Plaintiff'-lessor brought this action to recover damages for alleged nonperformance by defendant-lessee of covenants in a lease. This appeal is from a judgment in favor of defendants.
In January, 1945, plaintiff as lessor leased to defendants certain premises on Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles County for the purpose of operating a restaurant. The lease, which was for a term of five years from March T5t 1945. provided for a monthly rental of 7 per cent of the gross receipts with a minimum of $250.
Defendants went into possession under the lease and began operating the café. They changed the name of the establishment to the “Pump Room” and displayed a large sign with a pump painted thereon. A few months later defendant Loomis assigned his interest to defendant Harlow, who thereafter conducted the business alone. The venture was successful and for a period of three and a half years the average monthly rental payment to plaintiff was in excess of $1,000.
In November, 1948, Harlow opened a restaurant on property owned by him on Ventura Boulevard, about 1% miles from that leased from plaintiff. He transferred from plaintiff’s premises to the new location the name “Pump Room,” together with the painted sign of the pump and about two thirds of the personnel of the original Pump Room restaurant. The café on plaintiff’s premises was changed to a Chinese restaurant. It was not successful and receipts from the business dropped. Rentals fell to some $300 and then to the minimum of $250 a month. A few months later Harlow *378 changed the café back to an American restaurant but the business still did not prosper and plaintiff’s rentals remained at the minimum.
On April 5,1949, plaintiff sent defendant a notice of breach of the lease agreement but did not declare a forfeiture nor re-enter the premises or take possession until the term of the lease expired: By this action plaintiff seeks to recover damages for loss of rentals allegedly occasioned by the removal of the Pump Room restaurant prior to the expiration of the lease.
Paragraph 12 of the lease provides as follows: “It is further expressly understood and agreed that it is in nowise the intention of the parties hereto to enter into or create a. partnership or a joint venture in any shape, manner or form; that the care and/or restaurant business that shall be created and carried on by the Lessee, and the good will thereof, shall belong to and shall remain the sole property of the Lessee, with the full right to maintain and carry on its said business at any other place or places after the end or sooner termination of the within Lease; that the Lessor shall have no responsibility or liability by reason of the maintenance or conduct, of the said business by the Lessee, who shall save the Lessor harmless from any and all claims and law-suits that shall be brought against the Lessor based on such claimed responsibility or liability. ”
Plaintiff contends the removal by defendant of the business and the good will prior to the expiration of the lease was a violation (1) of the express provisions of paragraph 12 of the lease and (2) of an implied covenant.
Plaintiff asserts that the restraint imposed by paragraph 12 does not go so far as to prohibit defendant from carrying on a restaurant business in competition with that on plaintiff’s premises at another place less than 2 miles distant during the term of the lease but that the “activity prohibited was the carrying on in another place of the Lessee’s ‘said business, ’ that is, ‘the business that shall be created and carried on by the Lessee, and the good will thereof. ’ ” It is expressly provided in that paragraph of the lease that the “business that shall be created and carried on by the Lessee, and the good will thereof, shall belong to and shall remain the sole property of the Lessee ...”
Collas
v.
Brown,
Plaintiff cites four cases in support of his contention that there is an implied covenant that lessee would, during the term of the lease, so conduct his business on plaintiff’s premises as to make it mutually profitable to both parties:
Selber Bros.
v.
Newstadt’s Shoe Stores,
In the instant case the lease was not a renewal of a prior lease; there was no established business which the parties could take into consideration in determining the minimum rental. On the contrary it was a new venture and the parties had no way of estimating the probable revenue. Under such ' circumstances it- can only be concluded that the parties considered the stipulated minimum rent to be in Itself fair’ and adequate and any additional sum was in the nature of a bonus which the lessee was willing to pay if his business exceeded his expectations.
The facts in
Cousins Inv. Co.
v.
Hastings Clothing Co.,
A case involving facts almost identical with those in the case under consideration is
Palm
v.
Mortgage Inv. Co.,
(Tex. Civ.App.)
Much of the evidence introduced was of negotiations which took place prior to the execution of the lease! Since the agreement of the parties has been reduced to writing the written document supersedes all the oral negotiations and there can be no evidence of the terms of the agreement other than the contents of the writing. (Civ. Code, § 1625; Code Civ. Proc. § 1856;
Sorensen
v.
Commercial Credit Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Moore, P. J., and McComb, J., concurred.
