Pickalo v. Mack

186 N.W. 502, 217 Mich. 274, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 974
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1922
DocketDocket No. 61
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 N.W. 502 (Pickalo v. Mack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickalo v. Mack, 186 N.W. 502, 217 Mich. 274, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 974 (Mich. 1922).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiffs are owners of premises located on Dequindre street, in the village of Hamtramck, Wayne county, and on May 21, 1918, leased the major portion thereof for 5 years to defendant, Tony Mack. The part of the property leased is described as follows:

[276]*276“Two stores on the ground floor and two living rooms adjoining and one front bed room up stairs, sufficient space in garage adjoining for one automobile and space for fuel in said garage, and also one hen house located on the premises, and also use of basement in the building located at No. 769 Dequindre street, and also the use of yard in rear of the said building, for the term of five years from and after the first day of June, 1918, on the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned, to be occupied for business purposes and also for residence.”

The portion reserved by plaintiffs for themselves consisted of apartments upstairs where they were then living, with their four children, and general use of the premises except as leased to defendant. The lease is a standard form with customary pro'visipns, the only one as to use of the property being, as above quoted, “for business purposes and also for residence.” Defendant took possession of the property under his lease, established his residence in the upper story and opened a grocery and meat market on the first floor. Some time thereafter he put in and ran a soft-drink place and later, as claimed by plaintiffs, engaged in unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors to an extent which attracted an objectionable and lawless class to the place, resulting in disorderly conduct and disturbances on the premises which became unendurable. After repeated protests to him and unavailing appeals to the police of Hamtramck, as they claim, plaintiffs on May 25, 1920, served notice on defendant in part as follows:

“That because of your violations of the law in the occupancy and the use of the * * * premises at 769 Dequindre street, occupied by you * * * we hereby elect to declare and do declare said lease forfeited. Unless you remove from said premises within one week from the date of this letter, it will be necessary for us to take appropriate action, against you.”

[277]*277No attention being paid to this notice by defendant nor change in his unlawful practices, as plaintiffs claim, they declared his lease forfeited, and on June 5, 1920, commenced summary proceedings before á circuit court commissioner to regain possession of the premises. Plaintiffs had judgment in their favor before the commissioner and the case was appealed to the circuit court of Wayne county where a jury trial was had and a verdict rendered in favor of plaintiffs, with judgment thereon.

Upon trial in the circuit, plaintiffs introduced testimony showing that for some time before these proceedings were instituted defendant had increasingly sold intoxicating liquor in his place of business, which was brought to a garage back of the building in an automobile, and from there carried by the back way into the building in bags, boxes and otherwise, some of it to defendant’s bedroom upstairs; that customers freely bought liquor at his bar and drank on the premises to intoxication, at times indulging in riotous conduct and profanity in the hearing of their children and others in that vicinity, to an extent which disturbed the privacy and quiet of their home, keeping the family awake nights.' So far as their proofs are concerned there was an abundance to justify both proper civil and criminal proceedings. Defendant in his pleading and testimony upon the trial made denial of these charges, while his counsel saved by timely objections to plaintiff’s testimony, motions and requests for directed verdict, the right to review various legal questions raised.

Without discussing in detail defendant’s numerous assignments of error, it can be said that those calling for consideration center to the proposition that plaintiff failed as matter of law to show a right to forfeiture of defendant’s lease, or to dispossess him by summary proceedings, in the absence of any express [278]*278provision for forfeiture on that ground or any statute on the subject in this State, since the common law does not forfeit a lease because the leased premises are used for an unlawful business or purpose.

Plaintiffs’ contention is that the provision of the lease relative to the property being used for business purposes and residence limits its use to lawful business purposes, and defendant having repeatedly violated his contract by conducting an unlawful and criminal business on the premises against their protest they had the right to declare his lease forfeited and summarily proceed to dispossess him. The contracting parties’ rights must necessarily be measured by the written instrument between them extending over a term of years. There is no claim of fraud in its inception and it contains no negative covenant in express language by which the lessee binds himself not to sell intoxicating liquor on the premises, nor any express condition providing for forfeiture in case he should, as might have been and often is effectually so provided. The first paragraph of the lease describes in usual form the parties and property, which the first parties let and lease to the second party “for the term of five years from and after the first day of June, 1918, on the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned, to be occupied for business purposes and also for residence.” The second paragraph provides in usual form for re-entry by plaintiffs and removal of defendant “in case any rent shall be due and unpaid or any default shall be made in any of the covenants herein contained.” By the third paragraph second party hires the described premises for the term of five years “and does covenant and promise to pay the said parties of the first part, their representatives and assigns, for the rent of said premises for said term the sum of thirty-two hundred and forty dollars,” divided into monthly payments, .in advance. Pro[279]*279vision is also made for certain repairs and improvements by the first parties to put the premises in “tenable condition,” while the second party is given the right to erect a building upon the premises “for smoking meats.” No restrictions are put upon his subleasing. He next covenants in the fifth paragraph that he will at his own expense keep the premises in repair and at the expiration of his lease yield them up in as good condition as when taken, reasonable wear and damages by the elements excepted. In the sixth paragraph plaintiffs covenant that defendant shall have peaceable possession and enjoyment of the demised premises for the specified time, on his “paying the aforesaid instalments and performing all the covenants aforesaid.”

The trial court left the case to the jury with the instruction that “as a matter of law” the lease was being violated and plaintiffs would have a right to declare the same forfeited “if some illegal business, some unlawful business, in June, 1920, was being conducted in that place under this lease.” The jury determined that submitted fact in the affirmative. Apparently the court in so construing the lease implied a covenant by defendant that the premises should only be used for lawful business purposes and applied the re-entry clause to the implied covenant, since no express qualifying language touching the “business purposes” authorized is found anywhere in the lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.W. 502, 217 Mich. 274, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickalo-v-mack-mich-1922.