Metropolitan Building Co. v. Curtis Studio

244 P. 680, 138 Wash. 381, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1029
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1926
DocketNo. 19610. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 244 P. 680 (Metropolitan Building Co. v. Curtis Studio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Building Co. v. Curtis Studio, 244 P. 680, 138 Wash. 381, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1029 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

This is an action of unlawful de-tainer. On January 27, 1917, the respondent, Metropolitan Building Company, being then the owner of a building in the city of Seattle, situated on a tract of land called in the record the University Tract, leased a room therein to one E. S. Curtis, the predecessor in interest of the appellant, Curtis Studio of Seattle, authorizing the lessee to fit up the room and use it as a photographic studio. The duration of the lease depended on the time of the happening of certain events, but these, when they happened, fixed its termination as of January 10,1925. The lease, however, contained the following condition:

“It is understood and agreed that, if the Metropolitan Building Company decides to move the Exhibition Building, said company will give the said E. S. Curtis as much notice as possible, in no case less than three *383 months’ written notice to that effect. After giving such notice no rent shall be charged lessee. In the event the Metropolitan Building Company decides to remove said Exhibition Building, it will use its best endeavors to provide a satisfactory studio upon the University Tract for the said E. S. Curtis.”

The building, described as the “Exhibition Building” in the foregoing excerpt, was a structure erected on a tract of land which the respondent held on a long-term lease from the regents of the University of Washington. It was a temporary structure, and, by the terms of the agreement under which it was erected, had to be removed from the land by a definitely named time. Shortly prior to October 23, 1923, the respondent decided to move the building of which the leased room was a part, and erect in its place a permanent building, which it was required to erect by the terms of the lease under which it held the land from the University of Washington. On the date last named, it served a written notice on the appellant to that effect, notifying it to quit and surrender the premises on or before midnight of January 31,1924, and notifying it further that no rent would be charged to it after October 31, 1923. The appellant disregarded the notice, and continued in possesion of the premises until after the end of the period prescribed therein. The respondent thereupon served upon it the three-day notice to quit, prescribed by the forcible entry and detainer act. On its disregard of this notice the respondent brought the present action. At the time of its institution, the respondent sued out a writ of restitution, under which the appellant was ousted from the premises. Issue was thereafter joined on the allegations of the complaint, and a trial had before a jury, which resulted in a judgment for the restitution of the premises and for damages for their wrongful withholding.

*384 The assignments of error are somewhat large in number, but they can be grouped under more general heads than the appellant has placed them, and in this manner we shall notice them.

The first is, that the statutory action of unlawful detainer will not lie to recover the possession of property such as that involved in the present controversy. It is argued that, before such an action will lie, the conventional relation of landlord and tenant must exist between the parties, and that such a relation is not created by the lease of a room in a building, where such room is, as it is in this instance, only the part of a building, as such a lease does hot pass any interest in the land on which the building stands. But the action is statutory, and we think a study of the forcible entry and detainer act will show that the legislature did not put this narrow interpretation upon it. It provides (Bern. Comp. Stat., § 810) that any person is guilty of forcible entry who breaks open any window, doors, or other part of a house, and enters upon real property. It is provided (lb. § 812) that he is guilty of unlawful detainer, if he holds the premises, or any part thereof, after the expiration of the term for which it is let to him.

It provides (lb. § 814) that, where the unlawful occupant is renting rooms in a building on the premises, the lessees of the rooms shall not be regarded as sub-tenants of the person entitled to possession, and a manner is provided by which such lessees may be served with notice of the action. Nor did the legislature confine its language to the term “real property,” or “lands,” when indicating the character of property possession of which might be recovered under the act. It uses the terms “property,” “premises,” “demised premises,” “premises unlawfully withheld,” and other *385 terms equally general. Moreover, when'the purposes of- and necessities for the act are considered, it can hardly be believed that the legislature intended a limitation such as that thought here to apply. In every city, town and village in the state, buildings are erected for. the sole purpose of furnishing to those whose trades, businesses and professions require .only a- limited space, a place to carry on their occupations, and the owners of these aré in the'most need of. summary remedies to recover the space occupied on a breach of the conditions of the terms under which it is held; and we think it'clear that'these were in the legislative mind when the act under consideration was enacted. • •

It may be that this-court has never had occasion to consider, the direct question, yet from the earliest times' we have applied the act in like situations to that here presented. It was applied in Phillips v. Port Town send Lodge, No. 6, 8 Wash. 529, 36 Pac. 476, where the lease was for the upper story of a building; in Yesler Estate v. Orth, 24 Wash. 483, 64 Pac. 723, where the lease was for a store room — a portion of a building; in Owens v. Swanton, 25 Wash. 112, 64 Pac. 921, where the lease was for the three upper floors of a building; in Teater v. King, 35 Wash. 138, 76 Pac. 688, where the lease was for the.main floor of a building; in Newman v. Worthen, 57 Wash. 467, 107 Pac. 188, where the léase was for a store room in a building; in Hutchinson Inv. Co. v. Woman’s Exchange, 95 Wash. 605, 164 Pac. 196; where the lease was for a flat on the third floor of a building; in Hutchinson Inv., Co. v. Van Nostern , 99 Wash. 549, 170 Pac. 121, where the lease was for a basement room in a building; in Armstrong v. Burkett, 104 Wash. 476, 177 Pac. 333, 180 Pac. 873, where there was a sub-lease of a part of leased premises; in Sheridan v. Doherty, 106 Wash. 561, 181 Pac. 16, where there *386 was also a sub-lease of a part of leased premises; and in Lake Union Realty Co. v. Woolfield, 119 Wash. 331, 205 Pac. 14, where the lease was for a store room in a building. The foregoing by no means exhaust the list, but they indicate a uniform application of the statute to-leases such as the one here in question. To follow the appellant would be to hold that each of them was wrongfully determined; a conclusion we would hesitate to reach, were we convinced of the merits of the contention, since it would disturb a principle which the business world has a right to regard as settled..

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 680, 138 Wash. 381, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-building-co-v-curtis-studio-wash-1926.