32 Misc. 2d 349 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1961
On December 21, 1956 the defendant Super Car Wash, Inc. (“ Car Wash ”), then operating an auto laundry on a part of the property at the southwesterly corner of Grand Concourse and East 140th Street, Bronx, entered into a contract with the plaintiff Harold Price to sell him that business and to obtain for him a lease from the defendant Concourse Super Service Station, .Inc. (“ Concourse Super”), described in the agreement as “ the major tenant of the premises on which the auto laundry business is located ”, in the form approved by the parties for a term commencing January 1, 1957 and ending August 29, 1972. Car Wash was to receive $28,000 for the business, Concourse Super, $32,000 for the lease, and the contract was conditioned upon the procurement of such a lease.
This agreement provided, in part, that “Purchaser [Price] shall not be required to accept other than good title to both the business of the seller [Car Wash] or to the leasehold [from Concourse Super].” If good and marketable title could not be conveyed, the agreement would end.
The defendant Kettler, who warranted himself to be the majority stockholder in both Car Wash and Concourse Super
This agreement was executed by the attorney for Harold Price as attorney in fact and also bears the signature of Harold Price.
In a second transaction, or, more accurately, two transactions involving related subject matter, the plaintiff George L. Price acquired from the defendant Nausbaum 50% of the issued and outstanding capital stock of Concourse Servicenter Inc. (“ Servicenter ”) and then from the defendant Kettler the remaining 50% of such stock. The latter deal is reflected in an agreement made April 4, 1957, between said George L. Price and Kettler, which followed the transaction in which Price acquired Nausbaum’s shares. Concourse Super was the landlord of Servicenter which operated the gasoline station on the premises at the southwest corner of Grand Concourse and East 140th Street next to the Car Wash. It joined in the Price-Kettler agreement of April 4, 1957 for the purpose of representing and agreeing, among other things, that it was the landlord under a subsisting sublease with Servicenter and that said sublease be amended to give the subtenant a free right of assignment of the sublease without consent of Concourse Super.
The controversy herein stems from a restrictive covenant against assignment or subletting contained in an instrument (hereinafter referred to as the “leaseback”) from Esso to Concourse Super, which, it is claimed, made it impossible for the defendant Concourse Super to grant to either Harold Price as the purchaser of Car Wash or to Servicenter, all of whose stock had been purchased by George L. Price, the subleases required or represented by the respective agreements of December 21, 1956 and April 4, 1957. The individual plaintiffs
An understanding of the basic issue in controversy requires a reference to past lease transactions. Concourse Super is the prime lessee of the entire parcel on which are located the Car Wash and the gasoline station. That lease, made August 24, 1951, was for a 21-year term commencing September 1, 1951, and expiring August 31, 1972. It granted Concourse Super the right to sell, assign, transfer or mortgage the premises and it was recorded. Plaintiffs eoncededly had full knowledge of this lease and it was returned in the title certification which they ordered prior to closing the first (Car Wash) transaction.
On the same day, Concourse Super sublet the entire parcel to Esso for a 10-year term commencing September 1, 1951 and expiring August 31, 1961. This sublease was also recorded and returned in the title report; and there is no dispute as to plaintiffs’ knowledge of it. It was, naturally, subject to the provisions of the prime lease and granted Esso the right to sublet all or any part of the premises. It reserved a right in Concourse Super to cancel the sublease at any time after the expiration of two years upon stipulated conditions. This right was never exercised.
Concurrently, Esso made a leaseback of the premises to Concourse Super for the term of two years from September 1, 1951 to August 31, 1953. This was the same period following termination of which Concourse Super could cancel the sublease. The instrument was recorded on August 29, 1951, with the two preceding instruments. By 1956, however, the time when the contract in suit was executed, the leaseback had expired (so far as the record was involved) and it was accordingly not returned in the title report made to plaintiffs’ counsel. The leaseback was modified by an unrecorded agreement made July 28, 1953, which extended the term to September 30, 1957. This added four years to the original term specified in the leaseback. It was correlated with a recorded modification of Concourse Super’s right to cancel the sublease by extending the firm term of the sublease by an additional 4 years — i.e., Concourse Super’s right to so cancel could not now be exercised during the first 6 years of the 10-year term thereof.
The leaseback contained a clause whereby the lessee (Concourse Super) agreed “ to make no assignment of this lease nor sublet the premises herein demised.” The plaintiffs assert that they did not see the leaseback prior to closing their transactions and thus did not know of its contents or of the restriction; that it was affirmatively represented that the Esso leaseback was identical in terms to the Esso sublease which did contain a right to sublet; that the provision of the leaseback forbidding assignment and subletting made it impossible for Concourse Super to grant a sublease to plaintiffs or Servicenter; and that the consequence is a failure of consideration in the transactions involving the plaintiffs.
If there was a failure of consideration, there is no need to consider whether there was any misrepresentation or concealment, intentional or not. At issue, therefore, is the validity of the Concourse Super sublettings to Harold Price and to Servicenter.
