, status and obligations of the parties under the lease. The cause was tried as an equity suit. The trial court found against the owners of the leasehold on their claim for rent and enjoined them from instituting further suits for rent. In addition the court declared that John Taylor Dry Goods Company had met and complied with the terms and conditions of the lease entitling it to be released of further duties or obligations to pay rent.

In 1909 John Taylor Dry Goods Company was apprehensive of encountering some difficulty in renewing its lease on the property on Main Street at Tenth and Eleventh Streets. Also Mr. John Taylor was of the opinion that the future downtown business district of Kansas City lay in the direction of Thirteenth Street and Grand Avenue. In view of these circumstances six lots at Thirteenth Street and Grand Avenue were purchased outright or leased for long terms in contemplation of moving the business of the company to a new location. *Page 664

On March 1, 1909 the Jenkins lot was leased for a term of ninety-nine years — to the last day of February 2008 — at an annual rental of $10,000.00, payable in monthly installments of $833.33. At the end of the term there was an option to purchase under [56] certain conditions. In the lease the company purchased the four-story brick building then on the lot for $40,000.00 and promised, within ten years, to erect new improvements at a cost of not less than $40,000.00. As a tenant the company agreed to maintain the improvements, pay taxes and charges and keep the premises insured. The lease contained clauses (to be discussed later) with reference to assignment, default and forfeiture.

The subsequent history of the lease and the succession of events culminating in this controversy are set forth in the two following paragraphs:

After the lease was executed the company did not change its business location. The principal business district did not move toward Thirteenth Street and Grand Avenue and, within a short time, it became apparent that the course of events contemplated and inducing the procuring of the lease would not likely transpire. The lease became onerous and Mr. Taylor's brothers and business associates who were never wholly of his views as to the future became dissatisfied with the lease and its burdens as an obligation of the company. But, whatever the underlying causes or reasons may have been, on March 18, 1913 John Taylor Dry Goods Company, in consideration of one dollar, assigned the lease to Mr. Taylor personally and he assumed all future obligations under the lease. By 1917 the section of the lease as to improvements had not been complied with and Andrew Paul Jenkins with his wife, the John Taylor Dry Goods Company and Mr. Taylor entered into an agreement extending the time for compliance five years or until the termination of the war. The extension agreement recited that it was not to operate as a release of any previously existing obligation of the company or of Mr. Taylor to Jenkins. In 1917 Mr. Taylor and his wife leased the remaining ninety years of the term to Mr. Robinson who agreed to erect a building on all of the lots, including the Jenkins lot, at a cost of not less than $250,000.00. Robinson, in turn, assigned the lease to White and White assigned to the Grande Building Company. During this period of time the four-story brick building was razed and construction of the thirteen-story $250,000.00 building was begun but after a basement and the concrete and steel skeleton of the building reached three stories the project was abandoned. In 1928 White and the Grande Building Company reassigned the lease to Robinson and Robinson, in turn, assigned the lease to Mr. Taylor's widow and heirs. By 1931 both Mr. Taylor and Mr. Jenkins were dead and the requirements as to improvements had not been met and in that year Mrs. Jenkins and her family, the inheritors of Mr. Jenkins, *Page 665 granted the company until 1934 in which to comply with the lease as well as pay certain taxes then in arrears and certain mechanics' liens. This extension also provided that it was not to release the company or its assigns from any previously existing obligations under the original lease. Subsequently the three-story concrete and steel skeleton was removed. In 1941 and prior to April 1942 a new one-story building with basement, costing in excess of $40,000.00, was constructed on the Jenkins lot by Mr. Taylor's heirs and successors. On April 28, 1942, the heirs of John Taylor assigned the lease to Benjamin F. Broyles, paying him $500.00 to accept the assignment, the obligations of the lease and possession of the premises. Mr. Broyles was not responsible financially and had neither the ability nor the intention of carrying out the rent obligations of the lease. After this last assignment the John Taylor Dry Goods Company and all the heirs of John Taylor furnished the widow and heirs of Andrew Paul Jenkins certified copies of the official records of all instruments effecting assignments and transfers of the leasehold and no further rent was paid.

Up to April 1942 the annual rental of $10,000.00 had been paid. Several times, three or four (in 1932 and 1933) the rent was in arrears and each time suit was instituted against John Taylor Dry Goods Company for the rent. Each time, after the suits, the payment of rent was resumed. Throughout the years the monthly rent was deposited in the First National Bank to the credit of Mr. Jenkins and after his death to the credit of his successors. Prior to 1913 the rent was paid by the John Taylor Dry Goods Company but after the assignment to Mr. Taylor in 1913, the company's evidence shows, the rent was advanced by the company but charged to Mr. Taylor's personal account, after his death to his estate, then to the John Taylor Trust Account and finally to two of the sons as agents and representatives of the Taylor heirs.

[1] On this appeal the Jenkins family contends that the lease contains a special written covenant by which the tenant, John Taylor Dry Goods Company, promised and bound itself to pay the specified rent [57] throughout the whole term of ninety-nine years and that it is obligated for the rent for the whole term, even though the lease has been assigned, because the covenant to pay rent is in addition to all other covenants in the lease. They concede that the lease contains a provision permitting its assignment but contend that the covenant to pay rent is in addition to all other payments required; an express covenant continuing the lessee's and lessor's privity of contract in plain, unambiguous language.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 54, 352 Mo. 660, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-john-taylor-dry-goods-co-mo-1944.