This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action for declaratory relief.
Plaintiffs leased to defendant, a Japanese, the. second floor of the building located at the northеast corner of First and Los Angeles Streets, in the city of Los Angeles, for the period from February 1, 1940, to January 31, 1944, at a rental of $175 per month. Defendant operated a hotel business in the demised premises until May 8, 1942. On May 3, 1942, a Civilian Exclusion Order, issued by the military authorities, ordered that from and after May 11, 1942, all persons of Japanese ancestry be excluded from the area in which the hotel was located. On said last mentioned date defendant and all other persons of Japanese ancestry were evacuated from the city of Los Angeles and were excluded by Civilian Exclusion Orders from said area during the remainder of the term of said lease.
The lease prоvided that “the lessee shall use the premises for conducting a hotel and renting office space, and for no
■ It was stipulated that at no time during the period covered by the lease did the defendant actually reside on the premises. He employed various persons to reside therein and manage his hotel business. Each day, however, he visited the premises and advised said manager with respect to various matters and assisted in doing the physical labor necessary to the operation of said business. On May 5, 1942, plaintiffs sent defendant a letter in which they waived any requirement of the leasе that he personally occupy the premises and consented to any assignment or sublease he might care to make. On May 8, 1942, defendant, with consent of the plaintiffs, sublet the premises to H. J. Marrs, at a rental of $100 per mоnth. He immediately went into possession. The plaintiffs commenced this action for declaratory relief in which they sought to have it determined that the lease was still binding. The original judgment was in favor of plaintiffs, but it was reversed (on an appeal on the judgment roll) and remanded for a new trial. (See
Brown
v.
Oshiro
(1943),
The trial court found, amоng other things, that prior to the evacuation order 75 per cent of the tenants in number, on the average, in said hotel were of Japanese ancestry, and inferentially that 25 per cent were non-Japanesе; that the hotel was located in the heart of the area known as “Little Tokio”; that the parties, at the time of the execution of said lease, intended that defendant should personally conduct a Japanеse hotel, that is, one catering primarily to persons of Japanese ancestry; that by virtue of the removal of all Japanese from the area defendant could not operate the kind of a hotel сontemplated by the parties when the lease was executed.
As conclusions of law the court concluded that the terms and conditions of the lease were impossible to perform by defendant after May 11, 1942, аnd that he was excused from all obligations thereunder, and that his defense of commercial frustration had been sustained.
Plaintiffs contend: (1) that the evidence is insufficient
It is apparent from the lease, as stated by the court on the former appeal (p. 193), “that the ‘desired object’ of the parties was to provide ‘for conducting a hotel and renting office space.’” There is no direct evidence which tends to limit or define this “desired object” as expressed in the lease. It may be that the defendant
hoped and expected
that because he was of Japanese ancestry and because his hotel was located in the Japanese community hе would be able to get a large amount of Japanese patronage. In this connection it should be noted that the defendant had operated this hotel under a prior lease since some time in 1936, and that, aсcording to the undisputed evidence, for at least several years prior to the execution of the lease here in question the proportion of the tenants who were Japanese and those who were not Japanese was substantially the same as it was during the period of this lease. It is also significant that defendant changed the name of the hotel from a Japanese name to State Hotel prior to entering intо this last lease. Furthermore, the evidence is undisputed that there was non-Japanese occupancy of a substantial number of properties in the immediate vicinity of this hotel. As previously stated the hotel is located on the northeast corner of First and Los Angeles Streets. It has an entrance on each of said streets. On the west side of Los Angeles Street, both north and south of First Street, the occupancy was non-Japanesе. On the east side of Los Angeles Street, north of the hotel, the occupants were non-Japanese. On the east side of Los Angeles Street, south of First Street, the predominant character of the occupаncy was non-Japanese. On the north side of First Street, immediately adjacent to the hotel on the east, there was a garage operated by a non-Japanese. Defendant’s hotel was thus readily accеssible, geographically, to whatever non-Japanese trade these neighboring establishments brought to that vicinity. Defendant was thus in a position to get substantial non-Japanese patronage and succeeded to the extent that 25 per cent of his tenants, on the
In order to determine the applicability of the defense of frustration to the “desired object” or purpose of the lease as therein stated some additional evidenсe should be recited. That evidence, which is not disputed, is that Mr. Marrs, to whom defendant sublet the hotel on May 8, 1942, took in from his operations thereof, between said date and December 31,
From these figures it is plain that the defendant has not sustained “the burden of proving that the value of the lease has been destroyed.”
(Lloyd
v.
Murphy
(1944),
Other cases involving leases which support our conclusion that the purpose of the lease was not frustrated are:
Mitchell
v.
Ceazan Tires, Ltd.
(1944),
The judgment is reversed.
Shinn, Acting P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
