Realty Board Investors, Inc. v. Oliver

166 N.E. 398, 31 Ohio App. 105, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 589
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 166 N.E. 398 (Realty Board Investors, Inc. v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Realty Board Investors, Inc. v. Oliver, 166 N.E. 398, 31 Ohio App. 105, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 589 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Vickery, J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to the municipal court of the city of Cleveland, the purpose being to reverse a judgment rendered against the plaintiff in error in the court below.

From the record, arguments of counsel, and briefs, we learn that prior to April 1, 1923, the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error, May Lockwood Oliver entered into a 99-year lease, whereby the plaintiff in error leased a parcel of real estate on Euclid avenue owned by the defendant in error for the full term of 99 years, at a flat rental of $4,500 per year, and the lease contained a provision that the plaintiff in error, defendant below, the lessee, was to erect a building upon said premises to cost *106 not less than $30,000, within five years from the beginning of this lease, or on or before April 1, 1928. The lease further provided that the plaintiff in error, as lessee, was to pay all taxes and other assessments against said property, thenceforth to be levied and assessed.

To insure the provisions of this lease and the terms thereof, the plaintiff in error procured a bond in the penal sum of $15,000 from the Maryland Casualty Company for the faithful performance of this contract, and the bond contained a provision that if the plaintiff in error, as lessee, failed to erect a building on the premises on or before April 1, 1928, • then the lessor could demand as liquidated damages the full penal sum of this bond, less any amounts that had been paid on the bond prior to that time, to make up any default that had accrued prior to that time, and that the $15,000 paid as such liquidated damages should discharge the plaintiff in error, as lessee, from the further liability of erecting said building upon said property.

The plaintiff in error, the lessee, went into possession and paid the rent up to the 1st day of April, 1928. It had not erected the building as provided for in the contract of lease and in the bond. The plaintiff below, the lessor, made no attempt to declare a forfeiture — if she could have done so — nor was there any demand made for liquidated damages for the non-erection of the building.

Subsequent to April 1, 1928, under the terms of the contract of lease, further sums of rent became due, and taxes and penalties became due upon this property, which were paid by the plaintiff below, the lessor, and an action was brought against the *107 lessee, plaintiff in error, to recover such, sums, and that was the cause of action which was filed in the municipal court, for which judgment was rendered. After service of summons upon it the defendant, plaintiff in error here, filed an answer and tendered in court, although not demanded of it, the sum of $12,750, which was the unconsumed portion of the bond, as it assertedj claiming that $2,250 had been paid to cover the prior defaults, and at the same time it tendered a quitclaim deed conveying the property back to the plaintiff below, and asked to be discharged from further liability. After hearing this case, the court decided in favor' of the plaintiff, and, as'already stated, it is to reverse that finding that error is prosecuted here.

The proposition stated, -which plaintiff in error undertakes to maintain, is a curious one, for if it were acknowledged to be the law, any person with a 09-year lease could fail to comply with his contract and then go into a court and set up his own wrong and thus avoid responsibility on a 99-year lease, or any other kind of lease. We do not so understand the law.

We think that this contract of lease and the bond should be construed together as one document, and in construing them together one can readily see the purpose of this bond. Undoubtedly the bond did secure the payment of the rent until the expiration of five years, but that could not have been the only purpose of the bond, for if the lessee had failed to pay the first year’s rent, and the lessor had forfeited the lease, we hardly think it could be claimed that the lessor accepting the property after such forfeiture could recover the $15,000 liquidated dam *108 ages. There was a purpose why this bond was to run five years.

Now it must be remembered that this was a long-term lease, 99 years, at a flat rental of $4,500 a year and a payment of taxes and other things — penalties, if there were any. In order to insure good faith, the lease provided that within five years the lessee was to erect upon this property a building to cost not less than $30,000, and that this building must be turned over in case of a forfeiture of the lease, free and clear from all incumbrances and liens, to the defendant in error, the lessor, and the bond was given not only to secure the rent, but to secure the performance of the erection of this building free and clear from all incumbrances, and if that building had been built at any time within the five years and had been free from liens, and the ground rent had been all paid up to the 1st day of April, 1928, the Maryland Casualty Company could have demanded the return of its bond and an exemption from any liability, for there would have been none. If the lessee did not erect a building within that time, the plaintiff would have no security whatever for the rentals of this property except the bond.

The bond contains this provision: “And if the said building shall not be so erected and completed in all respects in accordance with the requirements of the said lease, the said principal and the said surety shall, at the expiration of the time so fixed therefor, promptly pay to the lessor, her heirs, personal representatives and assigns, as liquidated damages, upon their demand, the sum of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000.00), or such part thereof as shall not have been already paid on account of prior defaults under the said lease.”

*109 This indicates beyond any equivocation or doubt that this clause relating to liquidated damages was to be in lieu of the erection of this building by the lessee in accordance with the terms of this contract, and the bond is very careful to limit the liability of the surety company, and therefore of the principal likewise, upon the non-erection of this building, to the same statement in the clause of the bond referring to liquidated damages. Now if the plaintiff below, the lessor, had received from the surety company in a defaulting for rent a sum which impaired the obligation of this bond, the penal sum of the bond would, of course, mark out and limit the liability of the surety company, and if plaintiff had accepted a portion of this before, she could not increase the liability of the bond. Therefore, that clause of the bond which relates to the liability of the bonding company and the principal to pay any amount of the penal sum not already expended is explainable and is perfectly proper.

Of course, the contract of lease is a long, complicated instrument; but taking it in connection with the bond there can be no doubt as to what the parties intended this contract to mean.

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166 N.E. 398, 31 Ohio App. 105, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realty-board-investors-inc-v-oliver-ohioctapp-1929.