O'Brien v. Illinois Surety Co.

203 F. 436, 121 C.C.A. 546, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1913
DocketNo. 2,260
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 203 F. 436 (O'Brien v. Illinois Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Brien v. Illinois Surety Co., 203 F. 436, 121 C.C.A. 546, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1155 (6th Cir. 1913).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] 1. The court below properly held against plaintiff’s theory that he was entitled to recover' the sum named in the bond as liquidated damages. To meet the well-established principle that the penalty cannot be considered as a sum agreed upon for liquidated damages, when it appears that it was to secure the performance of each of several different conditions of varying degrees of importance and involving varying amounts of injury to the obligee (Bignall v. Gould, 119 U. S. 495, 7 Sup. Ct. 294, 30 L. Ed. 491; Lansing v. Dodd, 45 N. J. Law, 526), the plaintiff urges that the three things here contemplated were the erection of the building, the observance of the laws and the avoiding of the liens, and that these three things were successive, each being the only operative condition while it was active, and so that the rule just cited is avoided. It is sufficient to say of this contention that, whatever its merit otherwise might be, it is not applicable here. The first condition, the erection of the building, permitted a great variety of breaches, which might have ranged from the total absence of any building all the way down tó some slight deficiency in form or size or trimmings. It is not to be supposed that the parties contemplated the payment of $5,000 if the builder used plain brick, instead of pressed brick, on the front, and the payment of the same amount if there was no building at all. The sum named in the bond was clearly a penalty, intended to indemnify O’Brien against such damages as the law might declare owing to him for any breach of any condition of the bond.

[2] 2. Defendant urged that the building was to belong to the lessee, and the lessor had, during the term, no interest therein; that the lessor’s sole measure of damages for its nonerection was the lessened value of the reversion falling in at the end of the stated term, which expectant diminution must be reduced to terms of present worth; and that, with a 97-year lease and a building of the character described, and without covenant to insure or to keep in repair, such damage was so speculative as to be incapable of computation; and, hence, in practical effect, that [439]*439the bond was wholly inoperative. We do not doubt that a building so promised constitutes, in effect, additional rent, payable at the end of the term, and that the present worth of such future subtraction from revel's ion value is the primary and ordinary measure of damages (Doe v. Rowland, 9 C. & P. 734; Cooper v. Randall, 59 Ill. 317); but the application thereof sought by plaintiff overlooks two considerations.

The first is this: The lease was not for an unalterable term of 97 years. It carried the seeds of an earlier ending, and when these seeds developed into cancellation, in March, 3.909, the term was ended. March, 1909, became, by relation, both the agreed end of the term and the end of the agreed term; and it was necessarily within the contemplation of the parties that a reversion might occur and the building might become the property of the landlord at that earlier date, as well as at the end of the 97 years. Since the only purpose of construction is to arrive at the true intent of the parties, it may not necessarily follow that in every case of this character the lessor is entitled to the full value of the agreed, but nonexisting, building as of the date when such premature reversion occurs, although this would seem to be the rule announced by the Supreme Court of Ohio, in Rock v. Monarch Building Company, 100 N. E. 887 (decided December 17, 1912). We now only point out that such a reversion was clearly in the minds of the parties, and that the provisions of their contract must be construed as having due reference to that contingency.

The second consideration to which we referred is this: Whenever a building, to be erected by a lessee, will materially increase the rental value of the premises, and the lease reserves to the lessor such a periodical rent that his stipulated right of re-entry into the vacant premises may not be, of itself, ample indemnity for any default, it is clear that the building is intended to constitute, not only an additional rental payable at the end of the term, but also an additional security for the rent currently accruing. This intention is not alleged in the petition now under review, but we think the allegation unnecessary. Such intent stands out on the face of every such contract, and only under unusual conditions could it be lacking.

From these considerations, it is apparent that such building has a double character. It is a contingent, future, bonus rent, to fall in at the end of the maximum period, or at some uncertain earlier period, and, as such, it is more or less speculative. It is also a continuing, actual, and valuable security for each installment of rent as the same accrues, and in that capacity, and to that extent, is not, in the least, speculative. In a case like the present, and so far as concerns the lessee’s completed defaults, the speculative difficulty disappears when the lease ends.

It follows that plaintiff was entitled to have this building in existence to serve as security for whatever payments of rent and taxes might be in default whenever the lease terminated, and to the extent that these were in default, in March, 1909, and to the extent that the building, if erected and reverting, would have made him good therefor, plaintiff is entitled to damages, and the surety on the bond is liable therefor, up > the penalty of the bond. How far, if at all, the surety [440]*440is entitled to have such damages minimized by prompt forfeiture and efforts at re-rental, or by proving that, pending the term the lease was in force, the value of the reversion has increased, are questions not involved; and- there is, on this record, too uncertain a margin remaining in the penalty above defaulted rent and taxes to require that we decide the full theoretical extent of plaintiffs’ right.'

Our conclusion that damages are recoverable finds support in the opinion of Judge Sanborn in American Bonding Co. v. Pueblo Co., 150 Fed. 17, 80 C. C. A. 97, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 557, 10 Ann. Cas. 357 (C. C. A. 8th), and in the principle which was assumed, though not applied, in Real Estate Co. v. McDonald, 140 Mo. 605, 41 S. W. 913, and which was recognized and partially applied in Longfellow v. McGregor, 61 Minn. 494, 63 N. W. 1032, and in Johnson v. Cook, 24 Wash. 474, 64 Pac. 729. These cases all go on the theory that such buildings or improvements are security for the -performance of other parts of the contract. Chamberlain v. Parker, 45 N. Y. 569, urged as holding to the contrary, is, clearly distinguishable. The grant there involved was not of a leasehold, but of a fee, and there never would be any reversion, unless upon the happening of a specified and not very probable condition subsequent. The improvement to be made upon the premises by the grantee was the sinking of a well in search for oil, and the well would never be of any value to any one, even to the grantee, unless the search was lucky; and, even in that event, the value was wholly speculative. We quite agree that the damage to the grantor by the failure to sink the well would not support an action.

[3] 3. In what we have said, and in the point to be discussed, we treat the ¿mended petition, showing that the lease had been canceled, as though it was the only petition before us. We see no substantial harm in so doing.

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Bluebook (online)
203 F. 436, 121 C.C.A. 546, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-illinois-surety-co-ca6-1913.