Rowe v. Standard Drug Co.

9 N.E.2d 609, 132 Ohio St. 629, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 629, 9 Ohio Op. 19, 1937 Ohio LEXIS 192
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1937
Docket26432 and 26439
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 9 N.E.2d 609 (Rowe v. Standard Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowe v. Standard Drug Co., 9 N.E.2d 609, 132 Ohio St. 629, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 629, 9 Ohio Op. 19, 1937 Ohio LEXIS 192 (Ohio 1937).

Opinion

Williams, J.

After the Court of Appeals had granted the permanent injunctions this court decided the case of State, ex rel. Brisker, Atty. Genl., v. Buhl Optical Co., 131 Ohio St., 217, 2 N. E. (2d), 601. Thereafter The Standard Drug Company and The May Company abandoned the plan of operating the optical departments and entered into new agreements.

Each contempt case was submitted on the agreed statement of facts and exhibits attached, for determination of the question whether the new arrangement constituted a violation of the decree enjoining the defendant corporation from practicing optometry and from advertising that it was engaged in such practice.

The transcripts of testimony taken on the hearings in the injunction cases and incorporated in the bills of exceptions are of little value here since the testimony relates'to the old arrangements and the findings in the contempt cases are based on the new arrangements.

As the new plans put into operation were somewhat different, the two cases will be discussed separately.

The Standard Drug Company entered into its new arrangement with I. J. Adelson in July, 1936, by the execution of a written contract of lease. The court below found from the facts and entire arrangement that the existent relationship was not that of landlord and tenant but that of licensor and licensee.

The terms and provisions of the lease were substantially as follows: The Standard Drug Company leased a space (which had been used as an optical department) in the balcony of its storeroom in the Cleveland Arcade Building and also space in the front case in the center of the storeroom to I. J. Adelson, to be used for the conducting of an optical, jewelry and *633 watch repairing business in consideration of 20% of the gross sales as rent. All sales were to be registered in a cash register and the moneys arising therefrom were to remain in the possession of the lessor until the payments of rent were made. All decorations and improvements were to be made at the expense of lessee and all fixtures and equipment used by the lessee were to be furnished by the lessee. The payments of rent were to be made weekly by deducting 20% of the gross sales made by the lessee and any other charges lessor might have against lessee.

Lessee agreed to hire sales people for the conduct of his business and to employ adequate help for that purpose. Sales people and other employees were to be paid by the lessee, and lessee was to conduct his business on the premises in strict compliance with the law and save lessor harmless from expenses, costs and damages.

Lessee further agreed to maintain an ample stock of merchandise but the lessor was to have no responsibility nor any connection with the merchandise, sales or sales policy of the lessee. Lessee agreed not to contravene the rules and general policy of the lessor in conduct of lessee’s business.

Lessee could lease a part of the space to an optometrist with the consent of lessor and lessor should not have any right o-r interest in the business of lessee.

These are in substance all the terms of the lease.

There can be no question of The Standard Drug Company’s right to lease its premises or a part thereof to either an optician or optometrist so long as it receives no part of the fees arising from the practice of optometry and in no way participates in the practice of that profession. The written instrument was by every test a lease. It conveyed an estate for a definite term with reservation of rent. The fact that the rental was a percentage of gross receipts does not alter the *634 case. It has recently become common to require the payment of such a percentage as rental; in fact it is considered a fair and just way of measuring rental value. .When all the elements are considered, there is nothing in the contract of lease that shows the legal status of the contracting parties to be other than landlord and tenant. True the lease contains some provisions not usually incorporated in such instruments but none of them is illegal, or opposed to public policy The contract is on its face entirely valid.

The court, however, is not limited by the terms of the lease but will consider the manner in which the optical business was conducted and the extent to which the corporation participated in transactions involving optometrists.

In actual business practices The Standard Drug Company, on receiving and retaining moneys from the sale of glasses with the purpose of securing the payment of rent, issued sales slips and cash register receipts in its own name. There was nothing illegal or improper in this practice so long as charges for optometrical services were not illegally included to its knowledge. That knowledge does not appear from the record; in fact no part of fees paid the optometrist ever came into the hands of either lessor or lessee.

The circumstances under which the practice of optometry was carried is shown in the following quotation from the agreed statement of facts:

“That Albert J. Kudysh, a duly registered optometrist, has the following arrangement with Mr. I. J. Adelson. Commencing July 1st, 1936, all patients who came to Dr. Kudysh for examination were charged a fee of $1 by Dr. Kudysh, which sum was received and retained in cash by Dr. Kudysh himself. This dollar did not go through the cash register of The Standard Drug Company, nor did it in any manner directly or indirectly, get into the possession of The Standard *635 Drug Company or I. J. Adelson. At the end of each week, Mr. Adelson paid to Dr. Kudysh the difference between the.total received by Dr. Kudysh from examination fees for that week and $60, the said sum of $60 being the guarantee given by Mr. I. J. Adelson to Dr. Kudysh, in consideration of his maintaining his office in the space leased by Mr. Adelson in The Standard Drug store. This is a verbal agreement and continues up to the present time, and it is contemplated that it will continue.
“That Dr. Kudysh is present at the store in the Old Arcade, and in the space leased by Mr. Adelson, from approximately 9:30 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. daily and from 12 noon to 5:00 p. m. on Sundays, for the purpose of examining the eyes of patients visiting the said premises; that at the time that the arrangements between Dr. Kudysh and Mr. Adelson were entered into, it was understood that Dr. Kudysh was to charge $1 for examination of the patient, which is to be retained by Dr. Kudysh and is not to be included in the price of the glasses, if the patient hired Mr. Adelson to fill the prescription.
“That upon completing the examination of any patient, Dr. Kudysh writes out the prescription for the type of glasses needed, if any, and receives his fee of $1 from the patient, thereupon he informs the patient that he may go to any optician to have the prescription filled, and that if he desires to do so, Mr. Adelson is in a position to fill the prescription; that during the period that Dr. Kudysh has been located in the store, to date, about sixty patients out of 600 or 700 which he has examined, have gone to other places to have their prescriptions filled; that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.E.2d 609, 132 Ohio St. 629, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 629, 9 Ohio Op. 19, 1937 Ohio LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-standard-drug-co-ohio-1937.