Prins v. VAN DER VLUGT ET UX

337 P.2d 787, 215 Or. 682, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 294
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 337 P.2d 787 (Prins v. VAN DER VLUGT ET UX) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prins v. VAN DER VLUGT ET UX, 337 P.2d 787, 215 Or. 682, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 294 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff lessee against the lessors to set aside a written lease which the plaintiff claims is unconscionable, harsh and oppressive. The plaintiff leased the premises which are in John Bay, Grant County, for the purpose of operating a physiotherapy clinic. After about a year and a half she vacated the premises and eventually the defendants took possession in accordance with the termination provisions contained in the lease. The alleged hardship to plaintiff resulting from the termination of the lease arises out of the fact that the plaintiff had constructed a building upon the leasehold premises at a cost of $14,000 and that her interest in the building would be forfeited if the relief requested is not granted.

The written lease contained a clause providing that the building was to be used by the lessee in carrying on physiotherapy and as her personal residence and for no other purpose. The lease also contained a covenant against assignment by the lessee. It is contended that these restrictions on the lessee’s interest were inserted in the lease as a result of duress by the defendants. The plaintiff alleges that as a result of defendants’ conduct and other factors there were not sufficient physical therapy patients to enable her to *685 make a livelihood by using the premises as limited in the lease; that it was for this reason that she vacated the premises, and that if the restrictions on assignment and use are enforced the defendants will be unjustly enriched. She further alleges that a fiduciary and confidential relationship existed between her and the defendants; that as a result of this relationship she was' induced by the defendants to construct the building upon the premises and enter into the lease in question upon the representation by the defendants that her interests would be protected in the event that it was not feasible to continue the use of the premises for the purposes specified in the lease; and, that by enforcing the express terms of the lease and by retaking possession of the leasehold premises the defendants have violated this confidential and fiduciary relation and that if they are permitted to retain the building they will be unjustly enriched.

The plaintiff seeks a decree permitting her to remove the building constructed by her, or to recover the reasonable value of it upon payment of such damages as defendants may have suffered. The lower court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint and the plaintiff appeals.

The lease is for a term of twenty years beginning on January 1, 1952. The lessee agreed to pay 5% of the gross receipts earned in carrying on the practice of physical therapy, payable at the end of each month during the term of the lease. There was no provision for minimum rental. The lease recited that the lessee had begun construction of a building on the leasehold premises and the lessee covenanted to complete it. It provided that upon the expiration or termination of the lease the premises were to be delivered v. to the lessors. The clause restricting les *686 see’s use was phrased as follows: “Said building is to be used by the Lessee in carrying on and conducting physical therapy, and for no other purpose without the written consent of the lessors, excepting only that lessee shall be privileged to reside on said premises.”

The lease contained a nonassignment clause which read as follows: “Said lessee will not assign, transfer, pledge, hypothecate, surrender, or otherwise encumber or dispose of this lease or the estate created in this lease, or any interest in any portion of the same, or permit any other person or persons, company, or corporation to occupy the premises without the written consent of the lessors being first obtained in writing.” The lessee further agreed: “That this lease is personal to said lessee, and her interests, or any part thereof, cannot be sold, assigned, transferred, seized or taken by operation of law, or under or by virtue of any execution or other process, attachment, or proceeding instituted against the lessee, or under or by virtue of any bankruptcy or insolvency proceeding had in regard to the lessee, or any other manner, except as above mentioned.”

The lease reserved the lessors a right of entry “* * * if the lessee shall be in arrears in the payment of rent for a period of 10 days, or if said lessee shall fail or neglect to do, or perform, or observe any of the covenants contained herein on her part to be kept and performed * *

The lease was executed under the following circumstances. The defendants, husband and wife, are medical doctors. They own and operate a hospital or clinic in John Day, Oregon. The plaintiff is a physical therapist. The parties met for the first time in 1942 when the plaintiff, as a part of her duties *687 as an employee of the Crippled Children’s Society, went to Prairie City, Oregon where the defendants were engaged in the general practice of medicine. During 1942 and 1943 the plaintiff saw the defendants several times in connection with her work for the society. It appears that the relationship which developed on these visits was little more than a friendly professional acquaintanceship.

Plaintiff did not have any further contact with the defendants from August 1943 until 1951 when she got in touch with them by letter for the purpose of determining whether it would be feasible to establish a physiotherapy practice in John Day. At that time she had her own practice in Seattle, Washington, but because of her son’s ill health she wished to move to a drier climate. The defendants indicated their interest in having the plaintiff move to John Day. She visited J ch. Day in the spring of 1951 and again a few months later; on each occasion for only a few days. It was sometime during these visits that the parties entered into negotiations for a lease of defendants’ property. The formal written lease which plaintiff now seeks to set aside was not signed by the lessee until June, 1952. However, a draft of a lease prepared by the defendants’ attorney was prepared and submitted to the plaintiff’s attorney sometime before November 7, 1951.

On October 18, 1951, prior to the time the written lease was finally executed, the plaintiff entered into a contract with William Zickler, a building contractor in J ch. Day, for the construction of the building which was completed in March, 1952. It is plaintiff’s position that she constructed the building before obtaining a written lease because she relied upon the defendants’ oral promise that the written lease would contain a *688 provision for the protection of her interests in the event of her death or inability to continue to practice her profession, or if it became infeasible to continue using the premises as a physiotherapy clinic. She contends that the defendants represented to her that there was a wide and substantial demand for physical therapy services in eastern Oregon; that they intended to make additions to their hospital building and staff and to develop a general medical center for the treatment of illnesses and injuries resulting from industrial accidents and that they desired to have as an adjunct to the hospital a physiotherapy clinic to round out the services of the hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
337 P.2d 787, 215 Or. 682, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prins-v-van-der-vlugt-et-ux-or-1959.