Rounds v. Owensboro Ferry Co.

69 S.W.2d 350, 253 Ky. 301, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 642
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 9, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 69 S.W.2d 350 (Rounds v. Owensboro Ferry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rounds v. Owensboro Ferry Co., 69 S.W.2d 350, 253 Ky. 301, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 642 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

On March 28, 1930, and long prior thereto, the appellants and defendants below, three brothers, Frank T., .James B., and Harry B. Rounds, owned a ferry franchise to operate a ferry across the Ohio river at Owensboro, Ky., and which prior to that time had been operated by only two of the brothers, Frank T. and James B. Rounds, as partners under the firm name of Owensboro Ferry; their brother, Harry B. Rounds, although a third joint owner in the franchise and equipment necessary for the operation, was in no wise interested in the prosecution of the business, but suffered and permitted his two brothers to operate the ferry on their own responsibility and to take and receive the net pro-needs exclusively to themselves. They had suffered and permitted the property and the franchise to become run down and neglected so that it was of but little service to the traveling public. On that day the members of the operating partnership, Frank T. and James B. Rounds, with the wife of one of them, entered into a written lease contract with Thomas S. Seay and Byrne McDaniel, whereby the partners leased to Seay and McDaniel the franchise and some property, used in connection therewith for a period of two years “beginning April 1, 1930, and ending March 31, 1932.” The lease also covered the necessary real estate at the termini of the ferry required in its operation, and a stipulation therein said: “It is further understood and agreed between the lessors and lessees that the lessees have the right and privilege at their option to renew and extend this contract and lease for and during the period of eight additional years from and after the expiration of the two years hereinabove provided for, and if said lessees desire to exercise this right and option they shall give to the lessors written notice to that effect at least thirty days before the expiration of said two year period; and if the lessees so elect and so notify the lessors, then this period of lease shall be extended for said eight additional years upon the same terms and condi *304 tions as hereinabove set ont. It is further agreed that if the lessees herein shall desire to extend this lease period beyond the ten years herein provided for, in like manner the lessees shall have the option of again extending the term hereof for five years after the original ten year term upon the same terms and conditions, by giving notice in like manner.”

It was further provided therein that a part of the consideration for the lease was that the lessees should reconstruct and build up a paying ferry business at the point designated, and, as compensation for such rebuilding and reconstruction, the lessees were to pay nothing to the lessors during the first year of the two-year term of the lease; but they agreed to pay for the second year a, royalty rental of 40 per cent, of the net income from the operation, excluding any salary for either of the lessees. The latter took charge of the property on April 1, 1930, and later leased two boats from the partnership of Frank T. and James Rounds, which were repaired and put into operation. The first year the lessees, who in the meantime became incorporated under the name of Owensboro Ferry Company to which the leased privileges were assigned by the individual lessees, made a handsome net profit over and above the outlay in repairing and equipping the property and during the second year the profits ran as high as $1,100 for some months and never lower than $800. No written or other notice was given within thirty days -immediately preceding March 31, 1932, the date upon which the two-year term ended; but on March 14th, plaintiff and appellee, Owensboro Ferry Company, gave notice of its. intention and purpose to renew, continue, and extend the lease for the eight additional years provided in the option contained in the lease; but it was fourteen days after the time had expired for giving such notice under-plaintiff’s option contained in its lease. Some conversation and- conduct of the lessors created the impression on the part of plaintiff that a surrender of the lease at the expiration of the two years (April 1, 1932) would be demanded and it then filed this equity action in the Daviess circuit court against the lessors and their brother, Harry B. Rounds, who declined and refused to-sign the lease, seeking to enjoin them from repossessing themselves of the property, or from insisting on such right because of the failure to give the stipulated notice of extension or renewal.

*305 The petition set out that the original lease was one for fifteen years covering the first two-year period,' as well as the two additional optional periods of eight and five years provided for therein, with, as was alleged in the petition, the right and privilege of the lessees' to terminate the lease at the end of the first two-year period by giving thirty days notice, but which they failed to do, and which, as contended by plaintiff, automatically extended the lease for the first additional eight-year term. Those allegations were made in the face of the express provisions to the contrary contained in the lease, a copy of which was filed with the petition and which rendered it fatally defective, but the court overruled defendant’s demurrer filed thereto. Later plaintiff filed an amended petition in which it alleged that the original lease contract was- actually entered into on April 17, 1930, and the term began on that day, since the writing was -not acknowledged by the lessors until that day, although they had each signed it and delivered it to, the two individual lessees fqr their signature, but which they had neglected to attach. It was binding on the lessors from the time of their signatures without acknowledgment, which was only for the purposes of xecordation.

It was also alleged in the amended petition that the ferry at the beginning of the lease had been practically abandoned and was without necessary equipment and the approaches to it were impassable and that plaintiff was compelled to and did expend $3,467 in repairs and equipment; that a profitable business had been built up since the lessees took charge and it would be inequitable to deprive them of the benefits of an extension or renewal under the circumstances, which allegation took no cognizance whatever of the stipulations in the lease that such repairs were expressly assumed by the lessees in consideration of no- rental payments for the first year of the two-year term. The amended petition further averred that Frank T. Rounds was an employee of plaintiff from the time it took charge in operating the ferry and tliat he received $3 per day for his services; that he possessed knowledge which he obtained as such employee, as late as January or February in 1932; that plaintiff had entered into some contracts (one of which “was with a radio station at Evansville, Ind., advertising the ferry) extending over a period beyond the termination of the lease (April 1, 1932, and that he (Frank T. *306

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.W.2d 350, 253 Ky. 301, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rounds-v-owensboro-ferry-co-kyctapphigh-1934.