Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc.

136 F.3d 843
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 29, 1998
Docket96-2294, 96-2330 and 97-1208
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 F.3d 843 (Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., Martin A. Dale v. H.B. Smith Company, Inc., 136 F.3d 843 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

CYR, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Martin A. Dale challenges various district court rulings relating to a parcel of commercial real estate located in Westfield, Massachusetts. Defendant H.B. Smith Co., Inc., a former occupant, cross-appeals. We affirm the district court judgment, in part, and vacate and remand in part.

I

BACKGROUND

Dale acquired title to the property in 1980, subject to a preexisting lease between his predecessor in title and International Harvester Company (“International”) and a preexisting sublease between International and PCP Realty Trust (“Realty Trust”). On December 31, 1983, International assigned its *846 leasehold interests in the property-to Dale, including its rights as sublessor to Realty Trust. Realty Trust thereafter remitted $1,500 per month to Dale, representing the rent due International under its sublease. Several years later Realty Trust sublet the property to cross-appellant Smith at $9,433.67 per month.

On September 15, 1989, Dale initiated a successful state court action against Smith and Realty Trust to acquire summary possession of the property, claiming that Realty Trust had failed to renew the sublease with Dale (qua successor to International) in accordance with its terms. The state district court entered an order entitling Dale to recover possession based on its finding that the Realty Trust sublease had expired on May 31, 1989. Smith and Realty Trust appealed to the superior court before Dale could execute the district court judgment, which had been scheduled for August 1, 1990. Pursuant to the appeal bond, Smith was required to continue its regular monthly rent payments to Realty Trust. In turn,. Realty Trust was to continue its rent payments to Dale and also escrow $7,933.67 monthly with the superior court, representing the difference between the $9,433.67 rental Realty Trust would receive directly from Smith and the $1,500 rental Realty Trust paid directly to Dale. Realty Trust and Smith ceased their payments as of January 1991.

On May 1,1991, the superior court appeals filed by Smith and Realty Trust were dismissed for failure to comply -with the appeal bond. Although Realty Trust subsequently appealed the dismissal order, its appeal was dismissed on' November 4, 1991. In due course, the superior court released the es-crowed monies to Dale. On February 14, 1992, Dale reentered the property pursuant to the state court judgment.

The present action was instituted by Dale in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts to recover damages from Smith for its use and occupancy of the property. Dale demanded damages equal to the rent prescribed in the Realty Trust-Smith sublease for each month in which Smith held over as a tenant at sufferance, together with the property taxes assessed during the same period. Dale alleged that Smith became a tenant at sufferance on June 1, 1989 — the day after the sublease between Dale and Realty Trust expired — and that Smith remained a tenant at sufferance until Dale recovered possession on February 14, 1992. In addition, Dale demanded damages for waste during the Smith tenancy. The parties authorized the magistrate judge to enter final judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1).

The magistrate judge [hereinafter: “court”] found that (i) Smith became a tenant at sufferance on August 1, 1990, when execution of the state district court order granting summary possession was to have taken place but for the unsuccessful appeals to the superior court, and (ii) the Smith tenancy at sufferance terminated on June 30, 1991, based on a projection that Dale would have recovered possession within sixty days of the May 1, 1991, order — dismissing the Smith and Realty Trust appeals — but for the subsequent unsuccessful Realty Trust appeal from the first order dismissing its superior court appeal. See supra p. 846. Accordingly, the court determined that Smith was liable for the reasonable worth of the use and occupancy of the property, which the court calculated at the amount of rent fixed in the Smith-Realty Trust sublease for each month Smith held over as a tenant at sufferance, less the $47,168.35 previously received by Dale in accordance with the appeal bond, plus $16,-170.76 in property taxes assessed during the Smith tenancy at sufferance, together with interest. Finally, the court granted Dale judgment against Smith for an additional $5,040.90 for waste to the property during the Smith tenancy. 1

II

DISCUSSION 2

A. Tenancy at Sufferance

The court ruled that since no landlord-tenant relationship existed between Dale *847 and Smith, see Carlton Chambers Co. v. Trask, 261 Mass. 264, 158 N.E. 786, 788 (1927), Dale could not “control [Smith] as the sublessee____” We now examine its thesis.

It is widely acknowledged, in Massachusetts and elsewhere, that a sublessee becomes a tenant at sufferance in relation to the lessor upon termination of the sublessor’s tenancy, at least absent an agreement to the contrary. See Evans v. Reed, 71 Mass. (5 Gray) 308, 309 (1855) (“Had [the sublessee] remained after [the sublessor] left, and [the owner] accepted rent of him, it would have been evidence from which an agreement to accept [the sublessee] as a tenant might have been implied.”); 3 see also Staples v. Collins, 321 Mass. 449, 73 N.E.2d 729, 730 (1947) (“[A] tenancy at sufferance is readily changed into a tenancy at will by expres's or implied agreement of the parties____ [Continued] payment and acceptance of rent [on the regular rent day], standing alone, are prima facie proof of the creation of a tenancy at will____”). There is no contention or evidence that Dale accepted rent from Smith after the expiration of the Realty Trust subtenancy. Thus, by holding over after the Realty Trust sublease with Dale had expired, Smith became a tenant at sufferance. See Evans, 71 Mass. (5 Gray) at 309.

Although the absence of privity — either of contract or estater-between the landowner and the sublessee precludes an action for rent against the sublessee, see 49 Am.Jur.2d Landlord and Tenant § 509, at 488-89 (1970); 1 A James Casner, American Law of Property § 3.62, at 313 (1952), the present action is not for rent but for use and occupancy of the property by Smith during its holdover following expiration of the Realty Trust subtenancy with Dale. See Lowell Hous. Auth. v. Save-Mor Furniture Stores, Inc., 346 Mass. 426, 193 N.E.2d 585, 588 (1963) (“The liability of a tenant at sufferance is not to be determined arbitrarily by the rent fixed in a lease with the former owner, but rather is the sum which the trier of fact finds the use and occupation were reasonably worth.”).

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Bluebook (online)
136 F.3d 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-a-dale-v-hb-smith-company-inc-martin-a-dale-v-hb-smith-ca1-1998.