People's Bank v. Bennett

159 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit in unlawful detainer. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the court peremptorily instructed that plaintiff could not recover and from this judgment the appeal is prosecuted.

It appears that the property involved is owned by one Dr. A. Lane, and that he is president of plaintiff bank. Dr. Lane leased the entire property, consisting of a hotel building, and banking room therein, to plaintiff -bank, and the bank re-let the hotel building to defendant, but, afterward defendant negotiated a lease for the hotel building directly with Dr. Lane and now claims the right of possession under this subsequent lease. It appears that on February 10, 1904, Dr. A. Lane, owner of the premises, let the entire property, consisting of the hotel building, and banking room therein, to plaintiff bank fór a period of five years, until February 10, 1909. The rent agreed upon *5was twenty-five dollars per month, for the entire property. It was stipulated in this lease that the bank might continue to hold the premises for another like term of five years at the same rental and under the same terms and conditions as set forth in the original lease, if it elected to do so. Plaintiff bank occupied one room of the building as its banking house, and more than two years thereafter, on April 25, 1906, let all the remainder of the premises to defendant for a hotel. Though this lease to defendant was executed April 25, 1906, it created a term of three years, from February 10th of that year, terminating on February 10, 1909, for which defendant agreed to pay plaintiff bank a monthly rental of twenty-five dollars per month in advance. This lease stipulated, too, that defendant might continue it under the same terms and conditions and at the same rental for the same term, if he chose to do so at its expiration.

From what has been said, it appears that the lease of plaintiff bank from Dr. Lane expired February 10, 1909, with the privilege of renewal, and the lease of defendant from plaintiff bank expired on the same day, with a like privilege. Two days before the bank’s lease with Dr. Lane expired, that is on February 8, 1909, it renewed the same for. a new period of five years, commencing on February 10, 1909, and ending February 10, 1914. Though defendant’s lease with the bank of that portion of the building which he occupied as a hotel expired on the same day, he negotiated no new contract of lease thereof but continued in possession of the premises, as before, under his lease which stipulated that he might do so, if he chose, on like terms as those contained in. the original lease. Defendant paid plaintiff bank the rent falling due on the first day of the months of March, April, May and June after the lease expired, but defaulted or refused to pay rent to the bank July 1st. Defendant refused to pay further rent to *6the bank, because, as he says, he had rented the premises from Dr. Lane, the owner, for a period of ten years, from July 1, 1909, to June 30, 1919, at forty dollars per month for the term of ten years. The facts touching this matter are about as follows: Defendant and Dr. Lane negotiated for several weeks about the lease of the premises and it appears several of the directors of the plaintiff bank knew that such negotiations were pending but did not consent thereto. Finally, on June 23d, Dr. Lane and defendant entered into a written lease, whereby Dr. Lane, as owner of the premises and not as president of plaintiff bank, let to defendant the entire property, including the banking house quarters, for the term of ten years, as above suggested, at a stipulated rental of forty dollars per month. As a part of this arrangement, defendant executed and delivered to Dr. Lane a writing which recites that, in consideration of one dollar to him paid, he let to plaintiff bank, free of further rent or charges therefor, the room occupied by it, for a period ending on the 10th day of February, 1914— that is, the same date on which the bank’s new lease with Dr. Lane terminated. This memorandum also provided that at the expiration of that period (February 10, 1914), defendant would rent to plaintiff bank the same room for the remainder of this term— that is, until July 1, 1919, at such rental as the parties should agree upon, and, if no agreement could be made between them, such as might be agreed upon by a board of arbitrators selected for the purpose. The lease so made from Dr. Lane, the owner, to defendant, of date June 23, 1909, was acknowledged before Mr. Glassey, the cashier of plaintiff bank, who was likewise a notary public, and it appears that Dr. Lane, the president of the bank, signed, as a witness, the agreement by which defendant authorized the bank to occupy the premises until February 10, 1910, free, of rent. At the same time, and simul*7taneously with the execution of these papers, Dr. Lane executed, a written order, directed to defendant, by which he appointed plaintiff bank as his agent to collect the rent of the premises for him under the new lease above mentioned. This paper was witnessed by J. A. Glassey, the cashier of the bank, who" signed his name thereto as á witness, but Glassey says that he did not know the matter involved a lease of the property until after he had taken the acknowledgment and received Dr. Lane’s copy of the lease to deposit with Lane’s private papers in the bank. Dr. Lane delivered his copy of the lease to Glassey, the cashier, to be placed with his papers, but the bank repudiated the transaction throughout immediately and asserted its rights to the premises under the lease renewed on February 8, 1909, for a term of five years, from February 10th of that year to February 10, 1914. Though it appears some of the directors of the bank knew that negotiations were pending between Dr. Lane, the owner of the property, and defendant about a lease, it is not shown that any of them consented thereto. Indeed, it affirmatively appears from the testimony of defendant, as well as from Dr. Lane himself and the cashier of the bank, Mr. Glassey, that shortly prior to June 23d, when the lease was consummated, Mr. Glassey, the cashier of the bank, informed Dr. Lane and defendant that he would not consent to a letting of the property to defendant by Dr. Lane, as it was a matter about which he was without authority and pertaining to which the board of directors alone could act. As to this, it appears Dr. Lane and defendant called at the bank to discuss with Glassey, the cashier, the matter of the proposed lease between Dr. Lane and defendant. Upon informing Mr. Glassey thereabout and requesting his consent, he refused it point blank, saying that is a matter for the board of directors. Notwithstanding this warning, Dr. Lane proceeded to execute a lease with *8defendant as above stated and defendant relies thereon for his right of possession against the bank. The lease which defendant originally entered into with the bank stipulates for the payment of a monthly rental to the bank of twenty-five dollars per month, on the first day of each month, and provides further that, in the event defendant should default in any installment of rent for thirty days after the same is due, the lease shall terminate and he will, on demand, reinstate plaintiff in the peaceable possession of the premises. Defendant having defaulted in the payment of rent due to plaintiff under its lease, on July 1, 1909, plaintiff thereafter demanded possession and served a written notice on defendant to that effect, on August 10, 1909. As defendant continued in his refusal to either pay plaintiff rent or give possession of the premises, this suit in unlawful detainer was instituted on August 21st of the same year.

