131 Neb. 831 | Neb. | 1936
The Platner Lumber Company brought this suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on the property known as Krug Park located in Omaha. One defendant was the Krug Park Amusement Company, the lessee and operator of the amusement park. Another defendant was the Cassel Realty Company, the owner of the fee title to the real estate. The lien was asserted by virtue of a contract
The real estate involved consists of about 20 acres known as Krug Park, equipped as an amusement park and owned in fee simple by the Cassel Realty Company, a corporation organized in 1903. In January, 1917, the Cassel Realty Company leased Krug Park to Ingersoll for a term of 10 years with an option to extend the léase for another 10 years. Ingersoll organized the Krug Park Amusement Company and. assigned his lease to it. In 1927 the lessee exercised its option and extended its lease until December 31, 1937. In 1932, the Krug Park Amusement Company issued and sold bonds, and to secure them executed a trust deed to the First National Company as trustee. A provision of this trust deed was that the Krug Park Amusement Company should keep the property insured against fire by a policy with a provision that, the loss should be payable to the trustee according to its interest. In September, 1932, the bathhouse, a feature of the park, was destroyed by fire. The rebuilding of the bathhouse caused this controversy.
T,he Krug Park Amusement Company proceeded to rebuild the bathhouse by contracting for labor and materials. The Platner Lumber Company furnished materials, and the interveners furnished materials and labor for the construction of the building as follows: Platner Lumber Com
The trial court decreed a lien for the above amounts against the leasehold estate but denied the lien against the fee. The Platner Lumber Company has appealed from the judgment, and the Dudley Hamilton Company has filed a brief in this court. The Krug Park Amusement Company as a tenant had no authority to encumber the land for improvements. Waterman v. Stout, 38 Neb. 396, 56 N. W. 987. A tenant cannot without the authority of the landlord charge the land with a lien for materials for constructing a building thereon. Stevens v. Burnham, 62 Neb. 672, 87 N. W. 546; Cross & Johnston v. Eyerley, 86 Neb. 516, 125 N. W. 1085. The law relating to mechanics’ liens requires a contract between the owner or his agent and the one who seeks to enforce a lien for labor or material for the improvements on the land. It is not claimed that there was any contract between the Platner Lumber Company or any intervener and the Cassel Realty Company, the owner of the fee.
The Krug Park Amusement Company was not the authorized agent of the landlord, the Cassel Realty Company, in the construction of the bathhouse. It seems to be the argument of the appellant in this case that the Krug Park Amusement Company was in fact the agent of the owner of the fee. At least it is argued that the Cassel Realty Company had knowledge of and consented that the improvement be made. After the fire the Krug Park Amusement Company consulted the trustee for the bondholders and requested that the insurance money on the bathhouse be used for replacing the property. The trustee consented by a letter dated October 8, 1932. There was some difficulty about the payment of insurance, and on January 14, 1933, the trustee wrote another letter qualifying the former one in which it stated that it had not yet received any insurance
There is another circumstance that materially aids in our conclusion that there was no such agency, and that is the fact that appellant, Platn-er Lumber Company, did not furnish .the material on the credit of the Cassel Realty Company, or look to them for payment of their claim. The Plainer Lumber Company had been dealing with the Krug Park Amusement Company before this transaction. They had an unpaid and delinquent claim for material furnished for other purposes at the time. They knew and understood that the Krug Park Amusement Company was the lessee of the property. The mechanic’s lien which was filed and later the petition which was filed in this foreclosure case recites that the Krug Park Amusement Company had a leasehold interest in the premises. The appellant, Platner Lumber Company, did not rely upon the Cassel Realty Company for payment. The trustee ■for the bondholders paid for the material furnished so far as the insurance money was received. - However, the insurance company refused payment on some of the policies amounting to $7,500, and as a result the Krug Park
On October 1, 1931; the Krug Park Amusement Company 'failed to pay the $1,625 rent due. By April 1, 1932, the past-due rental amounted to $4,875. On June 13, 1932, at the opening of the amusement season,- $2,000 was paid ron the rental account. Rentals then past - due and unpaid amounted to $2,875. On July 1, 1932, the past-due rentals increased to $4,500. During the summer at different times •sums aggregating $1,041.66 were paid, • leaving the past* •due rentals amounting to- $3,458.34 which was the amount past due when the bathhouse was destroyed in September, 1932. The rentals were not paid regularly and reached the “total of $10,083.34 on the first of April, 1933. Some payments were made thereafter, but in September, 1933, the amount past due on the rental account was approximately $10,000; This recital of the condition of the rental account is made for the purpose of showing that the rent was not paid regularly and when due from October, 1931, to September; 1933. During this time the materials and labor were furnished by the appellant and the interveners for the construction of the bathhouse under a contract with the tenant.
The only intervener which has filed its brief as a cross-appellant is Dudley Hamilton Company. Its answer and cross-petition allege that in accordance with its contract with the Krug Park Amusement Company it furnished certain labor and material for the construction of the bathhouse; that the material was furnished and the labor performed at the instance of and with the consent, approval, and knowledge of, and on the authorization and for the
The appellant' contends that this' case comes within the 'rule announced in Harte v. Shukert, 94 Neb. 210, 142 N. W. 517. The rule there' is: “A landlord who; for several months, failed to exercise an option to- declare the forfeiture of a long-term lease for nonpayment of past-due monthly rentals, while the tenant, with the,knowledge and consent of the landlord, was making permanent improvements under his lease at a vast expense, may be estopped to exercise such option after the improvements have-been , completed.”, •It is certain that this rule is applicable to the present case. In the present case the landlord had for a long period of time ■failed to exercise the option to declare a forfeiture of the lease for nonpayment of the past-due rentals, during which 'time the tenant was- reconstructing the bathhouse which 'was burned. This was done with the landlord’s knowledge and consent or at least without-any objection on its- part. While this improvement was being constructed- the Cassel Realty Company waived its option to declare-a forfeiture and is bound by the rule on the matter of estoppel. There 'the similarity between the Shukert-case and the case at bar ends. In the appellant’s brief it • is- argued that,
With respect to the landlord’s taking possession, it appears that in the winter of 1933 the Krug Park Amuse
The facts in the case at bar and the Shukert case are distinguishable because in that case the landlord illegally took possession and appropriatéd the leasehold interest, including the expensive improvements erected by the lessee, to his own use and benefit, to the exclusion of a lienholder.
While it is not the duty of the landlord to release, nevertheless he may do so to mitigate damages, and yet there will be no forfeiture of the original lease necessarily arising from the fact. Merrill v. Willis, 51 Neb. 162, 70 N. W. 914. In the recent Nebraska case, Johnston v. Jackson, 129 Neb. 545, 262 N. W. 19, it was held that, where a lessee becomes bankrupt during the term of a lease, the landlord’s acceptance of rent from the trustee and his tenants for several months and unsuccessful attempts to rent the premises do not amount to such interferences with lessee’s possession as to indicate an intention of reentry so as to preclude recovery for the remaining period of the lease.
There is a very great divergence of opinion between the parties, not so much as to the evidence, but as to the conclusions to be drawn from certain evidence. To have set out the various contentions of the parties as to the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence would have extended this opinion to an unwarranted length. It is. sufficient to say that the Cassel Realty Company had not exercised its option to forfeit the lease because the pay-
Affirmed.