Rekas v. Dopkavich

66 A.2d 230, 362 Pa. 292, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1949
DocketAppeal, 51
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 66 A.2d 230 (Rekas v. Dopkavich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rekas v. Dopkavich, 66 A.2d 230, 362 Pa. 292, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 408 (Pa. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This is an appeal from a decree awarding specific performance of an agreement for the inter partes transfer of a liquor license in certain specified contingencies. Inasmuch as effective transfer of the license necessarily depends upon ultimate approval by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 1 the decree naturally goes no *294 further than to require of the defendant his execution and delivery to the plaintiff of all papers and the doing of all things necessary to effect a transfer of the license from him to the plaintiff.

The appellant does not question the merit of the learned chancellor’s findings of fact which the court en banc approved. He complains, rather, of the inferences and conclusions drawn by the chancellor from the established findings, reminding us with citations 2 that such inferences and conclusions are not binding upon review by this Court and that we are at liberty to correct them insofar as they are erroneous. To that statement of law, of course, no exception can be taken. But, the inferences and conclusions, whereof the appellant complains, were drawn from undisputed written instruments, whereon the respective rights of the parties depend, and it is our opinion that the construction placed upon the evidentiary writings by the court below is correct and the consequent decree proper. The facts material to an understanding of the controversy are as follows.

The plaintiff and the defendant are, respectively, mother and son and live in the same dwelling at 38 Center Street, Kingston, Pennsylvania. The mother is the owner of the property and, for many years, operated a restaurant there in connection wherewith she held a restaurant liquor license from the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. On October 29,1945, by a lease in writing, the plaintiff demised the premises to her son for *295 a fixed monthly money rental and certain other specified considerations. At tlie same time, she and her son entered into a written agreement, which they signed, sealed and caused to be witnessed, respecting a transfer to the son of the liquor license for the premises and the rights of the parties thenceforth in such connection. They also executed on the same day a bill of sale from the mother to the son for all liquor and beer on the premises. The bill of sale, which specified a consideration of $600, contained language purporting to be a transfer of the liquor license, but the habendum clause was expressly limited to the “goods and chattels and articles of personal property ... by these presents bargained, sold ...” etc. The bill of sale further recited that the transfer (i.e., of the business and license) was subject to approval by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. The lease, by its terms, was to run from the time the transfer of the liquor license became effective until August 1, 1947. It contained no provision for any extension or renewal; and, the court below found that there was no holding over. In the agreement concerning the liquor license, the parties, after reciting that the license was a benefit to the premises and that they desired that it should not be transferred to any other premises or any other party, expressly agreed that “in the event that [the son] . . . forfeits his right to the possession of said premises by virtue of any provision in the lease ... he will transfer to [the mother] the Pennsylvania Liquor License for the said premises without any consideration, it being agreed that receipt of said License by [the son] was also without any consideration.”

In construing th¿ above-quoted provision of the agreement, the learned chancellor interpreted the term “forfeits” as having been used by the parties in the sense of “loses”. As a verb, “forfeit”, in its primary use, means “to lose”; and that is also its legal meaning: *296 26 Corpus Juris p. 891 [§4]; 23 Am. Jur. §2, p. 599. The provision was, therefore, properly construed to mean that, in the absence of a renewal or extension of the lease or a holding over, the expiration of the specified term constituted a termination of the son’s “right to the possession of said premises by virtue of [a] provision in the lease . . .” and that, accordingly, the son was obligated by the express terms of the agreement to “transfer to [his mother] the Pennsylvania Liquor License for the said premises without any consideration . . No other conclusion could reasonably have been deduced from the writings. Admittedly, the term of the lease was neither renewed nor extended. The appellant contents himself with a bald assertion that there was a “holding over”, but the learned court below rightly rejected that contention. A “holding over” after the term of a lease is a tenure which the law implies from the intention of the parties as evidenced by their conduct. See Trickett on Landlord and Tenant, Section 493. Here, no such intention can be inferred, certainly not as to the mother. When the term of the lease expired, the mother and son were already involved in this very litigation over the premises and the license. 3 Nor was any notice to vacate necessary in the circumstances in order to avoid the creation of a new tenancy by implication of law; the lease was at an end by the expiration of its term: see Williams v. Ladew, 171 Pa. 369, 376, 33 A. 329; Gilbert v. Price, 18 Pa. Superior Ct. 359, 361.

The appellant ascribes to the word “forfeits” a strict connotation which he apparently derives from the com *297 mon-law idea of a forfeiture. The cases which he cites in that connection as to the law’s abhorrence of a forfeiture, etc., are not pertinent here. Of course, there was no such forfeiture. Admittedly, the defendant was not in default under the lease up to the end of the term. All that actually happened (but it was quite enough) was that the lease expired according to its definitely specified term; and, because of that, it was forthwith the defendant’s duty under his contractual obligation to surrender peaceable possession of the premises and transfer the license to his mother.

The defendant’s principal contention is that the transfer of the license by the bill of sale was absolute and is not to be cut down, for any one of several reasons, by the provisions of the contemporaneous written agreement concerning the license and the. rights of the parties in respect thereto in certain future contingencies. The bill of sale was in intended compliance with the requirements of Section 238 of the Regulations of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (see footnote 1 ante) relating to the transfer of a license from one person to another at the same address. The bill of sale so required is intended to cover the “business and fixtures” and the purchase price is for “the business” with its goods and chattels and not for the license. Consequently, the consideration recited in the bill of sale affords the defendant no reason for refusing to re-transfer the license to the owner of the premises, the lease therefor having come to an end. Nor does the agreement, in its relation to the bill of sale, violate the parol evidence rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A.2d 230, 362 Pa. 292, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rekas-v-dopkavich-pa-1949.