Maiatico v. Stevens

125 A.2d 275, 1956 D.C. App. LEXIS 227
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 14, 1956
Docket1819, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 A.2d 275 (Maiatico v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maiatico v. Stevens, 125 A.2d 275, 1956 D.C. App. LEXIS 227 (D.C. 1956).

Opinion

*277 ROVER, Chief Judge.'

Appellant landlord filed two complaints against the appellee demanding possession (1) of two basement rooms of premises 1726 Eye Street, N.W., and (2) of a restaurant situated on the ground floor of the same premises.

On October 14, 1952, landlord leased to tenant the restaurant on the first floor of the building for a term of ten years, to commence on January 1, 1953; this lease superseded an earlier lease between the former owner and the appellee dated January 14, 1947, which by its terms extended beyond January 1, 1953, but which by agreement of the parties was canceled as of December 31, 1952.

The basis of the action to recover the two basement rooms was that the lessor had permitted the lessee' to use these rooms as a licensee in connection with the operation of the restaurant business; that he had revoked the license but that appellee refused to surrender the rooms. His complaint for possession of the retaurant space was predicated upon an alleged violation of paragraph 19 of the lease by appellee’s failure and refusal to install his own electric and water meters “in that the use of electricity and water, in the landlord’s opinion is excessive.” The court found in favor of the lessee on both complaints and these appeals are from judgments entered on the findings.

Regarding appellant’s first suit, the soundness of his claim for exclusive possession of the two basement rooms hinges upon his contention that the use and occupancy of the rooms by the appellee was only permissive. The rooms have been and are presently serving the needs of appel-lee’s restaurant as dressing rooms for his employees, as storage space for provisions in connection with the restaurant and as a location for its carbonatar.

The lease to. the appellee describes: “the restaurant, constituting approximately 1547 square feet, more or less, on the west side of the first or ground floor of the building.” The rights exercised by the ap-pellee in the basement rooms are therefore privileges in other parts of the building than those described in the lease. If construed as a license, such would have been extinguished, by appellant’s withdrawal of his consent to their exercise, 1 evidenced by a letter from appellant’s building superintendent to appellee, dated June 17, 1955, giving two weeks’ notice to vacate the rooms. We note from the record that appellant purchased the building and became appellee’s lessor during the previous lease term at which time ap-pellee was already using the rooms for these purposes.- Therefore appellant’s assent played no part in the creation of the privileges in question and no evidence was adduced to show his predecessor’s permission had given them existence. Nor is it argued that the lease itself expressly creates a license in appellee for such use óf the rooms or that appellant at any time expressly permitted it. 2 Therefore if a mere license existed, revocable at the will of appellant, it must be implied. However, appellee contends that he has easements in the rooms, also by implication, passing to him as lessee of the ground floor restaurant area, which cannot be revoked during the term of the lease. If the latter proposition is established by the evidence, the finding that the appellee is entitled to the use of the .basement rooms for the named purposes should not be disturbed

The right of a lessee of part of a building to the use and enjoyment of a basement area not included in the terms of his lease has been recognized or not *278 “depending on the application of governing principles to the particular facts involved.” 3 To pass by implication as an easement incidental to a leased portion of a building, the privileges which are exercised in portions not leased must be reasonably necessary and not merely convenient to a tenant’s beneficial use and enjoyment of his leasehold. Or, it must be clear from all the surrounding circumstances that this was the use intended by the parties to the lease. 4 If either of these criteria obtain, there must be an express reservation by the lessor in the lease to bar an “implication passing easements”. 5

In the case at hand, lessor’s building superintendent testified in substance that during his tenure, including time during which the appellee was operating the restaurant under the previous lease, the basement rooms have been in daily use for the mentioned purposes; that the rooms are locked and that he possesses no key to them. Precisely when appellant acquired this knowledge was not established, except that it was “sometime after” he purchased the building. However, it will be assumed that whatever his agent knew, before the making of the new lease, the appellant knew. 6 Therefore, at the time of the making of the new lease, the appellant was aware of this continuous, apparent use and enjoyment by the appellee of the basement rooms in his building, in restriction of his own rights therein. 7

The lease itself provides in one paragraph that the tenant must keep clean “such portions of the building * * * as may be used incident to the operation of said restaurant * * * ” and that the appellee’s undertakings were limited to conditions arising from the use of the demised premises, or “of such other portions of the building * * * as he may use incident to the operation of his business in the demised premises.” Another paragraph makes it the duty of the tenant to make necessary repairs and alterations “for the operation or maintenance of a restaurant, or for the premises used for or incident to the operation and maintenance of the restaurant.”

All these factors amply sustain the finding that it was within the contemplation of the parties when the present lease was executed that the rooms in the basement were to continue to be used and occupied by the appellee for storage and dressing rooms and for space to locate the restaurant machinery as being “incident to the operation” of the restaurant.

Nor has appellant persuaded us that the evidence showed that such accommodations were merely convenient to the operation of the leased space as a restaurant. Appellee on the contrary testified that he had no other place for storage or for his carbonator or for his employees to change their clothes. This testimony demonstrates a reasonable need for the rooms, not that they are a mere convenience. After weighing the evidence, the trial court found that no space in the restaurant was available for dressing rooms or for storage of provisions. The appellant argues that other areas in the building could have been used for these purposes. But the trial judge found no equivalent facilities to have been designated to replace those the ap- *279 pellee was using for dressing and storage rooms and certainly none was made in the aforementioned letter purporting to revoke permission to use them. The use made of the basement rooms was not merely a convenience but the only adequate space ever made available for such purposes as are here involved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Root v. Allstate Insurance Company
158 S.E.2d 829 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A.2d 275, 1956 D.C. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maiatico-v-stevens-dc-1956.