164 F.2d 430 | 5th Cir. | 1947
The case was disposed of without a trial by a judgment of dismissal with prejudice, from which the plaintiff, Deauville Corporation, appeals.
The complaint exhibits the lease which is for thirty-three years from June 24, 1935, and fixes “as rent the following percentages of the gross receipts of any business conducted by the tenant on said premises * * * guaranteeing however a minimum of fifteen thousand dollars per annum payable quarterly.” The lease further provides: “5. In the event of default by the tenant in the performance of the covenants relating to payment of rent, taxes and assessments, such default continuing for a period of forty-five days, the landlord may give written notice of its intention to terminate the lease unless the tenant shall remedy such default within forty-five days after receipt of such notice.” It is further provided that from the percentages over and above $50,000 the tenant may deduct payments made on insurance, taxes and assessments during the current year, and fifty percent of the cost of advertising and promotion; and the tenant is given the right to sublet portions of the premises, which for years has been done. Finally it is provided: “The gross receipts shall be audited at the close of each fiscal year by a certified public accountant at the expense of the tenant a copy of such audit to :be furnished the landlord, and based on such audit, payments shall be made to the landlord within twenty days after such audit of the percentages herein provided for, less payments made during the year.” The complaint then states that on March 6, 1946, a mandate went down from the Supreme Court of Florida in a suit by the
Appellant contends that this is a statutory proceeding to evict, authorized by Florida Statutes of 1941, Sec. 83.20, F.S.A., and that nothing is needed but to prove that some rent was due and was not paid on demand. The complaint, however, does not refer to the statute, and does not allege, as it requires, that “three days’ notice in writing, requiring payment of such rent or the possession of the premises shall have been served.” The statute makes no provision for ascertaining what amount is due, if in dispute, and no case is presented in which it has been applied by the Florida courts where the rent was uncertain and needed to be fixed and ascertained. Where the contract, as here, states no fixed rent (except the quarterly minimum payments, which are not alleged to be in default) but only percentages of profits, made in business, subject to uncertain allowances for expenditures, and the tenant is alleged to be engaged in an effort to get the amount properly fixed by litigation in the State courts, we think this summary remedy is not properly applicable. The landlord does not pretend to know what is due. The case in which he says the Supreme Court of Florida has given an opinion is conceded in argument to be that reported as Garden Suburbs Golf & Country Club v. Pruitt, 156 Fla. 825, 24 So.2d 898. The report shows, not a decree fixing an amount due, but a partial reversal with leave to take an account, and it does not appear that any final decree has yet been had. In Baker v. Clifford-Mathew Investment Co., 99 Fla. 1229, 128 So. 827, the Supreme Court of Florida elaborately considered the eviction statute relied on in the present case, along with an earlier statute found in Florida Statutes of 1941, Sec. 83.05, F.S.A., which authorizes a landlord having rent due and not paid on demand to enter and take possession, and held broadly that under common law, not changed by these statutes, the demand for rent due to be the basis of eviction, (although in Baker’s case the rent was a fixed and certain amount), must be by the landlord or his authorized agent, of the exact amount due, on the day it is due, at the most notorious place on the demised premises, except where the rent is made payable at some other place, in which case the demand must be made there. It was declared that a lessee has an estate and that forfeitures are not favored in law or in equity, and to cause a forfeiture great strictness in fulfilling all conditions in the statute or the lease is necessary; and for want of proof of “such a demand as was required at common law” the case was reversed. Under this decision, the above notices, sent by mail, naming no sum as that due and neither demanding the rent nor possession, but merely stating an intention to terminate the lease because full rent has not been paid, are insufficient.
But the answer and exhibits and affidavits show much more: that there has
But these considerations, while supporting the denial of the motion for a summary judgment, make against the dismissal of the whole cause without a trial. The defendant having formally withdrawn its motion to dismiss and invoked relief that would end the controversy, we think the amendments ought to be allowed and the case tried on its merits. If (as the judge states) there is another case pending in the district court which involves the same issue as to the rents, the two may be consolidated as provided in Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 42, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c. The tenders and the deposits made will thus be better preserved for the benefit of both parties. The transfer of the deposits to another case, the depositor objecting, may not be proper. See Masser v. London Operating Co., 106 Fla. 474, 484, 145 So. 72.
We therefore affirm the refusal of a summary judgment, but reverse the judgment of dismissal, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Because each party has partly succeeded in this court, the costs of appeal will be equally divided between them.
Reversed.
Two appeals were taken by different counsel, but they have been on motion consolidated.