Keating v. Preston

108 P.2d 479, 42 Cal. App. 2d 110, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 21
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1940
DocketCiv. 6403; Civ. 6404
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 479 (Keating v. Preston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keating v. Preston, 108 P.2d 479, 42 Cal. App. 2d 110, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 21 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Acting P. J.

The above-entitled suits were consolidated for trial. Both actions involve the validity and construction of a lease of a portion of hotel property in Sierra Madre for the purpose of conducting a restaurant business. The first ease is a suit to terminate the lease for alleged breach of an implied covenant not to violate section 337a of the Penal Code by accepting wagers from restaurant customers on horse races. The second suit sought to enjoin the lessor from demising or using space in the hotel for a competing restaurant business, and from closing the doorway communicating between the lessee’s restaurant and the hotel lobby. The court adopted findings in both cases adverse to the lessor. From the judgments which were accordingly rendered separate notices of appeal were given.

May 1, 1935, the Farmers & Merchants National Bank of Los Angeles executed its written lease to Deborah Preston of “All the space . . . necessary to do the restaurant busi *114 ness”, together with the right to “serve . . . liquors not only on the leased premises but also in any part of the hotel” for the term of three years, in consideration of monthly rental “to be paid on the 5th of the month for the previous calendar month”. The lease provides for the right of the lessor to re-enter the premises for failure to pay any installment of rent when due or “if default shall be made in any of the covenants herein contained”. The restaurant occupied a portion of the ground floor of the Hotel Sierra Madre which was conducted by the appellant in the remaining portion of the two-story hotel building fronting on West Central Avenue in that city. At all the times involved in this litigation the appellant, Helen R. Keating, managed and operated the hotel business in that building. There was a doorway connecting the restaurant with the lobby of the hotel, which was commonly used by the lessee in providing the guests of the hotel with both food and liquor. The restaurant contained no adequate wash-room or toilet. By common consent, the hotel wash-room and toilet were frequently used by customers of the restaurant. The hotel property and lease of the restaurant were conveyed to the appellant, Helen R. Keating, January 29, 1937. Both the hotel and the restaurant were patronized by many persons who were interested directly and indirectly in horse racing. During much of the time involved in this litigation the appellant employed in her hotel a clerk by the name of Frank Fishbaek, who accepted money from both the appellant and from many of her hotel guests, to be delivered to the proper parties at the race track as wagers on horse races. It appears that Deborah Preston, the lessee of the restaurant property, also occasionally accepted money from her restaurant customers to be placed on horse races. The appellant first heard that the lessee accepted money for that purpose, as an accommodation to her customers, in November and December, 1936. The appellant had positive knowledge on February 19, 1937, that the lessee accepted money for that purpose. On March 4th, the appellant demanded and on the following day accepted rent for the restaurant for the month of February, which accrued on March 5, 1937. After the execution of the lease the appellant closed and barred the door intervening between the restaurant and her hotel, and threatened to lease to other individuals another portion of her hotel to be operated as a restaurant or cocktail room in competition with the respondent’s restaurant, Mrs, *115 Keating then brought suit to rescind the lease of the restaurant property on the ground of breach of covenant not to use the property for a purpose other than that of maintaining a restaurant, and that the violation of section 337a of the Penal Code, in accepting money to be wagered on horse races, constituted a forfeiture of the lease.

About the same time Deborah Preston commenced another suit against Mrs. Keating, seeking to enjoin her from leasing any other portion of her hotel property to other persons for the purpose of operating a restaurant in competition with the respondent’s restaurant. This suit was tried on the theory that the lease of the restaurant gave Deborah Preston exclusive right to conduct a restaurant in the Sierra Madre hotel property.

The lease does not specifically restrict the use of the premises to that of the restaurant business. It merely demises “All the space in the Hotel Sierra Madre . . . necessary to do the restaurant business”. That language may be susceptible of construction implying that the lease of premises was not necessarily restricted to a use only for the restaurant business. The lease does further provide that the lessor may reenter the premises for failure to pay rent when it is due, and “if default shall be made in any of the covenants herein contained”. Section 1930 of the Civil Code provides that:

“When a thing is let for a particular purpose the hirer must not use it for any other purpose; and if he does, he is liable to the letter for all damages resulting from such use, or the letter may treat the contract as thereby rescinded.”

The preceding section of the code has been held to apply to the leasing of real property, as well as to the hiring of personal property. (Isom v. Rex Crude Oil Co., 147 Cal. 659, 661 [82 Pac. 317]; 15 Cal. Jur. 672, see. 81.) Unless the lease specifically limits the use of the property to a particular purpose, or that restriction is necessarily inferred from the language which is employed, the lease may not be forfeited on account of the mere use of the property for another purpose even though that be an illegal use prohibited by statute, for the reason that forfeitures of leases are not favored by the law. But under such circumstances the lessor will be compelled to resort to a suit for damages or for injunctive relief to compensate him or to prevent a continued unauthorized use of the premises.

*116 The appellant concedes at page 92 of her opening brief that the lessee was not restricted by the terms of her lease to use the demised property exclusively for conducting a restaurant therein, and upon the contrary admits that she might conduct any other lawful business in the leased premises. She says in that regard:

“Under the lease, she (Deborah Preston) is probably not even obligated to conduct a restaurant but might, under the provisions thereof, conduct any other kind of lawful business. ’ ’

By her preceding language the appellant admits that section 1930 of the Civil Code has no application to the facts of this case. That section merely declares that a contract may be treated as rescinded on account of a breach of covenant not to use the property for a purpose different from that which is specified in the lease “when a thing is let for a particular purpose" If the property in question was not leased “for a particular purpose”, then there is no statutory provision authorizing the forfeiture of a lease merely because it may be used for an illegal purpose. The remedy for such illegal use of leased property is a suit for damages or injunctive relief.

That rule is concisely stated in 2 Tiffany on Landlord and Tenant, page 1359, section 193, where it is said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 479, 42 Cal. App. 2d 110, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keating-v-preston-calctapp-1940.