Sauer v. Toye
This text of 616 So. 2d 207 (Sauer v. Toye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Bruce M. SAUER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John L. TOYE d/b/a Telephone Secretary Service, Intervenor-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*208 Joseph F. Roy, Monroe, for plaintiff-appellant.
William H. Reinhardt, Jr., Stacy C. Moak, Metairie, for intervenor-appellee Telephone Servicers, a Louisiana limited partnership and its general partner Teleservices Corp.
KLIEBERT, C.J., and BOWES and GAUDIN, JJ.
KLIEBERT, Chief Judge.
This is an action by Bruce M. Sauer, plaintiff, (hereafter owner) for past due rents, possession, and eviction of the defendant, John Toye, (hereafter sublessee) from the premises bearing Municipal Number 2315-19 Metairie Heights Avenue, Metairie, La. Two days before the date set for hearing of the rule, Telephone Servicers, a Louisiana limited partnership (hereafter lessee-intervenor), intervened claiming right of possession under a lease granted by plaintiff's predecessor in title.
Over appellant's objection, the trial court heard the intervention at the hearing on the eviction rule. Defendant-sublessee, Toye, neither responded to the rule nor appeared at the hearing. After the hearing, *209 the trial judge denied the eviction, finding ".... that intervenor [Telephone Servicers] has a valid recorded lease on plaintiff's property and that the recorded lease has sublease provisions.... [P]laintiff's knowledge of the recorded lease containing subleasing provisions, provided sufficient notice to third parties of the encumbrances on the property." The judge also denied the claim for past due rent after finding that the appellant presented insufficient evidence to prove that claim.
On appeal, the appellant contends that the trial court erred in hearing the intervention at the trial of the rule and further erred in its findings regarding the notice provided by the subleasing provisions in the recorded lease and the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the claim for past due rents. We conclude that the trial court properly heard the intervention and agree with the judgment rendered in this case, but disagree with some of the trial court's legal reasoning. Nevertheless, we affirm the judgment.
The appellant purchased the commercial office building involved in this case on January 31, 1992, by an Act of Sale from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation which was acting as receiver for the property's previous owner, Pontchartrain State Bank, then in liquidation. Pontchartrain State Bank's predecessor in title, Commercial Bank and Trust Company, acquired the property by foreclosure against the original owners, Joseph J. Geraci, individually, and James L. Sheppard, Trustee for Jules G. Mollere, III, who had pledged the property as security for a collateral mortgage note executed on April 16, 1985. The appellant does not dispute the foregoing chain of title to the property or the existence of the encumbrance.
On September 1, 1982, prior to the mortgage of the property, the original owners leased office space in the building to Telephone Servicers. The written lease between the owners, as lessors, and Telephone Servicers, as lessee, specified a five year term ending on August 31, 1987, and contained the following renewal option provisions:
"Lessee shall have the option to renew this lease for an additional ten (10) years from the expiration date thereof on the same terms and conditions, except that the rental shall be for $600.00 per month for the entire period of the option, and this option shall be considered exercised unless Lessee notifies Lessor to the contrary, in writing, 120 days before the expiration date of this lease. Lessee shall have the further option to renew this lease beyond the foregoing option period for an additional five (5) years beyond the expiration of the ten (10) year option period except that the rental shall be for $750.00 per month for the entire period of the option, and this option shall be considered exercised unless Lessee notifies Lessor to the contrary, in writing, 120 days before the expiration date of the ten (10) year option."
The lease also contained a standard provision authorizing Telephone Servicers to sublease the rented premises only upon receiving written permission from the lessor:
"Lessee is not permitted to rent or sub-let or grant use or possession of the premises to any other party without the written consent of the Lessor, and then only in accordance with the terms of this lease. Should Lessee desire to sub-let, permission must be obtained in writing through Lessor or Agent and such sublease shall be handled by Lessor's agent at expense of the herein Lessee."
The lease between the original owners of the property and Telephone Servicers was recorded in Jefferson Parish on October 20, 1992. On June 28, 1988, Commercial Bank and Trust Company, then owner-lessor of the property, issued written permission for Telephone Servicers to sublease the premises to John Toye. A written sublease between Telephone Servicers, as sublessor, and John Toye, as sublessee, was executed on June 30, 1988, but never recorded in the conveyance records of the Parish of Jefferson.
Appellant's eviction action and claim for past due rent are asserted directly against sublessee Toye. The rule filed by the appellant *210 alleges Toye's occupancy of the premises without either a lease agreement with the appellant or a recorded lease agreement with any previous owner of the property, and further alleges Toye's failure to comply with the legal notice to vacate the premises already served on him. The rule also avers that the appellant is entitled to collect reasonable rent from Toye for the period of his occupancy of the premises. Telephone Servicers' intervention petition opposes the appellant's rule based on the existence of its recorded lease with the original owners and its authorized sublease with defendant Toye.
In his first assignment of error, the appellant concedes that Telephone Servicers' intervention could be properly filed anytime prior to the hearing on the eviction rule, but he argues that it was error for the trial court to hear the intervention rule at the trial of the eviction rule. He contends that an intervention is subject to the procedural rules for ordinary proceedings, including the requirement of La.-C.C.P. Article 1571 A(2) that an answer be filed prior to assignment of the matter for trial.
La.-C.C.P. Article 1031 classifies an intervention as an incidental demand, and La.-C.C.P. Article 1036 directs that the mode of procedure employed in the incidental action shall be the same as that used in the principal action, unless otherwise specified. The principal action in this case is an eviction instituted by the appellant by a rule to show cause, as authorized by La.-C.C.P. Article 4731 A[1] and is a summary proceeding governed by La.-C.C.P. Articles 2591-2596. Intern. Matex Tank Terminals v. System Fuels, 398 So.2d 1029 (La.1981). The intervention filed by appellee Telephone Servicers is therefore also subject to the summary proceeding articles, and Article 2593 specifies that an answer is not generally required in summary proceedings. The lack of an answer to appellee's intervention in this case posed no obstacle to the trial court's hearing that intervention at the trial of the appellant's eviction rule.
We are also unpersuaded by the appellant's contention that he was surprised and prejudiced by the hearing of the intervention, having only received a copy of the intervention petition on the morning of the trial.
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616 So. 2d 207, 1993 WL 88155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauer-v-toye-lactapp-1993.