Schwartz Amusement Co. v. Independent Order of Odd Fellows

128 S.W.2d 965, 278 Ky. 563, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 19, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 965 (Schwartz Amusement Co. v. Independent Order of Odd Fellows) 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
Schwartz Amusement Co. v. Independent Order of Odd Fellows, 128 S.W.2d 965, 278 Ky. 563, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 460 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

Affirming.

In this opinion the appellants, Schwartz Amusement Company and J. I. Schwartz, the plaintiffs below, will be referred to as the plaintiffs, and the appellees, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and Robert Enoch, defendants below, will be referred to as the Lodge and as Enoch.

J. I. Schwartz resides in Indianapolis, Indiana, and is engaged in the moving picture theater business personally and through the Schwartz Amusement Company, a corporation which he controls. He and his corporation held leases on two theaters in Shelbyville, Kentucky, one known as the Shelby and the other as the Strand, which theaters were under the supervision of a local manager, Robert Enoch, who resided in Shelbyville and was the agent of Schwartz. The Shelby was rented from Miss Ivory Ethington at a monthly rental of $350, payable in advance on the first day of each month. The Strand was rented from the Lodge at a monthly rental of $75, payable on the last day of each month. The written lease wherein plaintiff rented the Strand from the Lodge was dated July 1, 1936, and covers a period of five years from that date, with an option to the leasee to extend it for an additional term of five years from July 1, 1941. The lease contains this provision as to the payment of rent:

*565 . “For the said lease the second party agrees and promises to pay on the last day of July 1936, and on the last day of each following month during the entire existence of this lease, the sum of $75.00, which sum is to be paid to such party as designated by the first party, and upon a default or failure to pay said monthly payments as they fall due for a period of ten days thereafter, then the first party has the option to declare this lease canceled and take possession of the premises or to hold the second party liable therefor, and to re-rent the premises and any such rental obtained to be credited upon the amount due under this lease.”

It was customary for Enoch to make out checks on a Shelbyville bank covering the rents of these two theaters at the end of each month, and to mail same to Schwartz at Indianapolis, who would sign the checks and have his secretary enter them on his books and return them to Enoch. About the first of each month Enoch would deliver the returned cheeks to the respective landlords. The record shows that Enoch made out a cheek payable to Miss Ethington for $350 in payment of her August rent and a check payable to the Lodge for $75 in payment of its July 1938, rent and forwarded them to Schwartz in Indianapolis the latter part of July. Schwartz testified he signed both checks and his secretary and bookkeeper, Hirchman, testified he entered the two checks and mailed them in one envelope to Enoch at Shelbyville on or about July 31, 1938. Enoch delivered Miss Ethington’s check but did not deliver the $75 check to defendants, and he testified it was not received by him. However, he never called to the attention of Schwartz or of the Lodge that he had failed to receive the $75 check for the rent on the Strand

The first part of August, Schwartz negotiated with one Settos, who controls a theater managers’ corporation, to take charge of his Shelbyville theaters and operate them for him. Schwartz had not been running the Strand and it had remained dark for several years. He testified it was not profitable to operate both theaters in a town the size of Shelbyville and that he rented the Strand for the purpose of keeping some competitor from obtaining a lease on it. It was rumored in Shelby-ville that Schwartz was on some character of deal with Settos, and further rumored that another picture theater would open in the town. Enoch went to Indianapolis *566 to learn from Schwartz if he would hold his job, and Schwartz informed him that so long as his work was satisfactory he would be retained. On August 7, 1938, Enoch started working under the Settos management. Settos and his assistant, Rosenthal, came to Shelbyville to arrange for the taking over of the Shelby and the Strand Theaters, which latter they planned to keep dark just as Schwartz had. On August 10th, Rosenthal and Settos took Enoch to dinner with them in Shelbyville and talked over with him certain improvements they contemplated making in each of these theaters. Enoch knew he was retained by them as local manager and he was given a check for one week’s salary, which he represented to Settos was $40, while in fact he had been receiving only $30 from Schwartz. At no time did Enoch inform Settos, or Rosenthal,, that the rent on the Strand had not been paid, although he knew it was important to Settos, and also to Schwartz, to retain the lease on the Strand and that it was the purpose of Settos to do so.

Boyd Roe, who had no connection with the Odd Fellows Lodge, got in touch with some of its members and informed them a rumor was current in the town that a third theater was to be opened, and inquired if Schwartz had paid his rent for July: Judge Ralph Gilbert and other prominent members of the Odd Fellows had a meeting on August 12, 1938, which was the day after Roe had mentioned the subject, and they discovered the rent had not been paid. Roe advised these gentlemen he could rent their theater to Enoch for ten years at a monthly rental of $100 and advised them that if the third theater were opened in town, there would be no demand for their property. On August 13th, the Lodge entered into a written contract with Enoch wherein the Strand was leased to him for a period of ten years from August 13, 1938, at a monthly rental of $100. On the same day they made the lease with Enoch, to-wit, August 13, Í938, the Lodge wrote Schwartz they had cancelled his lease because of his failure to pay the July, 1938, rent within the time provided by the lease. Schwartz immediately came to Shelbyville and took the matter up with Enoch. Although he was in Shelbyville for several days, he did not pay the Lodge the July rent until August 17, 1938. When a representative of the Lodge accepted this rent, Schwartz was informed that the lease had been cancelled and that the rent hg *567 was paying; and which the Lodge was accepting, was the July, 1938, rent. • ’ ‘ ' ■ . ■ . ■

On August-22d, the plaintiffs filed their petition in equity in the Shelby Circuit Court against the Lodge and Enoch for a declaratory judgment under Section 639a — 1 et seq., Civil Code of Practice, seeking a declaration of their rights to this lease. The petition alleged that Enoch, while the ¿gent of plaintiffs, entered into an unlawful and illegal conspiracy with the Lodge to procure a cancellation of plaintiff’s lease so that the Strand might be leased to him; that in furtherance of this conspiracy, Enoch wilfully failed to deliver the check to the Lodge for the July rent, which check plaintiffs alleged they mailed Enoch in ample time for him to pay the July rent before the grace period expired; that the Lodge on August 13th, notified the plaintiffs the lease had been cancelled, and on that day the Lodge leased the Strand to Enoch. Plaintiffs asked the Court to adjudge the lease the Lodge had executed to them on July 1,1936, to be in force and effect, and to enjoin the Lodge ifrom leasing the property.to Enoch.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 965, 278 Ky. 563, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-amusement-co-v-independent-order-of-odd-fellows-kyctapphigh-1939.