Kevich v. R. L. C., Inc.

343 P.2d 402, 173 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1589
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 1959
DocketCiv. 17922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 343 P.2d 402 (Kevich v. R. L. C., Inc.) 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
Kevich v. R. L. C., Inc., 343 P.2d 402, 173 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1589 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

By this action plaintiffs seek monetary relief from defendants Morris Bernstein and R. L. C., Inc., a corporation. The judgment denied them recovery except to the extent of $116.67 as against the defendant corporation, from which portion only of the judgment plaintiffs have appealed.

*317 Commencing in September, 1951, plaintiffs were tenants of the store premises at Number 40 Lakeshore Plaza under a lease from Pacific Coast Construction Company for a term ending November 14, 1956, at a monthly rental of $350, conducting thereat a retail toy, stationery, card and gift shop business.

On April 20, 1955, plaintiffs delivered possession to the defendant corporation upon an oral sublease at a rental of $350 per month. Upon such subletting there ensued negotiations for a written lease. A writing was agreed upon but not signed. Thereafter, in October, 1955, plaintiffs gave the sub-lessee notice that the rent would increase to $1,000 a month commencing December 1, 1955.

There were negotiations also for a concession from the defendant corporation to plaintiffs for the conduct of a toy, greeting card and similar business in the defendant’s retail establishment.

At the time of the subletting plaintiffs left on the premises a neon sign and a number of tables and counters, of which they never regained possession.

Plaintiffs claim that the subletting to defendant corporation, the granting of a concession by the corporation to the plaintiffs, and the discontinuing of plaintiffs’ business at the demised premises constituted a single, consummated transaction. They seek the increased rent from and after December 1, 1955, damages for defendant’s failure to effectuate the proposed concession, the value of the goodwill of plaintiffs’ business, the value of the sign, the tables and the counters, and recompense for plaintiff Sidney Kevieh’s services in planning and getting ready to engage in business as a concessionaire of defendant.

The trial court’s findings were against plaintiffs upon all issues except its finding that defendant corporation had not paid the rent of the subleased premises for the period extending from April 21 through April 30, 1955, at the rate of $350 per month, plus interest thereon from May 1, 1955.

(1) It was found that independently and apart from the subletting, and disconnected from the consideration of the sublease, plaintiff Sidney Kevich and one Irving Viner, after the subletting, formed a partnership to negotiate with the defendant corporation to become (as partners) concessionaires of a toy department within the retail business organization *318 of the corporation; as such partners, Kevich and Viner carried on the negotiations until some day in the week beginning August 15, 1955, whereupon the negotiations collapsed; and no concession agreement was ever reached or entered into.

Mr. Bernstein’s testimony supports this finding. He testified that he was first approached concerning a toy concession in September or October of 1954 by Mr. Viner and Mr. Kevich. The first time in 1955 that a concession was discussed with Kevich was when he was about to vacate the store. Bernstein told him he had no room. After Kevich vacated the premises, he kept coming into the main store reiterating his desire to have a concession within the store. Bernstein consistently told him that there was no room at that time. The defendant corporation was not very interested in selling toys. Kevich was not promised a concession if one became available but that he would be considered, because Bernstein discussed his concessions with his associates and could not absolutely promise one. In June or July, Kevich told Bernstein that that was the time to buy toys, and Bernstein told him he did not see the urgency of it as they had bought toys late in the season before. Kevich told him that he was going to buy toys for his California Street store and suggested buying for the concession. Bernstein told him that if he wanted to, he could buy and Bernstein would take what Kevich could not use when they opened a toy department, if Kevich did not get the concession and no one else had the concession. In July, Bernstein told Kevich that “evidently we would be unable to have a concession department in toys,” and suggested that Kevich rent the Rene store nearby, referred to also as the dress shop, and put in a toy store there for the Christmas holidays. Kevich was told that if he could take the store, defendant would not carry toys. But Pacific Construction would not rent the store to Kevich. After Pacific Construction reported this to Kevich, Kevich informed Bernstein. That was the last conversation Bernstein and Kevich had on the subject.

(2) The testimony of plaintiffs’ accountant concerning the financial history of the business tends to support the finding that the goodwill of the business conducted by plaintiffs at Number 40 Lakeshore Plaza was valueless.

Moreover, in the absence of a contract for purchase of the business or for its continuation as a concession, we perceive nothing in the record that could serve as a basis for charging *319 the defendant corporation with the loss of the business whatever its value may have been.

(3) The court found against plaintiffs’ claim for $1,250 as the reasonable value of Sidney Kevich’s time for two and a half months in getting ready to conduct business as a concessionaire of the defendant corporation. The failure of the parties to consummate negotiations for such a concession, supports the trial court’s finding and conclusion that there was no basis for such a claim.

Plaintiffs seem to place some reliance upon Mr. Bernstein’s testimony that when Kevich told him that June or July was the proper time to buy toys, Bernstein told Kevich to go ahead if he wanted to and whatever Kevich could not use defendant would take off his hands if Kevich did not get the concession and if no one else had the concession. This could hardly be considered as an agreement to compensate Kevich for his services as a buyer. Upon the contrary, it would appear that Kevich by buying in June or July, when he knew he did not have a concession agreement, did so in the hope he might eventually obtain a concession. If such were the fact, it was a business risk he took; at least it was susceptible of such an interpretation, one which we consider the trial court impliedly placed upon it.

(4) There is in the evidence substantial support for the finding that the sign, the tables and the counters were left on the premises when the plaintiffs went away in April, 1955, and were later abandoned by plaintiffs.

It is undisputed that Kevich left the tables and sign, and that he did not complain, or try to recover the sign after it was removed, nor protest the defendant’s use of the tables. Moreover, there was testimony on behalf of defendants that Kevich told them the sign was worthless, and that Kevich removed certain property by truck but did not take the tables. Prom these circumstances, it is a fair inference that Kevich left the property ‘because he no longer desire[d] to possess it, or thereafter to assert any right or dominion over it.’ ” (Lawrence v. Fulton, 19 Cal. 683, 691.)

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Bluebook (online)
343 P.2d 402, 173 Cal. App. 2d 315, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevich-v-r-l-c-inc-calctapp-1959.