Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad v. Duvall

67 N.W.2d 593, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 117
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1954
Docket7432
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 N.W.2d 593 (Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad v. Duvall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad v. Duvall, 67 N.W.2d 593, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 117 (N.D. 1954).

Opinion

GRIMSON, Judge.

This is an action to determine adverse claims to parts of Lots 7 to 17 and of the east 20 feet of Lot 18, Block 29, Governor Pierce Addition to the city of Bismarck. Plaintiff brings the action to have a sublease covering a part of these premises claimed by the defendant declared null and void. Defendant asks that said sublease be adjudged valid. The district court found for the plaintiff. Defendant appeals, and asks for a trial de novo.

It is admitted that the plaintiff is the owner in fee of the real estate in question, a part of its right-of-way in Bismarck, N. Dak. On May 1, 1950, the plaintiff leased the said premises to one F. H. Schmitt “to have and to hold for the term of one year from the date hereof, and thereafter from year to year, * * The property was to be used for the purpose of constructing a building thereon to be “exclusively occupied and used by the lessee during the terms of this lease * * * for the conduct upon the premises in an active and substantial way of a bulk oil and filling station business, or such other kind of business as may be approved by the lessor.” The lease further provided that:

“(16) This lease shall not be assigned or in any manner transferred by the lessee, voluntarily or involuntarily, by operation of law or otherwise, or the leased premises or buildings thereon sublet, used or occupied for the conduct of any business by any third person or corporation, or for any purpose other than herein authorized, without the written consent of the lessor.”

In spite of these provisions of the lease Mr. Schmitt and the defendant without the *595 consent of the plaintiff entered into a sublease on July 2, 1950, whereby Schmitt leased to the defendant a part of this ground “for the purpose of constructing a cafe building 24 x 32 feet which is to be constructed by said first party (DuVall) and operated by him.” This sublease was for a term of five years, with option of renewal by the defendant.

Soon thereafter the defendant commenced the construction of a building upon the premises involved.

As soon as the erection of this building came to the attention of Mr. Spielberger, the Bismarck general agent of the plaintiff, he, on August 8, 1950, wired the plaintiff asking whether the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. had permission to erect a restaurant on this property. He received an answer the next day: “No permission ever granted Schmitt Oil Co., to establish a restaurant building on their leased site. Please see that any further construction is stopped and let me have a full report in the matter by first mail.” On Aug. 9, 1950, Mr. Spielberger replies: “On receipt of your wire, I instructed Schmitt Oil Company to discontinue further construction of this building. Mr. Schmitt advised that he would finish the building and use it for an office or a warehouse if he could not use it as a restaurant.” In reply on August 11, Mr. Spielberger received the following instruction: “It must be thoroughly understood that we will not allow operation of a restaurant on our property. If Mr. Schmitt wishes to convert this building into a warehouse or office purposes there will be no objection from this department.”

Further correspondence and negotiations seem to have been had between the officers of plaintiff and Mr. Schmitt. No consent, however, was given by the plaintiff to the operation of a restaurant in this building erected by the defendant. The defendant himself had no negotiations with the plaintiff or its agents. He never asked plaintiff’s consent to his operation of a cafe on the right-of-way. However, when the building was finished, he did open a cafe there which he operated up to the time of the trial of this case.

The evidence indicates that Mr. Schmitt got into some financial troubles. He assigned his lease to the Skelly Oil Co. His business was incorporated under the name of Schmitt Oil Co. Inc., of which Mr. W. W. Oliver became Secretary and Treasurer.

The plaintiff continued to insist the cafe be removed from the premises. Upon the assurance of Mr. Oliver that the cafe would be removed by January 1952, the plaintiff, on August 1, 1951, entered into a lease for a bulk oil and filling station on the premises with Schmitt Oil Co. Inc., on identically the same terms as the original lease to F. H. Schmitt. This lease, on August 28, 1951, was assigned to Skelly Oil Co., for security purposes. The business of the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc., was sold to the Skelly Oil Co., in April 1952. The plaintiff repeatedly insisted that the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. and the Skelly Oil Co. remove the defendant’s cafe business from the premises. The plaintiff refused to make a lease to the Skelly Oil Company for the premises in question until the restaurant business was removed.

Finally, in March 1952, the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. served on the defendant a notice to quit and thereafter commenced an action against defendant to quiet title to the premises against his lease with Schmitt.- Plaintiff tried to intervene in that action but was denied permission. That action was never tried. Thereupon this action was started Nov. 14, 1952.

Defendant contends that the lease between plaintiff and the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. was still in force at the commencement of this action and that the plaintiff had no right to by-pass that lease and the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. to bring this lawsuit directly against the defendant, the sublessee of the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. He contends that the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc. lease would first have to be terminated and that that can not be done in an action to quiet title.

It is true that there is no privity of contract between the plaintiff, the original lessor of the premises, and the defendant sublessee. 32 Am.Jur., Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 423, p. 342. Whatever rights the de *596 fendant' obtained under his 'sublease are gained through the rights of the sublessor, F. H. Schmitt, under his lease from the plaintiff. Merchants’ State Bank v. Sawyer Farmers’ Cooperative Association, 47 N.D. 375, 182 N.W. 263, 14 A.L.R. 1353. But the termination or forfeiture of the original lease terminates the sublease. In Hawley Corp. v. West Virginia Broadcasting Corp., 120 W.Va. 184, 197 S.E. 628, 629, 118 A.L.R. 120, it is said:

“A sublease creates no privity of contract between the landlord and the' sublessee. The latter’s estate is but parcel of the lessee’s estate, and is subject to the conditions imposed thereon by the principal lease. Its forfeiture terminates likewise the sublease.” See also 32 Am.Jur., Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 422, p. 341; 51'C.J.S., Landlord and Tenant, § 48, page 578.

Both the leases from the plaintiff to Schmitt and the Schmitt Oil Co. Inc., were limited to the “term of one year from date hereof and thereafter from year to year, * 4c * »_ That is a definite term of one year with permission to renew such leases annually thereafter for an indeterminate time.

What was said by Judge Bronson in Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Bismarck Commission Co., 41 N.D. 490, 171 N.W. 623, 624, applies in the instant case, to wit:

“As a tenancy from year to year, there existed a demise of the premises 'for the current year with the privilege of a recurrent period, unless terminated by notice as provided for in such cases, or as otherwise changed by statutory rule.”

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Related

Brunsdale v. Bagge
224 N.W.2d 384 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1974)
Gipson v. First National Bank of Bismarck
97 N.W.2d 671 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.W.2d 593, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minneapolis-st-paul-sault-ste-marie-railroad-v-duvall-nd-1954.