The leaseback from Esso to Concourse Super containing the restriction against assignment and subletting also provided that 1 ‘ if default shall be made in any of the covenants herein contained, then it shall be lawful for Lessor [Esso] * * *
to re-enter said premises, remove all persons therefrom and terminate this lease.” The record is clear that Esso never exercised or threatened to exercise this option. As a matter of law, breach of the restrictive covenant would not void the leaseback. It would only create a situation under which Esso could, by taking advantage of it, re-enter (Storms v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 77 App. Div. 94, 98, 99, affd. 178 N. Y. 493; Liebmann’s Sons Brewing Co. v. Lauter, 73 App. Div. 183, 184). This right of
With respect to the allegations of misrepresentation and fraud, the plaintiffs argue vigorously that they did not see the leaseback, did not know its contents and were misled by alleged representations that the leaseback was identical to the sublease. Although the testimony of the parties and their respective counsel in the transactions between them is sharply contradictory on those issues, one fact is certain — prior to the first closing (i.e., of the Car Wash deal) the plaintiffs had notice from the title company of their choice, that Concourse Super had made a sublease of its entire interest in the premises for 10 years to Esso and that barring some agreement or arrangement, Concourse Super had thereby ousted itself from possession or the right to give possession to anybody else for the term of its sublease to Esso. The exception sheet expressly required the sublease to be surrendered (or otherwise disposed of), because its existence was an obvious bar to Concourse Super’s ability to convey a term commencing* earlier than August 31, 1961, the expiration date of the sublease. Plaintiffs say they relied upon
In Bird v. Salt Hill Corp. (282 App. Div. 1047) it appeared that an abstract of title which defendants employed in connection with their acquisition of title indicated the presence of restrictive covenants. The court succinctly said: ‘ ‘ That should have suggested an inquiry which, if diligently* prosecuted, would have disclosed the covenant (see Williamson v. Brown, 15 N. Y. 354, 362, 364, and Kingsland v. Fuller, 157 N. Y. 507, 511).”
In Williamson v. Brown (15 N. Y. 354) the prevailing opinion stated at page 362: “If these authorities are to be relied upon, and I see no reason to doubt their correctness, the true doctrine on this subject is, that where a purchaser has knowledge of any fact, sufficient to put him on inquiry as to the existence of some right or title in conflict with that he is about to purchase, he is presumed either to have made the inquiry, and ascertained the extent of such prior right, or to have been guilty of a degree of negligence equally fatal to his claim, to be considered as a bona fide purchaser.” The concurring opinion stated at page 364: “ Where the information is sufficient to lead a party to a knowledge of a prior unrecorded conveyance, a neglect to make the necessary inquiry to acquire such knowledge, will not excuse him, but he will be chargeable with a knowledge of its existence: the rule being that a party in possession of certain information will be chargeable with a knowledge of all facts which an inquiry, suggested by such information, prosecuted with due diligence, would have disclosed to him.” (See, also, Cambridge Val. Bank v. Delano, 48 N. Y. 326, 336; Cassia Corp. v. North Hills Holding Corp., 278 App. Div. 960; Kingsland v. Fuller, 157 N. Y. 507, 511.)
The evidence indicates that the plaintiffs had knowledge when they closed the transactions here involved of facts sufficient to put them on inquiry as to the existence of a right in others in apparent conflict with interests in the subleases which they were about to acquire. In any event, the actual closing of the transactions by the plaintiffs under the circumstances of this case constituted an acceptance of such right, title and interest as the respective defendants could convey. There is no question of the right of the plaintiffs to proceed with the transactions and waive
The plaintiffs urge that actual fraud was committed upon them by the defendants in not producing the expired leaseback irnt.il after all transactions had been closed and in orally misrepresenting the contents of the leaseback. As has already been stated, there is sharp conflict in the testimony in this respect. It is academic to note that the burden of proof in this litigation rests upon the plaintiffs and that they can only prevail if they sustain the burden of proof. In the absence of establishing their contentions by a preponderance of evidence, the plaintiffs must fail. For the reasons already stated, the court is not persuaded by a preponderance of the evidence that the representations alleged to have been made were in fact made. Further, if it be assumed arguendo that they were made, they were made under such circumstances as to prevent a finding that reliance thereon was justified.
The parties dealt at arm’s length. They were careful to document their conversations and understandings in the comprehensive agreements which are in evidence. The Car Wash agreement expressly excluded representations not specifically set forth therein. Those set forth therein relating to the leaseback have not been breached since it was in existence and coexistent as to term with the sublease. The extension of the original leaseback, though expressed in a formal writing by Esso made after the closing, related back thereto (cf. Fries v. Clearview Gardens Sixth Corp., 285 App. Div. 568). The alleged oral representations if not merged in the agreement or otherwise inadmissible (cf. Danann Realty Corp. v. Harris, 5 N Y 2d 317) have not been established. None of the theories advanced by plaintiffs has been sustained.