Topper v. Alcazar Operating Co.

35 So. 2d 392, 160 Fla. 421, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 762
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 4, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 392 (Topper v. Alcazar Operating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Topper v. Alcazar Operating Co., 35 So. 2d 392, 160 Fla. 421, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 762 (Fla. 1948).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, J.:

On May 16, 1946, the Alcazar Operating Company leased to Topper and Drory the concessions to operate for a period of ten years (a) the coffee shop situated on the ground floor and (b) the dining room and bar situated on the thirteenth floor, with furniture and fixtures therein, of the Alcazar Hotel located on Biscayne Boulevard, Miami, Florida. The rentals for the first year were based on a percentage of the business transacted, with a minimum guarantee of $10,000 and $15,000 per annum for the subsequent years. The lessees were required to deposit with the Alcazar Operating Company as security for the performance of the lease the sum of $15,000 viz: the sum of $5,000 on the execution of the lease and an additional $5,000 on the commencement of the lease and $5,000 on the beginning of the second year of the lease. The electricity consumed was to be paid by the lessees.

The Alcazar Operating Company, on June 17, 1946, by separate instrument leased the cocktail bar situated on the ground floor of the hotel to Topper and Drory. The lease was for a period of one year and yielded rentals in the sum of $20,000, payable as follows: $7,500 on the execution and the further sum of $7,500 four months after the date the cocktail bar was ready for operation, and $5,000 eight months after the cocktail bar was ready for operation. A clause providing for a renewal of the lease for nine years was incorporated in the lease, and the annual rentals under the new lease were for the sum of $20,000, payable monthly, plus a percentage of the business transacted in excess of $75,000 in any one year. *423 The lessees stipulated to pay extra for electrical current consumed. Ernest M. Drory, in October, 1946, assigned his interest in both leases to Topper and the latter became the sole lessee and operator under the terms of both leases.

On June 6, 1947, the Alcazar Operating Company and Joseph E. Topper by mutual consent agreed to cancel the lease dated May 16, 1946, and each signed a written instrument by the terms of which each of the parties released and discharged the other from any claim, liability, suit or action because of said lease, thereby rendering the same void and without legal effect. Some of the witnesses testified that the Alcazar Operating Company forgave the lessee Topper the sum of $3,600 in defaulted rents under the terms of the canceled lease. The witnesses for lessee Topper dispute this testimony and contend that the consideration for the cancellation of the lease was an oral agreement by the Alcazar Operating Company to execute a lease to Joseph E. Topper on the cocktail lounge on the ground floor of the hotel.

Joseph.E. Topper filed in the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida, a suit for declaratory decree, accounting, specific performance and other relief against the Alcazar Operating Company. It was ■ alleged that during the month of June, 1947, Topper proposed to the Alcazar Operating. Company that he would cancel his lease on “the dining room and the bar on the top floor of the Alcazar Hotel and the hotel would cancel an alleged claim of $6,000 for rents and the hotel would grant Topper a new lease on the coffee shop on the ground floor and a new lease for the operation of the cocktail bar on the ground floor, and, in part performance of said agreement, Topper surrendered the dining room and bar on the top floor of the hotel, and that a new lease be given him on the coffee shop and the cocktail lounge on the ground floor.” The Alcazar Operating Company refused to carry out its agreement and executed the leases according to its agreement. The plaintiff does not owe the defendant any sum of money as rents but the defendant has in its possession a sum of money of the plaintiff in an amount in excess of the total amount due by the defendant for all commissions covering all periods of time prior to filing suit.

*424 Paragraph VI of the bill of complaint was amended and alleged therein that the lease which the defendant agreed to give the plaintiff and under which the plaintiff was to operate a cocktail lounge on the ground floor of the Alcazar Hotel was to be on the same terms and conditions as in the existing lease, except the amount thereof was to be determined by the plaintiff and the defendant after the determination by them as to what gross receipts of the business to be conducted by the plaintiff on the premises were and the rents to be paid to the defendant were to be a reasonable sum of money based upon the gross receipts which it was estimated that the plaintiff would derive from the operation of the cocktail bar.

It was alleged that the lessee Topper had an option to renew the lease as set out in his Exhibit No. 2, which recited that the “lessor does hereby give and grant to the lessees the option to renew this lease for the balance of the term of the lease dated the 2nd day of November, 1945, from Anna Brodsky and others to the Alcazar Operating Company . . . provided that if the lessees elected to renew this lease, then they shall do so at least 60 days prior to the expiration of the , one year term hereof and in that event a new lease shall be-drawn and executed by the lessor and lessees embodying the terms and conditions of this lease,” etc. The plaintiff Topper alleged that he gave proper notice and requested a renewal of the lease within the 60 day period prior to September 12,1947. The bill prayed for (a) a specific performance of the agreement of the parties for a renewal of the lease of the coffee shop and the cocktail bar situated on the ground floor; (b) an accounting; (c) if specific performance be denied of the agreement for a lease as described in paragraph VI of the bill, then the defendant be required to specifically perform the renewal option set out in plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2.

The Alcazar Operating Company in its answer denied the material allegations of the bill of complaint and alleged that the plaintiff lessee did not elect to renew the lease sixty days prior to September 10, 1946, neither has he deposited or offered to deposit the sum of $10,000, or any other sum, as security for the performance by the lessee of the terms and conditions imposed by the lease, and that the lessee has not of *425 fered to perform the conditions and provisions of the renewal option set out in plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2. The answer denied specifically the allegations of the bill of complaint to the effect that a verbal agreement had been made for a new lease on the cocktail lounge on the ground floor of the Alcazar Hotel.

Testimony of the parties was heard by the Chancellor on the issues made by the pleadings and on final hearing the court held (1) that the equities of the cause were in favor of the defendant wherein the plaintiff sought specific performance of an alleged oral contract to make a new lease on the cocktail lounge on the ground floor of the Alcazar Hotel; (2) that the plaintiff was entitled to a renewal of the lease on the cocktail bar under the option to renew as set out in plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2, after compliance with the enumerated condition and provisions of the lease; (3) that the Alcazar Operating Company was indebted to the plaintiff lessee in the sum of $1,425.39. The plaintiff below appealed.

In the case of Daubmyre v. Hunter, 86 Fla. 326, 98 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 392, 160 Fla. 421, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/topper-v-alcazar-operating-co-fla-1948.