154 F.2d 332 | D.C. Cir. | 1946
By this appeal the appellants, Peoples Mortgage Corporation, Simon S. Freedman and Sallye Gerstein, complain of a judgment entered against them in the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia pursuant to a verdict for $10,000' in favor of the appellees, Charles Bedrosian, Vahan Garabedian and Jake Nalbandian. The action was for damages for breach of a lease contract by the lessor, Peoples Mortgage Corporation.
The transcript of the proceedings in the District Court is so garbled and confused that it is difficult to obtain a clear conception of what actually happened at the trial.
This much is clear: the plaintiffs
It appears that the building in question was a part of the estate of the defunct District National Bank and was being offered for sale by its receiver, one Wardell. Either late in 1940 or early in 1941, Peoples Mortgage Corporation submitted to the receiver an offer to purchase the building and made a cash payment of $1,000. The receiver, being quite anxious to complete the sale, endeavored to assist Peoples Mortgage Corporation to obtain a mortgage loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and went to the length of sending one of his employees with Freedman to the Richmond office of RFC for that purpose. Apparently at the request of RFC, although this does not clearly appear, it was decided to submit the purchase offer to the receiver in the name of the defendant, Gerstein, so that Peoples Mortgage Corporation could endorse the mortgage to RFC when that agency made the loan. But RFC, being dissatisfied with the appraisement of the property, refused to lend as large a sum as that required by Peoples Mortgage Corporation.
Freedman then visited a number of other lending agencies in an effort to obtain the requisite loan, but without success. Finally Peoples Mortgage Corporation forfeited to the receiver the payment of $1,000 which it had made, and thus lost the chance to get the hotel property. Consequently it was unable ever to give the plaintiffs possession of the premises as it had obligated itself by the lease to do.
The proof of the plaintiffs as to their damages was this: they estimated that throughout the term of the lease they would have had a gross income of approximately $2.50 per day for each of the 33 rooms in the hotel; they then estimated what their expense would have been for laundry, janitor service, coal, supplies and rent, and concluded, apparently, that they would have enjoyed a net annual income of about $4,000. At best these estimates, as reflected in the record, were vague and speculative. It will be observed that the final estimate is much lower than the damages alleged in the complaint. No evidence was introduced as to the fair market value of the lease.
In this jurisdiction, the measure of damage in a case such as this is the difference between the fair market value of the lease and the rental reserved therein,
The fact that Freedman owned most of the capital stock of the defendant corporation cannot be said to make him personally liable for its contractual obligation, in the absence of any fraudulent or deceptive use of the corporate entity by him to evade a liability which was justly his.
We conclude, therefore, that the evidence afforded no basis for submitting the case to the jury as to any of the individual defendants; and that, there being no proper proof as to the damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiffs, there was no basis for submitting to the jury the case against the corporate defendant. The judgment^of the lower court is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.
The parties will be referred to hereinafter as they were designated in the lower court.
Costinette v. Plaza Hotel Co., 41 App.D.C. 80.
Eichelberger v. Arlington Building, 52 App.D.C. 23, 280 F. 997; Jones v. Helvering, 63 App.D.C. 204, 71 F.2d 214.