Roshek Realty Company v. Roshek Brothers Company

87 N.W.2d 8, 249 Iowa 349, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1957
Docket49292
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 87 N.W.2d 8 (Roshek Realty Company v. Roshek Brothers Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roshek Realty Company v. Roshek Brothers Company, 87 N.W.2d 8, 249 Iowa 349, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572 (iowa 1957).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

Plaintiff, owner of a large business block in Dubuque, brought this action of forcible entry and detainer under chapter 648, Code, 1954, to remove defendant-lessee and put plaintiff in possession of most of the building. Alleged grounds of the action are that defendant holds over after termination of its lease and contrary to its terms. (See Code section 648.1, subsections 2 and 3.) Pursuant to Code section 648.5 the action was tried as an equitable one. Relief was denied and plaintiff has appealed. Our review is of course de novo. Rule 334, Rules of Civil Procedure.

Plaintiff leased the premises by written lease to defendant for ten years commencing February 1, 1945. Pursuant to provisions of the lease the term was extended to January 31,1970. The monthly rent was $3125 payable on the first day of each month, plus a percentage of receipts from sales of merchandise by the lessee, payable annually. These percentage payments are not here material. Defendant did not pay its rent for April 1956 on or before May 9 and on the latter date plaintiff undertook to declare the lease forfeited.

The vital provision of the lease, prepared by plaintiff, is:

*352 “(11) Default: In case the rent for any one month, shall be due and remain due and unpaid for thirty days after the same shall become due and payable and demand therefor has been made by the Lessor in writing, such failure to pay said rent * * * shall work a forfeiture of this lease at the option of Lessor, and thereupon the Lessor shall have the right to re-enter and repossess said premises, without action as of its first estate, or may bring its action for forcible entry and detainer under the Laws of Iowa, as it may elect, * *

I. The principal controversy is whether plaintiff has shown it made written demand for the April rent as a prerequisite to declaring the lease forfeited. Throughout the tenancy plaintiff customarily mailed to defendant on or about the first day of each month a typewritten statement on a printed form like this:

“Roshek Realty Company
Roshek Building
Dubuque, Iowa
Please detach and return this stub with your check.
Your cheek returned by your bank will be your receipt. April 1,1956 In account with
Roshek Brothers Company
Eighth and Locust Streets
Dubuque, Iowa.
Amount paid $.
April 1, 1956 April Rent $3,125.00
Roshek Realty CompaNy
Roshek Building
Dubuque, Iowa”

Mrs. Wareham, secretary to secretary-manager Rohde of plaintiff-corporation, testified she mailed by ordinary mail a statement like this to defendant on April 2, 1956, at the same time she mailed two other such rent statements to other tenants. She sent statements similar to the above to over forty tenants but all except the three before referred to were delivered personally by an employee of plaintiff. Plaintiff’s offices are in the same. *353 building where defendant has its store and offices and where most of the other tenants evidently are located. Parts of some of the upper floors of the store building are used by other tenants for offices.

Plaintiff contends the statement quoted above customarily mailed out on the first of each month constitutes a written demand for the rent such as the lease requires as a prerequisite to its forfeiture. There is room for argument that the parties to the lease contemplated a written demand in addition to the routine statement sent defendant the first of each month for over eleven years and sent other tenants as well. Part of the statement was apparently intended to be detached and returned to plaintiff for its convenience in bookkeeping. When the lease was made, the presidents respectively of these corporations were brothers each of whom, with his family, owned half the stock of both corporations. Under plaintiff’s contention, if defendant’s monthly rent check miscarried in the mails following receipt of the monthly statement plaintiff would have an absolute right to declare the lease forfeited without any other communication to defendant.

However, we will assume, without so holding, the statement above quoted constitutes a written demand within the lease provision for forfeiture. Nevertheless we have no hesitancy in deciding plaintiff has failed to carry the burden of showing the alleged demand was made upon defendant. There is no testimony defendant received it. Plaintiff relies wholly upon the rebut-table presumption it was received because, according to Mrs. Wareham, it was properly addressed, stamped and mailed. But we think the presumption plaintiff invokes has been rebutted.

Defendant produced as witnesses all officers and employees who have anything to do with receipt of mail and payment of rent commencing with the man who gets the mail at the post office, sorts it and leaves it on the desk of Mrs. Gilman, the personal shopper. She in turn opens the first-class mail, divides it into piles and takes it to the office of John or Tom Roshek, defendant’s vice-president and president respectively, one of whom approves the rent statement. Mrs. Gilman testified she never saw a statement for the April rent and it would never get by without her seeing it, she was looking for it because it had occurred to *354 ber sbe bad not seen it. Both tbe Rosbeks said they never saw any April rent statement. Normally after tbe rent statements are approved they are left with Miss MeGratb to be paid. Sbe testified sbe never saw a statement for April. Mr. Braig, defendant’s treasurer, gave similar testimony.

Plaintiff’s secretary-manager instructed Mrs. Wareham not to send defendant a rent statement for May. Previously, on tbe few occasions during tbe more tban eleven years of tbe tenancy when tbe monthly rent was not paid, it was included in and added to tbe statement for the succeeding month. John Rosbek testified tbe rent was not paid in these few earlier months because statements therefor were not received. On May 9 plaintiff sent defendant a registered letter saying tbe lease was forfeited for nonpayment of the April rent. Mrs. Gilman received it tbe nest day and immediately gave it to Tom Rosbek. An extensive, thorough search for an April rent statement was forthwith instituted. Rosbek testified he interviewed anyone who could possibly have bad anything to do with it. No statement was found in any file, desk or elsewhere.

Defendant then sent for its attorney and a number of defendant’s employees were again interviewed without finding any trace of a statement for April. Cheeks for tbe April and May rent were made out tbe same day (May 10) and immediately delivered to plaintiff’s secretary-manager. Checks for succeeding months until tbe trial in August were also delivered to him. Plaintiff never returned or tendered these checks to defendant.

Plaintiff claims a good deal for tbe fact defendant’s witness who picks up tbe mail at tbe post office testified be did not see a

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.W.2d 8, 249 Iowa 349, 1957 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roshek-realty-company-v-roshek-brothers-company-iowa-1957.