John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing

106 N.W.2d 205, 259 Minn. 111, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 658
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 18, 1960
Docket38,138
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 N.W.2d 205 (John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing, 106 N.W.2d 205, 259 Minn. 111, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 658 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Justice.

Appeal from a judgment of the district court.

Litigation concerning the will and trust of the late Theodore B. Sheldon, a resident of Red Wing who died in 1900, has been before this court on three previous occasions. See, Longcor v. City of Red Wing, 206 Minn. 627, 289 N. W. 570; John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing, 254 Minn. 1, 93 N. W. (2d) 660; Id. 256 Minn. 101, 97 N. W. (2d) 432. The facts and litigation involved have been set out in each of those cases as the situations required. For that reason, a prolonged explanation of the background is unnecessary.

Some of the defendants in the present action are members of the City Council of Red Wing and others are members of the T. B. Sheldon Auditorium Board. James Fraser was also made a party defendant. On January 23, 1959, the auditorium board entered into a lease with Fraser renting a part of the auditorium to him for uses including the showing of motion pictures.

Plaintiff, a taxpayer and the owner and operator of a motion picture theater in Red Wing known as the “Chief,” brought this action to enjoin the confirmation or renewal of that lease and to enjoin the making of any other leases in which the lessee might be authorized to conduct a motion picture business in the auditorium. Plaintiff’s theater and the auditorium are the only two motion picture theaters in Red Wing although there is a drive-in motion picture theater about 2 miles southeast of the city limits.

The auditorium property was conveyed by deed on October 10, 1904, to the city of Red Wing by the three trustees named in the last will and testament of Theodore B. Sheldon, with the provision, among others, that the care, custody, and management of the property should forever vest in five resident voters of the city, to be known as the T. B. Sheldon Auditorium Board. The auditorium board began to show mo *113 tion pictures in the auditorium in 1911 and this continued until our decision in John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing, 254 Minn. 1, 93 N. W. (2d) 660, referred to herein as the first Wright case.

Although plaintiff has raised many legal questions, it seems to us that the pertinent issues for our determination on this appeal are: (1) Is the present lease within the authority of the city and auditorium board, as agent of the city, or was the action ultra vires? (2) Is the lease in conflict with or in excess of the authority contained in the deed of October 10, 1904, conveying the auditorium to the city? (3) Is the lease in violation of the provisions of the will and trust of Theodore B. Sheldon, and does plaintiff have capacity to raise that issue?

The first time that this court considered the gift of the auditorium was in Longcor v. City of Red Wing, 206 Minn. 627, 289 N. W. 570. Under the facts of that case it was held that a gift on condition for charitable purposes was created rather than a charitable trust.

In the first Wright case, the present plaintiff sought to enjoin the auditorium board from showing motion pictures in the auditorium, and we held that, while the members of the auditorium board were given authority “to let or lease” the premises, no language could be found in the relevant documents indicating that the municipality or the auditorium board — an agency of the municipality — might, itself, engage in a private business upon the premises. After our decision in that case, the district court ordered judgment for plaintiff, permanently enjoining defendants, City of Red Wing, its council, and the T. B. Sheldon Auditorium Board, or any of them, from engaging in the operation of a motion picture business in the auditorium.

The matter next appeared in this court in John Wright & Associates, Inc. v. City of Red Wing, 256 Minn. 101, 97 N. W. (2d) 432, referred to herein as the second Wright case, which was a mandamus proceeding to compel the district court to enter judgment enjoining leasing the auditorium as allegedly required by the mandate of this court in its opinion in the first Wright case. In denying the writ, this court stated that the question of whether the city or the auditorium board might lease the auditorium to a third party had not been before *114 the trial court, nor had it been decided in the opinion in the first Wright case. We said (256 Minn. 104, 97 N. W. [2d] 435):

“* * * we held there that the use of the auditorium in the operation of a moving picture business was in excess of the municipal authority and the authority of the board created to manage the auditorium for the reason that the premises were not used for public purposes and that such activity was an unauthorized private commercial business and had no relation to the purposes of a municipal corporation. Whether or not the city or the board may lease the auditorium to a third party for the purpose of operating a moving picture theater is another question which was not before us. Accordingly, the trial court did not proceed in a manner which was inconsistent with our opinion.”

It therefore follows that the issue of the right to lease to Fraser, a third party, is not controlled by the opinion in the first Wright case since that case merely determined that the auditorium board could not itself show motion pictures in the auditorium.

It is our opinion that the auditorium board, an agency of the city, acted within its authority in leasing a part of the auditorium to a private person for purposes of theatrical entertainment, including the showing of motion pictures.

In Anderson v. City of Montevideo, 137 Minn. 179, 162 N. W. 1073, we held that where a municipal corporation in good faith erects a building for municipal purposes and includes an auditorium which is no longer needed for public use, and the leasing thereof will lighten the burden of taxation, the municipality has a legal right to lease the same for private use. See, also, Penn-O-Tex Oil Co. v. City of Minneapolis, 207 Minn. 307, 291 N. W. 131.

The lease here is limited to a period of 2 years. The lessee agrees to quit and deliver up the premises to the lessor peaceably and quietly at the end of that time or at any previous termination thereof for any cause. The lessor reserves the right to use the leased premises at any time it desires, with no reduction in rent on account of such use as long as the lessor does not use the premises for more than 12 days in any one year or more than 2 days in any one month. The lessee further agrees not to assign or underlet the premises or any part *115 thereof without the consent of the lessor or to use them for any so-called extrahazardous purpose. An examination of the lease satisfies us that the board, as an agency of the city, exercised every reasonable precaution to protect the rights of the city and that it did not go beyond its authority in entering into the lease.

We are also of the opinion that the lease was not in conflict with or in excess of the authority contained in the deed of October 10, 1904, conveying the auditorium to the city. The deed provided, among other things:

“The exclusive care, custody and management of said property shall be forever vested in five resident voters of said City, who shall constitute a body to be known as ‘The T. B. Sheldon Auditorium Board’.

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.W.2d 205, 259 Minn. 111, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-wright-associates-inc-v-city-of-red-wing-minn-1960.