Roach v. Matanuska Valley Farmers Cooperating Assn.

87 F. Supp. 641, 12 Alaska 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2095
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedDecember 30, 1949
DocketA-5315
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 F. Supp. 641 (Roach v. Matanuska Valley Farmers Cooperating Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roach v. Matanuska Valley Farmers Cooperating Assn., 87 F. Supp. 641, 12 Alaska 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2095 (D. Alaska 1949).

Opinion

DIMOND, District Judge.

The plaintiff, as guardian of Arno Liebscher, an insane person, has brought this suit against the Matanuska Valley Farmers Cooperating Association, a corporation, praying for general equitable relief with respect to a lease covering all of the property of the ward, situated in the City of Anchorage, Alaska, made by the former guardian of the person and estate of the ward, James R. Campbell, now deceased. Equitable relief is asked upon several grounds, among them the following:

(1) That the lease is absolutely void because it was executed on February 27, 1941, to run for a term of 15 years thereafter, and the then guardian was without power to execute a lease for such a long period of time, which may extend beyond the life of the ward; (2) that the lease, if not absolutely void, is voidable because the then guardian, James R. Campbell, was ill and mentally incompetent to transact business and was overpersuaded and “overreached” by the defendant in the making of the lease; (3) that the lease has become oppressive to the point of being confiscatory; and (4) that the lease is now forfeited and is null and void by its express provisions because of the failure of defendant to pay an installment of the rent on or 'before the due date thereof, and because the defendant failed to keep the buildings on the premises adequately insured.

The relevant facts are that Arno Liebscher, the ward, was adjudged insane on June 28, 1929, in the Probate Court for the Territory of Alaska, Third Division, Anchorage Precinct, and was thereupon committed as an insane person to Morning-side Hospital at Portland, in the State of Oregon, where he has since been confined. No suggestion is made that he will ever again become sane. On January 6, 1930, James R. Campbell, a resident of Anchorage, Alaska, was appointed guardian of the person and estate of Arno Liebscher, and duly qualified as guardian and continued to act in that capacity thereafter until August 25, 1941. At the time of the appointment of James R. Campbell, the entire estate of the ward consisted of a town lot in the City of Anchorage, Lot 9 in Block 23, with buildings thereon and a small amount of personal -property. Shortly after the appointment of James R. Campbell as guardian, the property belonging to the ward was appraised by three appraisers appointed by the Court who as *643 signed, the value of $900 to the lot with buildings and improvements thereon, and $100 to the personal property consisting of furniture and fixtures in the buildings, making the total value of the estate of the ward, as appraised at that time, $1,000.00. No argument has been advanced to the effect that the appraisal was erroneous or that the property in the early months of 1930 was worth more than the value given to it by the Court’s appraisers.

On August 25, 1941, the guardian, James R. Campbell, submitted to the Probate Court his final account of such guardian, that being the only report ever made by him. In this report, he states that during the period of guardianship he received the sum of $2,199.00 as rentals for said property, covering the entire period of the guardianship from January 6, 1930, until August 25, 1941. The guardian’s report indicates that during the entire period of his guardianship prior to December, 1940, he had received, on the average, less than $15.00 per month in rentals from the property. Again it is undisputed that the final report of James R. Campbell, as guardian, is correct in all respects.

Testimony given during the trial indicates that during the 1930’s, the City of Anchorage was in low economic condition, with many buildings vacant. After the outbreak of the Second World War, conditions radically changed so that at the present time, every building is occupied and the shortage of housing both for business purposes and for residences is acute, and rentals, except as controlled by law, have advanced accordingly- — some say fantastically. From the proof it appears that James R. Campbell, as guardian, had difficulty at times in renting the buildings on the property at any price and that on occasion, when the buildings were rented, the tenants failed to pay the rentals agreed upon.

In December 1940, the defendant sought quarters for its business in the City of Anchorage and finally negotiated a lease of the property in question from James R. Campbell as guardian, at a monthly rental of $45.00 per month, for a term of ten years. In taking a lease of the premises it was contemplated by the defendant that additional buildings might be constructed on the lot and in the lease, which is dated December 6, 1940, provision was made that the defendant might erect thereon an entirely new building or buildings and that “any improvement of a permanent nature or any structures erected on said property shall become a part thereof cmd the property of the first party". (Emphasis supplied.)

From the testimony of L. D. Roach, the present guardian, it appears that the then guardian, James R. Campbell, requested him to write the lease mentioned and to follow a form which had been drafted by or on behalf of the defendant. Mr. Roach testified that he protested against the lack of provision in the lease concerning payment of taxes on the property but that Mr. Campbell insisted upon having the lease drawn in the form prescribed. Mr. Roach, although an able and experienced lawyer, testified that he did not consider himself to act as counsel for Mr. Campbell in this matter. The testimony shows that some slight changes were made in the draft of lease furnished by Mr. Campbell in that the words “heirs, executors and administrators”, when referring to the -defendant, were omitted, but that generally, the lease of December 6, 1940, is almost a verbatim copy of the draft of lease furnished by defendant to Mr. Campbell and by the latter to Mr. Roach.

Shortly after the lease of December 6, 1940 was executed, the defendant discovered that the cost of construction was such as to require a lease for a longer term and so a new lease was written and executed. This lease is dated February 27, 1941, runs for the term of 15 years thereafter, with rentals payable on or before the 10th day of each month in advance, and is the one here in dispute. Although it is generally similar to the lease of December 6, 1940, it is markedly different in some respects. In the lease of February 27, 1941, the defendant was granted the right to tear down and remove the buildings on the premises and to construct a new building thereon to cost “not less than $15,000.00”. That lease also con *644 tained the following provision of genuine consequence here: “amd the said bidldhig so constructed shall be and become the property of the first party at the expiration of this lease". (Emphasis supplied.)

It is to be noted that the phrase last above quoted from the lease of February 27, 1941, does not appear in the earlier lease of December 6, 1940. The evidence indicates that the lease of February 27, 1941, was completely composed and drafted and written by counsel for the lessee, the defendant in this action. Each of the leases was expressly approved by order of the Probate Court.

On August 25, 1941, the date of filing his final account, James R. Campbell was discharged as guardian, and the present guardian L. D. Roach, was appointed and qualified and has since acted as such guardian.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F. Supp. 641, 12 Alaska 512, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-matanuska-valley-farmers-cooperating-assn-akd-1949.