Matter of Northwood Industries, Inc.

25 B.R. 210, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5373
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 3, 1982
Docket3-18-13945
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 B.R. 210 (Matter of Northwood Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Northwood Industries, Inc., 25 B.R. 210, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5373 (Wis. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

ROBERT D. MARTIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This case is now before the court on the debtor’s motion to exercise its option to purchase and thereafter to sell the subject real estate, and also upon the application of William Glover for relief from the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362 so that he may continue his state court action to recover the subject real estate. Both motions arise out of a common set of facts and circumstances.

Northwood Industries, the debtor (“Northwood”), initially leased a metal building built to its specifications for plastic manufacturing and sales on April 12, 1972. The lease was for 10 years beginning July 1, 1972 with a 5-year renewal option, and included an option to purchase the building for $35,000 at the end of the 10-year period. The stated rent was $600 per month. The' landlord, Glover, reserved the right to reenter the premises upon notice if the rent became more than 10 days in arrears or if the tenant otherwise breached the lease. The landlord’s written consent was required to assign the lease or any rights under it.

Pursuant to an additional lease provision, a second building was constructed for the tenant in 1976. The lease was modified to require a monthly rental of $880 and an option price of $55,000 at the end of the original 10-year term. The modification specified that the term expired April 8, 1982, a fact not immediately apparent from the original lease.

When Northwood ceased business in winter or spring, 1981, the option was of considerable value; the market value of the building had risen to approximately $130,-000. Sometime that spring, Douglas Kam-mer, North wood’s attorney, proposed to prepay 15 months rent and assume the lease. Glover refused to accept this proposal. In August, 1981, Northwood attempted to assign the lease to John Bowman, a former officer and shareholder then under contract to Northwood as a consultant. Glover also rejected the proposed assignment. While the building stood vacant, Northwood continued to pay monthly rent; borrowing from corporate principals and associates by means of a series of promissory notes. The group of creditors, including officers and employees who had loaned money to Northwood, had apparently decided to carry the rent payments until the end of the lease term and then exercise the purchase option. The rent for August and September 1981 was paid by checks drawn on the trust account of the Rhode Law Office. Both checks bore notes that they were North wood’s rent. The August rent check identifies its source as the “Lind-strom loan.” Glover accepted and cashed those checks without question.

On October 10, 1981, the last date for payment of the October rent, John Bowman’s wife Marcia personally delivered a check drawn on her personal account to Glover’s home as payment of the rent. Like the checks tendered by the Rhode Law Office, the check was noted as Northwood’s rent. Marcia Bowman was later reimbursed by Lindstrom. On October 21, 1981, Glover’s attorney notified Northwood that its tenancy was terminated for untimely payment of rent, and that he would reenter the building. On October 26, 1981, Glover returned the check to Marcia Bowman, refusing the tender of rent for the stated reason that she was neither the lessee nor an assignee. Glover subsequently filed a circuit court action for reentry. No rent was tendered by or on behalf of Northwood after October 10, 1981.

The propriety of Glover’s refusal of the October 1981 rent and the necessity of tendering rental payments thereafter must be determined before it is possible to assess the vitality of the purchase option. Glover contends that he was not required to accept *212 rent from a third party to the lease and that such acceptance would have operated to assign the lease. Northwood argues that this tender served only to satisfy the corporation’s obligations under the lease, and when refused, made further tenders of rent unnecessary. For the reasons set out below, the court concludes that Glover had no legal basis for rejecting the October 1981 tender of rent, that further tenders were not required, and that the lease was illegally terminated.

Under Wis.Stat. § 704.03, an assignment of a remaining period of a lease in excess of 1 year must be in writing. At the time Marcia Bowman tendered her check, approximately 6 months of the original lease remained. Although the statute did not, therefore, require written assignment of the remaining leasehold interest, the terms of the lease specified that no assignment could be made without written consent of the landlord. Glover refused to give his consent, so no effective assignment was nor could have been accomplished. The risk Glover contends that he was protecting himself against was completely illusory.

Glover cited Katz v. Miller, 148 Wis. 63, 133 N.W. 1091 (1912) in support of the proposition that acceptance of rent from a third party operates to effect an assignment. However, in Katz, the trustee who brought an action for breach of lease by its assignment had been aware for years that the building had been sublet. He also knew that the predecessor trustees had orally consented to the sublease and had allowed the subtenant to alter the building at great cost for the purpose of further subletting the premises to a number of small businesses. The court held the trustee was bound by the consent of his predecessors notwithstanding the terms of the lease since the subtenant had greatly changed his position in reliance on the predecessors’ apparent consent. Similarly, in Galvin v. Lovell, 257 Wis. 82, 42 N.W.2d 456 (1950), the court stated in dicta that the lessor had waived any possible violation by the plaintiff of its grocery store lease where the lessor was aware of the sublease, assisted in alterations to facilitate the sublease, voiced no objections to the lessee’s plan, and accepted rent.

In Baker v. McDel Corp., 53 Wis.2d 71, 191 N.W.2d 846 (1971), the defendant sought to avoid complying with an indemnity clause in a lease by arguing that the original lessee sublet to McDel in contravention of a clause prohibiting a sublease without lessor’s permission. The lessor had leased its filling station to an individual who subsequently incorporated his business. Amoco did not contest the lower court’s finding that it had waived any objections to the assignment, because it had known at all times that the individual had transferred his business to a corporation. None of these cases may be said to stand for the proposition that acceptance of rent from someone other than the named tenant is effective, standing alone, as recognition of an assignment in violation of the express terms of a lease.

In a case more similar to the present case, a lessor accepted rent from a third party without knowledge of an assignment and the court allowed the lessor to take action on the anti-assignment clause. Plotkin v. Milwaukee Metal Working Co., 255 Wis. 456, 39 N.W.2d 439 (1949).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 B.R. 210, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-northwood-industries-inc-wiwb-1982.