Scarritt Estate Company v. Johnson

262 S.W. 373, 303 Mo. 664, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 630
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 13, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 373 (Scarritt Estate Company v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scarritt Estate Company v. Johnson, 262 S.W. 373, 303 Mo. 664, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 630 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

*669 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition against defendant as Judge of the Circuit Court of Jackson County to prohibit him from enforcing certain orders in a case pending before him.

The plaintiff is a Missouri corporation and owns the fee to Lots, 76, 77, 78 and 79, Eoss & Scarritt’s Addition, to Kansas City, Missouri. A brick building, adapted to theater and business purposes and known as Grand Theater, occupies said lots. On July 25, 1922, plaintiff, as lessor, and Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation, as lessee, entered into a lease for ninety-nine years from July 1, 1922, whereby the lessee agreed to pay certain rentals, taxes and insurance premiums and to make certain alterations and improvements upon the leased premises, with provision for forfeiture of the lease for failure of lessee to perform the terms and conditions thereof.

On December 24, 1922, there was filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County a suit wherein J. C. Hartman and F. P. McClure were plaintiffs and Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation was defendant. Hartman and McClure were each holders of one share of preferred stock and one bond of said corporation under a trust agreement, and were also creditors of the lessee corporation. They alleged the existence of their own and other claims against the corporation, mismanagement of the corporate business, and danger of irreparable loss if creditors were permitted to sue for and collect their demands against the corporation by sale of its assets under execution, and prayed for the appointment of a receiver and for an injunction. On December 8, 1922, W. P. Zumbrunn was appointed receiver of said corporation and an injunction was granted as prayed. The receiver was ordered to continue the business of the Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation. He gave the required bond, took possession of the property of the corporation, including the leased premises, and operated the same.

On June 2, 1923, default was made in the terms and provisions of the lease, which the Elliott Theatre Enter *670 prises corporation was required to perform, and on that day plaintiff in this case gave notice of such default and that forfeiture would he declared in thirty days unless the terms of the lease were complied with. On July 5, 1923, plaintiff gave notice of forfeiture to Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation, W. F. Zumbrunn, receiver, and Home Deposit Company. The latter was trustee for the bondholders of the lessee.

On July 5, 1923, plaintiff herein filed in the case of Hartman et al. v. Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation, its intervening petition for the order of the court for the receiver to deliver to plaintiff possession of the leased premises or to authorize plaintiff to bring action in unlawful detainer or other proper action against said receiver to obtain possession of the leased premises. Plaintiff stated that it limited its appearance in said case to the purposes of its intervening petition only. It is unnecessary to recite all of the allegations of said intervening petition. In substance, it alleged certain defaults in performance of the terips of said lease, including failure 'to pay rents, taxes, insurance premiums, to keep the leased premises in repair and to make certain alterations in and improvements upon the buildings, as required by the terms of the lease.

On July 10, 1923, all parties appeared and trial was had of the issues made by plaintiff’s intervening petition. No pleadings were filed in opposition to said intervening-petition. The evidence adduced at the hearing was transcribed, and is attached to plaintiff’s petition in this court as an appendix thereto. On said date defendant, sitting as judge of said Jackson County Circuit Court, made the following order:

“Now on this 10th day of July, 1923, it being the forty-seventh day of the May term, the hearing of this cause was continued, evidence offered by various parties and the arguments made by counsel for the Scarritt Estate Company, the receiver herein, and holders of notes or bonds and other claimants, by leave of court the list of holders of bonds was amended by adding the claims of *671 R. K. Doolittle and George Sandz for two hundred dollars each, and it appearing’ from the evidence that Am-brose K. Elliott was during, the time that he was receiver of the Kansas City Amusement Company in this court, and still is the owner of all the capital stock of that company, he filed herein a voluntary entry of appearance individually and as trustee for said Kansas City Amusement Company.
“It is therefore ordered, considered and adjudged by the court that the claims of the holders of bonds and other claims filed herein not already passed upon be continued by the court for further consideration, classification, approval or rejection; that the application of the Scarritt Estate Company, herein filed be taken under advisement by the court, and that W. F. Zumbrunn, receiver herein, he and is hereby appointed receiver for the Kansas City Amusement Company, and A. E. Elliott as trustee for the Kansas City Amusement Company, and he is hereby ordered and directed to take possession and have charge of all the property of said Kansas City Amusement Company, and said A. E. Elliott as trustee of the Kansas City Amusement Company under the terms and provisions of the orders heretofore made appointing him receiver for the Elliott Theatre Enterprises Corporation, and that said-property and all other matters involved in this case be subject to further orders herein as the court may find necessary and advisable for the protection of the rights and interests of all parties. ’ ’

On July 18, 1923, defendant, sitting as judge of said court, made the following order:

“And now the petition of the Scarritt Estate Company for possession of property having heretofore been submitted and argued to the court, and by the court taken under advisement and the court being, now fully advised in the premises, denies said petition.
“It is therefore ordered by the court that the petition of the Scarritt Estate Company, for the possession of property be and the same is hereby denied and that said petition he and the same is hereby dismissed.”

*672 On July 18, 1923, plaintiff here, as intervening petitioner in that court, filed its motion for new trial. No disposition of the motion for new trial has been made.

. On August 14,1923, plaintiff filed in this court its petition for our writ to prohibit defendant as such judge from retaining custody and control of the leased property and from further exercising jurisdiction thereover through said receiver and from continuing the receiver appointed by said court in the possession of said property and from further denying to plaintiff the relief prayed for in its intervening petition.

We will here state that on January 19,1899, Edward L. Scarritt and others (then owners of the property here involved) and Kansas City Amusement Company, a corporation, entered into a lease covering said premises for a term ending May 31, 1910.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 373, 303 Mo. 664, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarritt-estate-company-v-johnson-mo-1924.