287 Mass. 18 | Mass. | 1934
This is a suit in equity wherein the plaintiff seeks specific performance of an oral agreement to give him a lease of a suite of offices occupied by him in the Hotel Edison building in Lynn, Massachusetts, and the cancellation of a lease of said suite executed and delivered by the defendant corporation to the defendant Fleishman. The plaintiff also seeks an injunction against the defendants to restrain them from interfering with his tenancy, and prays “that the court establish the amount due from the defendant Lincoln Realty Corporation of Lynn to the plaintiff.
The record discloses the following facts: On July 23,1931, the plaintiff was employed by the defendant corporation to draft plans and specifications for, and to supervise the erection and construction of, the Hotel Edison building. He was to receive as compensation for his services six per cent of the total cost of said building when completed. The judge found the amount due the plaintiff on January 24, 1934, the date of the order for final decree, was $5,420. Before beginning construction of said building it was agreed between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation that the plaintiff was to be a tenant of said building when constructed, but there was no “agreement as to the terms of the proposed lease.” On
On July 24, 1931, the defendant Cambridge Savings Bank made a construction loan of $180,000 to the defendant corporation, secured by a construction mortgage on the Hotel Edison building. A list of tenants who were represented as having taken or agreed to take leases was furnished the savings bank in July, 1931, by one who was employed by the bank to investigate the property. This list was furnished after consultation with both the plaintiff and the representative of the defendant Lincoln Realty Corporation of Lynn, and contained the plaintiff’s name as a lessee at $150 per month instead of $50, the only figure agreed upon. The bank furnished the construction mortgage of $180,000 in reliance upon this list of lessees. The trial judge in his finding of material facts said: “In my view of the case it is not necessary to determine and in the absence of the evidence of the bank’s agent it is not possible to determine who were the guilty parties to this fraud on the bank.” The defendant corporation in furnishing the savings bank with written reports of rental payments credited the plaintiff with payments of $50 per month beginning May 1, 1932. No statements for rent were sent to the plaintiff.
In July, 1932, the defendant corporation was expecting to receive the final payment from the construction mortgagee. The amount expected was not sufficient to pay in full all outstanding claims of those who had helped construct the building. At a meeting of creditors held about July 20,1932, an agreement was made which could not be carried out because the construction mortgagee deducted from the payment approximately $3,000 for taxes. There was due the plaintiff at this time a cash payment of $3,100. When he arrived at the meeting he was told by the attorney for the Lincoln Realty Corporation of Lynn that the corporation lacked the sum of $3,700 to pay the creditors in accordance with the agreement. The plaintiff thereupon stated, in sub
The trial judge ruled on the facts found that nothing prevented the defendant from terminating the tenancy in any manner in which a tenancy at will can be terminated. On July 27, 1933, the defendant corporation gave the plaintiff notice to quit for the nonpayment of rent and thereafter brought a summary process in the District Court to eject the plaintiff. This proceeding was denied rightly on the ground that the agreement as to the payment of rent was valid and, consequently, no rent was due when the notice to quit was served on the plaintiff. The defendant corporation on November 3, 1933, gave a lease of the premises above described and occupied by the plaintiff to the defendant Fleishman for the term of one year. Fleishman duly caused notice thereof to be served on the plaintiff. On the.above facts the trial judge found and ruled as follows: “Of course, Fleishman never intended to occupy the premises himself and intended after taking possession of the premises and dispossessing the plaintiff to cancel his lease, but that is true of every lease given under such circumstances and for such a purpose. The lease, nevertheless, is at law held valid as against the tenant in possession. Since on the findings herein made the defendant had all the rights of any owner to terminate the plaintiff’s
On the fact that there was no agreement as to how long the plaintiff should continue in possession of the premises, the ruling was right that it was immaterial that the plaintiff had spent a substantial amount of his own money in equipping the office for his own needs. In this connection it is to be noted that the mortgage title of the Cambridge Savings Bank was in force before the plaintiff became a tenant at will of the defendant corporation and that the savings bank was without knowledge of the agreement as to rent between the defendant and the plaintiff. The plaintiff has no ground for equitable relief based on the mere fact that the defendant corporation used the legal means of terminating a tenancy at will by a conveyance of the premises. DeWolfe v. Roberts, 229 Mass. 410. Foley v. Gamester, 271 Mass. 55, 56, 57. Berman v. Rowell, 274 Mass. 260, 265.
Decree affirmed with costs.