Mutual Drug Co. v. Sewall

182 S.W.2d 575, 353 Mo. 375, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 5, 1944
DocketNo. 38918.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 575 (Mutual Drug Co. v. Sewall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Drug Co. v. Sewall, 182 S.W.2d 575, 353 Mo. 375, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 445 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

[1] Action for declaratory judgment, under Secs. 1126 et seq., R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Secs. 1126 et seq., to determine plaintiff's liability under what was termed by the draftsman a "ninety-nine year sublease", executed November 14, 1919. Relief by declaratory judgment is sui generis, and while not either strictly legal or equitable, yet its historical affinity is equitable. Connell et al. v. Jersey Realty Investment Co.,352 Mo. 1122, 180 S.W.2d 49, 54, and cases there cited. The present cause was tried as one in equity. Plaintiff claimed that, under the facts obtaining and absent default in the terms of the so-called sublease at the time of any future assignment, plaintiff could assign all its interest therein and thereafter be free from further liability thereunder. The trial court agreed with plaintiff's contention, entered such declaratory judgment, and defendants appealed. The amount involved gives the supreme court jurisdiction of the appeal.

November 14, 1919, Fred H. Fitch, the fee owner, executed a lease, to run 99 years from November 1, 1919, to Quapaw Realty Company, a Missouri corporation, upon lots 6 and 7, Union Station Addition, Kansas City. On the same day, November 14, 1919, and immediately after the execution of the Fitch lease, Quapaw Realty Company, by a so-called "ninety-nine year sublease", leased said lots to plaintiff, an Ohio corporation, for the term of 99 years from November 1, 1919. The so-called sublease contained practically the same provisions as the original lease, except as to amount of the rental and the cost of the building to be erected on the property by the original lessee.

The original lease required the lessee to pay an annual rental of $3500, in equal quarterly installments in advance, on the first day of February, May, August and November, to erect, at its own expense, on the leased premises, by May 1, 1921, a building costing not less than $25,000, free and clear of all claims, to keep the building in good repair and adequately insured, and to pay all taxes. The original lease recites that the lessee, concurrently with the execution thereof, paid to the lessor and that the lessor accepted $3500 "as the rental in full up to and including the 30th of April, 1921."

There was a provision in the original lease that the lessee, prior to the erection of the building, could not assign the lease except with the lessor's written consent, but he could mortgage, without such consent, to raise money to erect the building. After the erection of the building the original lease authorized the lessee to "sell, assign or encumber this lease and its leasehold estate hereby created, provided all of lessee's covenants and obligations hereunder shall have been fully performed, met and complied with and, provided that there shall be at the time of such an assignment no arrears of rent unpaid to that date, nor any taxes, judgments, assessments, liens, penalties or claims for damages against lessee." The original lease further provided that "any such assignment must be in writing, signed, acknowledged *Page 380 and recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City, in the same manner as required by law for conveyances of real property and that by the terms thereof the assignee shall expressly accept, assume and agree to perform all of the covenants and obligations of lessee hereunder. And it shall be the duty of lessee promptly to deliver to lessor a certified copy of any such assignment."

And the original lease further provided: "Lessee covenants and agrees that it will not make any assignment of this lease except in the manner and upon the conditions above set forth, and it is agreed and notice is hereby given that any assignment [577] or conveyance of, and any mortgage or deed of trust upon lessee's interest and leasehold estate or any improvements on the demised premises not in strict conformity with the foregoing provisions shall be absolutely null and void."

Plaintiff contends that the so-called sublease is not a sublease, but is, in effect, an assignment of the original lease. We rule, infra, that it is such an assignment, hence we so term it for the most part when making reference to it herein. The assignment fixed the rental at $5,000 per year for the first 5 years and $6,000 per year for the remaining 94 years. The rent was made payable quarterly in advance on the first day of February, May, August and November. Plaintiff was required by the assignment to erect on the property a building, costing not less than $50,000, by November 1, 1920, six months earlier than the building required to be erected by the original lease. As stated, supra, the terms of the assignment contained about the same provisions as the original lease, except as to rental and the building to be erected, hence the requirements, in the assignment, as to repairs, insurance, taxes, encumbering, selling, assigning, etc., are the same, in effect, as in the original lease.

Plaintiff went into the immediate possession under the assignment (so-called sublease) and erected on the property a $115,000 building, and remained in possession until some time shortly before this cause was commenced. At the time of the trial, the property was occupied by plaintiff's subtenant, but there were no rent payments in default and no breach of the terms of the assignment. Defendants, 15 individuals, own the fee in the property through mesne conveyances from the original lessor Fitch and by inheritance from Fitch, now deceased.

July 15, 1925, Fitch and Quapaw Realty Company, original lessor and lessee, entered into a written agreement whereby they sought to terminate, as of that date, the original lease. The agreement recited that possession of the premises "with all improvements thereon, now held by second party (Quapaw) through its subtenant" (plaintiff) was delivered to Fitch. This agreement further recited that it was intended thereby "to terminate said Quapaw lease (original lease) and to vest in first party (Fitch) all the rights of second party (Quapaw) *Page 381 and its interest in said Mutual Drug Company sublease, so that first party (Fitch) shall forthwith become and enjoy all the rights of the lessor (Quapaw) under such sublease."

The articles of agreement for the incorporation of Quapaw Realty Company were signed November 12, 1919, and the charter was issued November 13, 1919. The capital stock was $3,000, which consisted of $100 cash and the Fitch lease, in prospect, valued at $2900. The Quapaw charter was forfeited January 1, 1927, "for failure to file the annual registration report for 1926."

The trial court found that the so-called sublease (the assignment) "conveyed and transferred the whole estate provided for in said original lease, for the entire period (and it did), leaving no reversion in the original lessee, and that said . . .

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 575, 353 Mo. 375, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-drug-co-v-sewall-mo-1944.