Vakos v. Hoff and Witmer

30 A.2d 367, 151 Pa. Super. 386, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 300
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 18, 1942
DocketAppeal, 237
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 367 (Vakos v. Hoff and Witmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vakos v. Hoff and Witmer, 30 A.2d 367, 151 Pa. Super. 386, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 300 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This proceeding originated in a bill in equity filed on January 31, 1940, by the plaintiffs, Peter Vakos and Steve Vakos, against the appellants, H. Jay Hoff and I. M. Witmer, and also against Harry R. England, Jr., Paul England, Margaret K. England, Harold England, Samuel J. England, and Thomas S. Holt, as co-defendants, to restrain the defendants from interfering with the plaintiffs’ use and possession of a storeroom on the first floor of a building located on South Third Street, Oxford, Pennsylvania, which had been leased to them by the England defendants for a term which did not expire until October 1, 1940. The suit was transferred to the law side of the court on April 8, 1940 without designating whether the action was to be in assumpsit or trespass; but on January 6,1941 it was fixed as an action of trespass for damages for unlawful eviction, and resulted in a verdict against Hoff and Witmer jointly for $2500, on which judgment was entered. They appealed to the Supreme Court, which remitted the appeal to this court: Sharp v. Keiser, 292 Pa. 142, 140 A. 772.

The .record of the case is confused, much having been taken for granted on the trial, but the underlying facts may be stated as follows:

Harry R. England was the owner of the building in which the storeroom abovementioned was located. On *388 April 11, 1916 lie gave the Chester County Trust Company his bond for $8500, secured by a first mortgage for that amount on said building and the lot of ground appurtenant. This mortgage was assigned on September 2, 1936 (recorded September 8, 1936) to the defendant, Thomas S. Holt, who was an uncle of the England defendants.

On December 18, 1929 the said Harry E. England executed and delivered to his five children, named as defendants above, a second mortgage on said premises in the amount of $14,582.40. On September 1, 1932 this mortgage was foreclosed and the property was sold at sheriff’s sale to the mortgagees, the England children, and a sheriff’s deed was delivered to them. This sale had no effect on the first mortgage.

On September 6, 1935, Paul England and Samuel J. England, acting for themselves and as agents for the other England children 1 — the owners — entered into a written lease for said storeroom with William J. Fekas, Nick J. Bebas and Arthur Dixon, for use as a restaurant, for the term of one year from October 1, 1935, with the added provision written into the printed form, “It is hereby agreed that the lessees shall have the privilege of remaining .for four years after the expiration of this lease.” This was rightly construed as effecting a lease for a term of four additional years if the lessees elected to remain in possession after the expiration of the one year term of the lease; which they did.

On June 2, 1936, Dixon assigned his interest in the *389 lease to the other two lessees and on December 17, 1936 they assigned the lease to Peter Vakos and Steve Vakos, the plaintiffs, “Paul and Samuel J. England, Agents, Lessors” approved and agreed to this assignment, in writing, on the back of the lease. This waived the clause in the lease prohibiting its assignment.

Harry R. England died before the present litigation arose. On October 20, 1936, his children, the owners of the mortgaged premises, executed and delivered to Holt, the holder of the first mortgage, their judgment bond in the penal sum of $8000, conditioned for the payment of $4000 in one year, on which judgment was entered against them on February 5, 1940 in Judgment Docket 0-4, page 122. It was stated at the oral argument that .this bond was given as collateral security for the said first mortgage.

Sometime thereafter — the exact date does not appear —the England children agreed in writing to sell and convey the said premises to H. Jay Hoff, abovenamed defendant, subject to said first mortgage.

On November 30, 1939 ,a paper signed by Samuel J. England, Agent, was served on the plaintiffs, notifying them to vacate the premises, held by them under said lease, “at the expiration of [their] current term, towit on the 1st day of January 1940”. There was no legal warrant or authority for this notice. The lease did not expire until October 1, 1940, and the notice to quit had no effect on the lease or on the plaintiffs’ possession under it.

On December 4, 1939 Margaret England, one of said 'England children’, who owned said real ■ estate, died intestate and unmarried, owning an undivided one-fifth interest in said real estate, which passed to her surviving brothers, as her heirs.

During the month of December 1939 Hoff twice asked the plaintiffs to vacate said storeroom on January 1, 1940. They agreed to do so if paid a consideration of *390 $3500, which Hoff refused. Plaintiffs paid Samuel England, as agent for the owners, the rent as it fell due up to and including December, 1939; but the latter refused to accept the rent for January 1940, and returned a check which they had sent him. He also refused to accept the subsequent rent.

On December .28,1939 the England children delivered to Hoff a deed for said real estate subject to said first mortgage. Unpaid taxes, amounting to $1434, were a charge on the land, and the sale was, of course, subject to the lease which did not expire until October .1, 1940.

On January 29, 1940, the defendant, I. M. Witmer, a contractor employed by Hoff, and at his instance, started to raze the building, tearing down partitions and taking out windows on the second and third floors; he took off the roof in the rear and started to tear up the floor above the restaurant. His actions rendered the.leased premises untenantable.

The plaintiffs then filed the bill in equity referred to in the beginning of this opinion. On January 31, 1940 a summons in ejectment was/ issued by Thomas S. Holt, to the use of H. J. Hoff, v. Peter Vakos to obtain possession of the leased premises, which was quashed on February 20, 1940, for failure to file the affidavit required to accompany the praecipe.

On February 5, 1940 execution was issued on the judgment entered in Judgment Docket 0-4, page 122, as aforesaid, to No. 1 February Term, 1940, 2 on the col *391 lateral bond given by the England children to Holt, and on February 29, 1940 the real estate was sold to Holt for $1. On March 6, 1940 a deed from the sheriff was delivered to Holt, and he, in turn, on March 19, 1940 conveyed the real estate to Hoff, subject to the lien of said first mortgage.

On March 9, 1940 the plaintiffs were obliged to leave the leased premises by reason of its untenantable condition, due to the actions of Hoff and Witmer.

On July 23, 1940 a quit-claim deed from Holt and the England children, was executed and delivered to Hoff. This was likewise ineffective to discharge plaintiffs’ lease.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 367, 151 Pa. Super. 386, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vakos-v-hoff-and-witmer-pasuperct-1942.