There can be no doubt that plaintiff bank leased the premises from Dr. Lane on February 10, 1904, for a period of five years, with bhe privilege, of renewal for a like term. ' It is conceded, too, throughout the ease that the bank renewed this lease for the entire premises on February 8, 1909, for a period of five years from February 10, terminating on February 10, 1914. So much is beyond question in the case; and it is conceded, too, that defendant became a tenant of so much of the building as was occupied by -the hotel for a term of three years, commencing February 10, 1906, and ending February 10, 1909. This lease stipulated that defendant might continue the tenancy, under the identical terms as provided therein, for a new period of three years from February 10, 1909, if he chose to do so. On the original lease expiring, February 10, 1909, defendant continued in possession of the premises, paying rent to plaintiff bank as before. On. the first days of March, April, May, and June, he paid to plaintiff the installments *9of twenty-five dollars .each, as originally stipulated .in the lease. No negotiations for a new lease were pending between the parties at the time the old one expired, and by continuing in possession of the premises, under the circumstances stated, the relation of landlord and tenant between plaintiff and defendant continued identically as before, for a new term of three years, terminating on the 10th day of February, 1912. [See Lewis v. Perry, 149 Mo. 257, 50 S. W. 821; Ins. Co. v. National Bank, 71 Mo. 58; Leggett v. Louisiana Purchase Exposition Co., 157 Mo. App. 108, 137 S. W. 893.] It therefore appears affirmatively, and beyond the pale of controversy, that defendant was tenant of plaintiff bank at the time Dr. Lane, the owner of the building (who is likewise president of the bank), negotiated a lease to him for ten years, from July 1, 1909, to July 1, 1919.

