Kostakes v. Daly

75 N.W.2d 191, 246 Minn. 312, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 3, 1956
Docket36,603
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 N.W.2d 191 (Kostakes v. Daly) 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
Kostakes v. Daly, 75 N.W.2d 191, 246 Minn. 312, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 514 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Murphy, Justice.

This appeal grows out of an unlawful detainer action for the restitution of certain commercial premises in the city of Rochester, *313 Minnesota. Plaintiff claims the right to restitution by reason of a breach of condition as to use on the part of the defendant-appellant, Schwen Ice Cream & Candy Company. The suit was initially instituted in municipal court and the resulting decision for the plaintiff was appealed to the district court. After trial in the district court resulting in findings for the plaintiff, the defendant, Schwen Ice Cream & Candy Company, appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The premise in question, which is a two-story brick structure with basement, is owned by one Irene Daley. On November 8, 1941, she leased the property to the plaintiff for a period of ten years. On September 8,1947, the lease was extended for an additional six years to November 9, 1957, the rent being increased approximately $40 to a total of $285 a month. On May 1, 1948, Kostakes sublet the first floor and basement of the property to one Van Eraven for a period of seven years at a monthly rental of $275. Subsequently Van Eraven transferred his interest in the sublease to Joseph Daly. On January 20, 1953, Kostakes and Joseph Daly entered into a new lease including the same floor and basement at an agreed monthly rental of $350 for the period beginning February 1, 1953, and ending November 9, 1957, which was the day on which Kostakes’ lease with the owner, Irene Daley, was to terminate.

The pertinent provisions of this agreement are as follows:

“[The Lessee takes the described premises] To Have And To Hold, The said premises just as they are, * * * for the following purposes, to-wit: off sale liquor store.
“* * * if said leased premises shall be appropriated to or used for any other purpose or use than is hereinbefore specified: * * * the said Lessee does hereby authorize and fully empower said Lessor or his agent to cancel and annul this lease at once and to re-enter and take possession of said premises immediately and by force if necessary, without any previous notice of intention to re-enter, and remove all persons and their property therefrom, * * *. Should lessee desire to assign this lease to third party, lessor agrees to give his consent thereto but in the event of any such assignment by lessee the lessee *314 shall not be relieved from any obligation to pay all of the rentals specified in this lease.”

A short time after this agreement was made, Joseph Daly began negotiations with the defendant Schwen Ice Cream & Candy Company for the assignment of Daly’s interest in the lease to that defendant. Before the Schwen company completed its agreement with Joseph Daly for the transfer of his interest in the property, it contacted the owner, Irene Daley, who was then in California. On February 14, 1953, it made a contract with her whereby she leased the first floor and basement to the Schwen company for a period beginning November 9, 1957, when her lease to Kostakes was to expire, and extending until the 9th day of March 1963. After obtaining this lease the Schwen company took the assignment of Joseph Daly’s interest, for which it paid him the sum of $12,000, and assumed Daly’s obligation to pay the monthly rental of $350 to the plaintiff.

About February 25, 1953, Joseph Daly, who had been operating an off-sale liquor business, vacated the premises and moved to a different location. At that time the defendant Schwen company took possession and immediately began to repair and remodel the building so as to make it suitable for use as an ice cream and confectionery establishment. Kostakes apparently learned of the assignment to the Schwen company a short time after the transaction at which time he expressed the view to Daly 2 that the premises could not be leased to anyone unless they had an off-sale liquor license. There was some evidence that Kostakes, who lived on the second floor of the property, had made some attempts to notify the Schwen company of his disapproval of its intended use of the building by complaining to various workmen about the premises, but these conversations were denied.

On approximately February 27, 1953, the defendant company submitted its first rent check payable to Kostakes in the amount of $350 to the First National Bank of Rochester. The payment of the rent *315 to the bank was in pursuance of Joseph Daly’s practice of paying monthly rental to the bank where it was applied to Kostakes’ account. The rent was for the month of March 1953 and the check therefor was accepted and endorsed by the bank for Kostakes. The latter claimed he personally knew nothing of the bank’s receipt of the check and it does not appear that the bank accepted on behalf of Kostakes any further checks tendered by the Schwen company. On March 1, 1953, the Schwen company placed a sign in the window indicating that the property was to become the “New home of Schwen’s Ice Cream Store.”

On April 25, 1953, the plaintiff notified the defendant-appellant in writing that he considered the lease violated because the building was being used for purposes other than an off-sale liquor establishment. At that point in time, the Schwen company had expended something over $10,000 in remodeling the premises. Upon refusal of Schwen to vacate the premises, the plaintiff commenced this action in unlawful detainer.

As a result of the series of transactions herein detailed, the relations of the parties with respect to the property and to each other should be noted. When on January 20, 1953, Kostakes sublet the first floor and basement to Joseph Daly for a period extending to November 9,1957, the transaction became an assignment rather than a sublease of Kostakes’ interest as to that portion of the premises. That was the legal effect of the lease because the period that the sublease was to run terminated simultaneously with the original lease negotiated between Kostakes and the owner, Irene Daley, for the entire building. Such an assignment takes place by operation of law even though the quantity of the portion sublet is not coincident with the total interest which the sublessor has received from the original lessor. 3 Had Kostakes retained but a part of the term, regardless of how small, the legal effect of the transaction would have been a sublease and the relationship of landlord and tenant *316 would have continued to exist between Kostakes and Joseph Daly. But because a pro tanto assignment was effected, the privity of estate between Kostakes and Joseph Daly was dissolved leaving only a privity of contract, while there came into play a new privity of estate between Joseph Daly and the original lessor, Irene Daley, thus giving Irene Daley the right to enforce against the sublessee, Joseph Daly, all the covenants that run with the land 4 as well as her rights against Kostakes as expressed in the contract between them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W.2d 191, 246 Minn. 312, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kostakes-v-daly-minn-1956.