Moore v. Minnis

11 Tenn. App. 88, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 88 (Moore v. Minnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Minnis, 11 Tenn. App. 88, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J:

Complainant, J. C. Moore, owned a lot in Knoxville, fronting ninety-six feet on the east side of Gay street, and extending back eastwardly one hundred forty-six and one-half feet. There were two old houses on this lot fronting on Gay street.

On May, 28, 1907, Moore and wife leased this property to the Equitable Realty Association, a corporation, for a period of ninety-nine years at a rental of $240 per year, payable semi-annually; the lessee to pay taxes, insurance, cost of repairs, etc. The lease gave the lessee the right to alter or tear down the houses on the lot and the right to build others, etc., but required that at the expiration of the lease there be houses and improvements on the lot at least equal in value to $4000, and that they should be and become the property of the lessor. It is clear that the basis upon which the lease was drawn was that the property was worth $4000, and that the lessor (Moore) was to receive six per cent net on it per year.

The Equitable Realty Association built three small dwelling houses on the rear end of the lot, and added another floor or story to one of the houses on the front end and a basement and some: rooms to the other.

On October 22, 1925, the Equitable Realty 'Association sold and assigned the lease to the defendants, Ed Minnis and Samuel Minnis.

On April 18, 1928, the complainants, Moore and wife, filed the bill in this cause against said defendants, Ed Minnis and Samuel Minnis, to have said lease forfeited and cancelled, and the possession of the property restored to them.

On the final hearing the Chancellor dismissed complainants’ bill at their cost and they have appealed to this court and have assigned errors.

The material allegations of the bill are as follows:

“Complainants allege that at the present time, and for may years heretofore, upon the above described premises several wooden frame houses have been situated, that these houses are all old and dilapidated, that they were built at a time when builders of houses were not skilled in erecting structures with adequate provision .against fire, that their condition makes the danger of fire imminent, and that these houses have for many years constituted and do now *90 constitute a nuisance within the meaning of the above quoted provision.
“The complainants further allege that at least one of the houses upon said premises is-now, and'for many years has been a notorious establishment for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquor in violation of State and Municipal laws and ordinances; that said house has often been raided by the city police and other law enforcement officers, and liquor unlawfully kept therein has been seized, and its occupants have been indicted, convicted and fined.
“Complainants further allege and aver that the said houses situated upon thé described premises are now and have been used as resorts for gambling and other immoral purposes in violation of State and Municipal laws and ordinances; and that because of the practices carried on in said houses and the uses to which they are put and the fire hazard incident to the manner in which said houses are kept, a nuisance has been established and is being maintained by defendants upon said premises.”

The material provisions of the lease are as follows:

“And the party of the second part (Equitable Realty Association) further agrees to comply at all times with all State and municipal laws' and ordinances, and not to erect or cause to be erected, or permitted to be erected on the premises, any nuisance or to commit any waste.
“It is further stipulated between the parties to this contract that if the party of the second part, its successors and assigns, shall fail . . . to do and perform any of the covenants and obligations imposed upon it by this contract, then the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns, at their election, may declare this lease forfeited and ,at an end, and may re-enter and take posessijon of the said property.
“And the parties of the first part further grant and convey unto the party of the second part,' the full right and power to assign this lease, or sublet the said property or any part thereof, for any terms of years less than the period for which this lease is made, but such assignment or subletting shall depend upon and be subject to the terms, provisions, stipulations, conditions and obligations of this contract.”

We might state here that there was no effort upon the part of the complainants to show that the houses on the lot had become so dilapidated as to constitute a nuisance or fire hazard, etc. The un-contradicted proof shows that the houses were kept in good repair and were in better shape than when the lease was executed.

The lot in question fronts ninety-six feet on the east side of Gay street but is at the end of the bridge across the Tennessee river and is below the level of said bridge. The two houses fronting on Ghy *91 street are frame and old and tbe lower floors are below the level of the bridge. The three houses on the rear end of the lot are frame and cheap. They have only two or three rooms and-are what are known as “shot-gun” houses. None of the houses could be rented to any other than a very poor class of tenants.

In 1904, the complainant, J. C. Moore, had a stroke of some kind, and since then he has been compelled to use crutches in order to-walk. He can get around very little, and lives more than a mile from the property in question. On account of his physical condition he did not visit the property.

The Equitable Realty Association was a corporation which seems to have been controlled by S. R. Rambo. It dealt in real estate and rentals and Mr. C. B. Johnson did its collecting on the rental property, and was, of course, collecting the rentals from the various tenants in the houses in question at the time the Equitable Realty Association sold and assigned the lease to the defendants. Mr. Johnson seems to be an honorable and upright man, and a member of the Knox County Revenue Commission, whose office is in the Court House. After the sale and assignment of the lease to the defendants he continued doing the collecting, but of course turned the money over to the defendants.

The defendants live at New Market, some thirty miles from Knoxville, where they operate a large store, and they seldom went to Knoxville and inspected their property. They are most honorable and upright men, and are staunch prohibitionists. At the time they purchased the lease in question they also bought other leases and property in Knoxville from the Equitable Realty Association — for all of which, including the lease in question, they paid $30,000. The lease in question was not valued or appraised separately from the other property and leases which they bought, but the evidence shows that its value at the time was about one-third of the total of $30,000, which they paid, i. e. $10,000.

As stated, Mr. Johnson, continued collecting the rent on the houses on the lot covered by the lease in question, as well as on the other-leases and property which the defendants bought from the Equitable Realty Association, and they left in his hands the matter of keeping said houses rented.

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Related

Murphy v. Reynolds
212 S.W.2d 686 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 88, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-minnis-tennctapp-1929.