By instructing a verdict for defendant as a matter of law, the court essentially assumed that the conduct of Dr. Lane, who was president of the bank, in executing a -lease of the premises, as owner thereof, to defendant and the conduct of Mr. Glassey, the cashier, in taking the acknowledgment of the parties to such lease, as notary public, and receiving Dr. Lane’s copy of the lease to be placed with his private papers in the bank operated a surrender of the bank’s leasehold estate and the creation of a new term, whereby the bank became tenant of defendant from July 1, 1909, to July 1, 1914. It is clear that no such result may be declared as a matter of law on these facts, unless Dr. Lane as' president of the bank possessed the implied power, without express authority from the board of directors, to cancel the bank’s lease with him and enter into a new one for it, whereby the bank was made tenant of defendant instead of defendant remaining tenant of the bank, and this, too, in a case where Lane was known to be dealing, as owner of the property, for himself, on his own ac*10count and for a profit to him. By the new arrangement, Lane would receive forty dollars per month for the building, while, under the lease with the bank, he received but twenty-five dollars. Though the president of a bank or other corporation may perform the duties incident to the trust reposed in him, including such as custom or necessity has imposed upon his office, without express authority, he is without implied power, as a matter of law, to either lease the corporation’s real estate or cancel leases it has outstanding with respect thereto or enter into new ones for it as lessee. [See Koch v. National, etc. Bldg. Assn., 35 Ill. App. 465; s. c., 137 Ill. 497; 2 Thompson on Corporations (2 Ed), sec. 1470.] As to the conduct of Mr. Glassey, the cashier, in taking the acknowledgments of the parties as notary public to the new lease and receiving a copy to be placed with Dr. Lane’s papers in the bank, it should be said that he in no sense acted for the bank in taking the acknowledgment but only in bis official capacity as notary, and in receiving the papers he acted prima facie as a mere depositary for Dr. Lane’s personal convenience. Though the cashier is regarded, in a manner, as tbe executive officer of a bank, this pertains only to the current business of such institutions with respect to their financial affairs, such as deposits, discounts, exchange, etc. The cashier, of course, is without implied authority, as a matter of law, to either lease the bank’s premises, accept the surrender of a leasehold term or lease premises of others for it. [2 Thompson on Corporations (2 Ed.), sec. 1526.] Furthermore, nothing in evidence suggests that the cashier was acting for the bank in this case, and it does appear that he had, only a short time before, informed both defendant and Dr. Lane that the .board of directors alone could authorize the transaction they sought to consummate. But aside from all of this,' the fact remains that the transaction of the new lease had with Dr. Lane was with him as *11owner of the premises and for his private benefit instead, of as president.of the bank, for while he arranged for free rent to the bank for five years, he appropriated to himself a profit of fifteen dollars per month in the transaction and sought to impair the bank’s reversion of two years of the term after defendant’s iease with it expired. Defendant knew he was dealing with Dr. Lane as owner of the property and not as president of the bank in consummating the lease referred to, and, in view of this fact, it is obvious that the law will not conclude a transaction between them as beyond repudiation on the part of the bank, when it appears Dr. Lane, who occupied a position of trust, realized a profit for himself.

The court should have referred the matter to the jury for inquiry as to whether or not the bank intended and consented to a surrender of the premises and the new letting. It appears defendant expended some money in improving the premises under the new lease with Dr. Lane. In view of this fact, if it appears on the trial that the board of directors of the bank officially, or a majority of them personally, consented to the new lease by Lane to defendant, no doubt an estoppel may be invoked therefrom in aid of defendant’s cause. The facts on this matter are not developed and the question is not decided.

The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.

Reynolds, P. J., and Caulfield, J., concur.
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