Page v. Martini

293 S.W. 253, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1927
DocketNo. 8925. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 253 (Page v. Martini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Martini, 293 S.W. 253, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 83 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is a suit for injunction brought by appellee against appellant to enjoin her from maintaining an advertising device in a hallway which is the common entrance to the respective places of business of plaintiff and defendant.

The record discloses that plaintiff, as lessee, operates a moving picture and road showhouse, known as the Grand Opera House, and situated on the northern portions of lots 10, 11, and 12 in block 500 in the city of Galveston. The main entrance to this opera house is through a hallway 15 feet wide extending west from the opera house building along the ground floor of a building situated on the north portions of lots 13 and 14 in said block to Twenty-First street. The defendant, as lessee, conducts apartments known as “The Page Hotel” in the second story of the building through which the hallway connecting the opera house with the street extends. The main or front entrance to defendant’s hotel is by a stairway leading from the hallway to the upper floor of the building. The lower entrance to this stairway, which is near the entrance from the hallway to the opera house, is closed by a door. Plaintiff has provided the hallway with a number of lights and uses the inside of its walls for pictures and other decorative devices advertising his theater. One of the lights placed by plaintiff in this hallway is just over the door to the entrance of the stairway leading up to defendant’s hotel. The defendant, without plaintiff’s consent, placed a white globe around this light, on which there is printed or painted the words “Hotel Entrance.” Plaintiff’s suit seeks to enjoin defendant “from maintaining said globe and printed or painted sign advertising said hotel busines, and ordering, requir *254 Ing, and directing defendant to remove the same, and from in any manner interfering with the electric fixtures and lights of plaintiff, and from placing upon the outer or inner walls of said Twenty-First street entrance, or within the confines thereof, any sign or other advertisement advertising the business conducted in the second story of said building.”

On the trial in the court below the jury impaneled to try the issues of fact in the case were instructed by the court to find a verdict for the plaintiff, and, upon return of such verdict, judgment was rendered, granting the injunction aslred by plaintiff.

There is no material conflict in the testimony. Both parties are lessees of J. E. Pearce. When the lease for the opera house, which is for a term of ten years from January, 1923, was made by Pearce to plaintiff, there was no entrance to the opera house from Twenty-First street, but Pearce obligated himself by the terms of the lease to “put in an entrance from Twenty-First street. This entrance is to be approximately fifteen feet (15 feet) wide, excepting a' staircase leading to the second floor.” The building through which this entrance way had to be constructed was held by Richard Ivey, as owner, and J. L. Tippen, as lessee, and in carrying out his agreement for the construction of the entrance way, Pearce, Ivey, Tippen, and plaintiff, Martini, executed the following agreement:

‘T. Richard Ivey has leased to J. E. Pearce for a ten-year period, ending • December 31, 1932, the south fifteen feet (15 feet) 11 inches of the north half of. lots Nos. thirteen. (13) and fourteen (14) in block No. five hundred (500) and also the second story of the two-story building occupying a portion of the north half of said lots, to which written leases reference is made.
“II. J. E. Pearce has subleased to A. Martini said south fifteen feet (15 feet), reserving the right to maintain the stairway leading to the second floor, which stairway is now located on said fifteen (15 feet) so leased from Richard Ivey.
“III. J. D. Tippen is now occupying, under a lease from Richard Ivey, the ground floor room immediately north of the 15-foot space referred to above.
“IV. The parties hereto, for value received, have agreed that the stairway now leading to the second floor of the above-mentioned two-story building is to be taken down and another one constructed in the southeast corner of the premises under lease to J. L. Tippen, which new stairway when constructed is to remain until the expiration of the ten-year leases J. E. Pearce holds from Richard Ivey. It is understood that neither J. L. Tippen nor Richard Ivey shall be put to any cost or expense in connection with the erection of this stairway. The stairway is to be erected pursuant to and in keeping with plans and specifications prepared by L. O. Evans & Co., architects, a copy of which plans and specifications is in the possession of Richard Ivey.
“V. A. Martini agrees that the entrance to the arcade or passageway on Twenty-First street will be kept unlocked or open during the term of his lease, to the end that all persons desiring to use said new stairway will have access thereto 'from the street at all times."

Thereafter, in January, 1925, Pearce leased.’ the second story of the building described in the preceding agreement to the defendant for a term of five years. This lease describes the property and appurtenances covered thereby as follows:

“The entire second floor of the two-story brick building situated on the north halves of lots Nos. thirteen and fourteen (N.% of lots Nos. 13 and 14) in block No. five hundred (500).
“The party of the second part and her tenants and servants shall have the right of ingress and egress at all times through the entrance of the Martini Theatre to said second floor and also the right to enter said second floor through the yard in the rear of said building.”

Under appropriate propositions and assignments appellant assails the judgment on the grounds, in substance: (1) That as lessee of the building for hotel or rooming house purposes she has the exclusive right, there being no provision to the contrary in her lease, to the use of the outside walls of that portion of the building covered by the lease for advertising her business, and for this purpose had the right to maintain on these walls such sign and lights as may be reasonably necessary to indicate and illuminate the entrance to her premises for the benefit and convenience of persons who may desire to patronize her hotel; and (2) the maintenance by a lessee of such signs or lights as are properly appurtenant and necessary to the use of the entrance to the premises leased is a right incident to and included in the right of ingress and egress through such entrance. We agree with appellant in both of these propositions.

In an able and exhaustive brief filed by counsel for appellant many authorities are cited in support of each of these propositions, but we shall only burden this opinion with the citation of a few of these authorities:

In R. O. l,. par. 226, pp. 733, 734, the general rulé as to the right of the lessee of a building to its outside walls for advertising purposes is thus stated:

“It is a well-recognized rule that, in the absence of express provision t¿> the contrary, a lease of a building or a part thereof for business purpose, including the outside walls, gives the lessee the exclusive right to the use of the outside walls of that portion of the building covered by his lease for advertising purposes.”

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 253, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-martini-texapp-1927.