Spalding Hotel Co. v. Emerson

72 N.W. 119, 69 Minn. 292, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 12, 1897
DocketNos. 10,346—(35)
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 72 N.W. 119 (Spalding Hotel Co. v. Emerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spalding Hotel Co. v. Emerson, 72 N.W. 119, 69 Minn. 292, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 271 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

This was an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendants, wherein it was sought to obtain, as relief against them, a permanent injunction restraining the defendant Silvey from allowing the defendant Emerson to occupy certain rooms in the Spalding Hotel, in the city of Duluth, as a homestead or for any other than hotel purposes, and to restrain the defendant Emerson from occupying the said rooms as a homestead or for any other than hotel purposes. The court below sustained a general .demurrer to that complaint, and plaintiff appeals.

From the complaint it appears that defendant Emerson first entered into possession of the premises under a lease from plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, the Spalding House Company. When the plaintiff purchased from the house company, it and defendant Emerson entered into a new lease, in substance the same as the first. Later, Emerson being insolvent, a receiver of his estate was appointed under the insolvency laws of this state, and such receiver (defendant Silvey) took possession, and, by order of the court, continued the hotel business. The receiver then attempted to oust Emerson from the occupancy of certain rooms in the hotel building which the latter claimed as his homestead.. It was held, upon appeal to this court, that Emerson, as a tenant for years, was entitled to the homestead as claimed. In re Emerson, 58 Minn. 450, 60 N. W. 23. It was said in that opinion (page 454), although really obiter:

“There was no covenant in the lease that the premises should be used for hotel purposes exclusively, nor was there a forfeiture clause with the right of re-entry on the part of the lessor corporation in case they should not be so used.”

This was said when considering the claim of counsel for the receiver that Emerson could not acquire a homestead interest because [294]*294of certain clauses in the lease. It was also stated that the right of the lessor corporation (the present plaintiff) would not be the right to re-enter in case the tenant disregarded the recital and stipulation found in the lease, but probably the remedy would be by injunction to restrain the tenant. However, the question now before us, the lessor’s remedy in case the tenant disregarded the clauses and stipulations found in the lease, was expressly left undetermined. The gist of the decision on the point referred to was that the clauses and recitals in the lease would not inure to the benefit of the tenant’s creditors, represented by the receiver, for the latter had no other or greater rights as against the insolvent than a judgment creditor could obtain.

Counsel for respondents contend that the decision reached in the homestead case is conclusive here, and for this reason the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. We cannot concur in this view. It is a familiar rule that a court of equity will enforce a covenant in a lease that the premises demised shall be used for certain purposes, and the tenant will be restricted to that use by injunction. While the tenant Emerson was operating the hotel, he certainly had a right to use a portion for his family, for it might well be that this was essential for the proper management of his business; and therefore, as against his creditors or their representatives, he might acquire homestead rights which could not be interfered with by either. His occupation of the rooms in question while he was conducting the hotel business was a part of that business, but, when he ceased the business, his continued occupation of the rooms was independent of and disconnected with it.

When he ceased the business of hotel keeping, he was no longer occupying the rooms for hotel purposes, but for the purposes of a private residence. That a plain and unambiguous covenant in the lease that the premises should be occupied for hotel purposes exclusively would have been broken as soon as the tenant ceased to carry on the hotel business, either because his estate had gone into the hands of a receiver or for any other cause, and he occupied all or a part of the hotel building as a private residence, is self-evident. That under such circumstances a technical forfeiture clause, which [295]*295would include the right of re-entry, could be enforced, is equally plain. The remedy of the lessor upon such a covenant, coupled with a forfeiture clause, would be re-entry, or, as we have seen, the covenant could be enforced in equity, and the tenant restricted to the use agreed upon, by injunction.

While, as before stated, there was no express or formal covenant as to the use to which the premises should be put in the lease (and it was the absence of this express or formal covenant which was mentioned in the former opinion), there was certain language used therein, and some stipulations, which, fairly construed, amounted to an agreement that the building was to be occupied by the tenant for hotel purposes exclusively. It was recited that the premises leased were an hotel building, and were demised and. leased for hotel purposes, and to be operated as such; and, in the clause against subletting without the written consent of the lessor, it was stipulated that the clause should not be construed as preventing the leasing of cigar and news stands or spaces for other business incidental to that of operating an hotel. The lease also contained this clause:

“As a further condition of his occupancy of said premises agrees to conduct and operate therein and thereat a public inn, first-class in all its appointments or accommodations, give to it so much of his personal time and attention as may be necessary, and exert his best efforts for its successful management, and to maintain the reputation of the house, and continue it in the favor of the public, as well for his own profit as for the good name of the property and plant.”

Now, with the construction we have placed on this language and this clause, which we hold to be an agreement to use the premises for hotel purposes exclusively, is the remedy which plaintiff lessor seeks available to it? No one would contend that, under the terms of the contract, the tenant would be permitted to close the hotel, and open a theater or a grocery house in lieu thereof, for the building was erected, fitted up, and furnished as an hotel. It was leased as an hotel and for hotel purposes. The lessor not only alleges that it is for its interest that an hotel be maintained and operated, but this is the presumption in view of the language and stipulations in the lease, which the lessor caused to be inserted therein, and should have the right to enforce, — language and stipulations which in this form of action ought to be construed as equivalent to an express [296]*296covenant in respect to the use of the premises, with a formal forfeiture and right of re-entry clause. No effect can be given to these portions of the lease unless it be held that there was a positive and enforceable agreement, of the nature above mentioned. Having entered into an agreement that the building should be expressly used for hotel purposes, with a rental fixed and other conditions inserted in the contract upon this basis, it would be most inequitable to hold that, notwithstanding a misuse of the property, and a rank violation of and departure from the terms of such contract, the lessor is without a remedy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.W. 119, 69 Minn. 292, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spalding-hotel-co-v-emerson-minn-1897.