Opinion
277 A.D. 299 98 N.Y.S.2d 426 CORTLANDT CAFETERIA, INC., et al., Plaintiffs, v. CORTLANDT AND DEY STREETS CORPORATION, Defendant. Supreme Court of New York, First Department. June 27, 1950
SUBMISSION of a controversy pursuant to sections 546-548 of the Civil Practice Act.
COUNSEL
Eugene J. Morris of counsel (Alfred J. Callahan with him on the brief; Demov, Callahans&sMorris, attorneys), for Cortlandt Cafeteria, Inc., plaintiff.
Henry L. Schaefer (Abbie Goldstein with him on the brief), for Chas. W. Wolf, Inc., plaintiff.
A. L. Caccia, Jr., of counsel (Elmer J. Hoare with him on the brief; Mitchell, Capron, Marsh, Angulos&sCooney, attorneys), for defendant.
GLENNON, J.
The sole question presented by this submission is whether defendant landlord may, upon the facts stipulated, avail itself of the alternative provisions of section 4 of chapter 314 of the Laws of 1945, as amended, so as to have the rent of plaintiffs' space fixed by the application of the square-foot formula. Both plaintiffs occupy business space in defendant's building as statutory tenants. The lease of plaintiff Cortlandt Cafeteria, Inc., expired on January 31, 1950. It provided for a minimum annual rent of $26,500, plus 8% of its yearly gross receipts in excess of $331,250. Plaintiff Chas. W. Wolf, Inc., a statutory tenant since October 1, 1947, has been paying a minimum rent of $10,350, which includes the 15% statutory increase, plus 7% of its annual gross receipts in excess of $128,571.42.
Defendant, as landlord, has instituted a proceeding pursuant to the alternative provisions of section 4 for the purpose of fixing a flat rental of plaintiffs' respective space on the basis of the fair rental value per square foot. The proceeding is being held in abeyance pending the determination of this submitted controversy, wherein plaintiffs contend that the alternative provisions are not available to defendant, and the latter claims that they are. The issue, therefore, is whether an alternative proceeding may be maintained after the expiration of a variable lease for the purpose of fixing a flat rental.
Generally speaking a variable lease is one whereby a landlord acquires an interest in the tenant's business and assumes a certain amount of business risk. The rent payable under such a lease may be considerably more than a reasonable rent, or it may be less. If the 15% emergency rent formula were to be applied to a variable lease, an injustice might be done either to the landlord or the tenant, depending upon whether the freeze date fell during the tenant's good or bad business period. The Legislature recognized the considerations involved by setting such leases apart for special and separate treatment. The difficulties presented by variable leases were resolved by the enactment of section 13 which deals exclusively with variable and graduated leases. That section, as amended by chapter 326 of the Laws of 1950, and insofar as it relates to variable leases, reads as follows: 'Any lease existing or future wherein the specified rent or any part thereof is variable according to volume or other criteria of volume of the tenant's business shall continue without change, but where such lease provides for the payment of a fixed, basic or minimum rent, such fixed amount shall be subject to the provisions of this act including all of the provisions of this section.' (Italics supplied.)
The foregoing is the only provision contained in the statute with respect to variable leases. The clear meaning of the provision is that upon the expiration of a variable lease, the percentage rent is to continue unchanged and unaffected by the provisions of the act and only the minimum rent reserved, if any, is subject to the provisions of the emergency legislation. No authority is provided for the substitution of a flat rent in place of a variable rent.
Since the applicability of the act is limited to the guaranteed rental the square-foot formula may not be utilized for the purpose of fixing an increased minimum rent. The alternative provisions of section 4 provide a means of fixing a total rent. The word 'rent' as used in the section is defined by statute to mean the total consideration paid for the use or occupancy of business space. Minimum rent however is not a total rent; it only constitutes part of the rent required to be paid. The same objection exists with regard to a proceeding under subdivision 1 of section 4. The landlord, therefore, is relegated to the provisions of section 13, which provides the sole statutory method of determining rent that is to be paid during the period of the emergency after the expiration of a variable lease. The same conclusion was reached by the Appellate Division, Second Department, in Matter of J. A. Kennedy Realty Corp. (C. Ludwig Baumanns&s Co.), (277 A.D. 790).
Furthermore, any increase allowed in an alternative proceeding may not exceed 15% of the rent being paid by the tenant at the time the application is made. It is quite obvious therefore, that the same difficulties which led to the exclusion of percentage rents from the application of the 15% emergency rent formula exists with respect to the application of the square-foot formula. The 15% limitation imposed is a clear indication that the Legislature did not intend to subject variable leases to the alternative provisions of section 4. It is argued that the provisions of section 13 merely afford a means of fixing an emergency rent, whereas the alternative provisions of section 4 provide a method of fixing a reasonable rent. The argument ignores the fact that the rent fixed in an alternative proceeding may be less than a reasonable rent despite the allowance of a 15% increase.
While the foregoing disposes of the issue presented by the submitted controversy, it might be well to point out that section 13, as amended, provides a means of fixing a reasonable rent in situations such as here presented. In the Wise Shoe Co. case (274 A.D. 241, affd. 300 N.Y. 491) it was held that the provisions of section 13 relating to graduated leases did not apply to variable leases. In that case the tenant was paying a percentage rent plus a guaranteed minimum, which included the 15% statutory increase, and the landlord sought to have a reasonable rent fixed on the basis of the rent charged for comparable space. In holding that the provisions applicable to graduated leases did not extend to variable leases it was said that a landlord received all that he was entitled to under the rent law when the guaranteed rental was increased by 15%. Subsequent to the affirmance of the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) by the Court of Appeals, the Legislature amended section 13 by adding the concluding clause of the above-quoted portion of the section (L. 1950, ch. 326). The amendment subjects the basic or guaranteed rent to 'all' of the provisions of section 13, which includes the provisions for the fixation of a reasonable rent on a comparable basis. It does not necessarily follow that a minimum rent fixed pursuant to those provisions must be equal to the rent paid for comparable space, and that a tenant is to pay such minimum in addition to the percentage rent provided for in the expired lease. The restrictions and limitations found in section 4 are not carried over into section 13 so that the latter section permits the fixing of a minimum rent which, when added to the expected percentage rent established by competent evidence, will be equal to a reasonable rent. It is only the percentage rent that is to continue unchanged; the minimum rent may be increased where necessary in order that a landlord receive a reasonable total rent for the use and occupation of its business space.
Judgment should be directed in favor of plaintiffs, without costs, in accordance with the stipulation.
VAN VOORHIS, J. (dissenting).
The question arising from this submitted controversy is whether the landlord is entitled to the fixation of a reasonable rent in excess of the emergency rent pursuant to section 4 of the Business and Commercial Rent Laws (L. 1945, ch. 314, as amd.; L. 1945, ch. 3, as amd.). Portions of the building come within each of these acts, but the language of the sections is the same, so that it is treated as a single question. This concerns the alternative proceeding instituted under the second paragraph of section 4 of the Business and Commercial Rent Laws as amended by chapter 534 of the Laws of 1949. The leases provide for payment of percentages of gross receipts from sales by the tenants, in addition to fixed monthly rentals and are known as variable leases. They have expired or are about to expire. This action is brought for a declaratory judgment to determine the respective rights of the parties upon the expiration of these leases. Whether the valuation of the premises justifies a rent increase is not involved; the question is simply what formula is to be applied. The tenants contend that section 13 of the Business Rent Law and the corresponding section 14 of the Commercial Rent Law, relating to variable and graduated leases, renders section 4 inapplicable to variable leases.
In 1948 the landlord in this case instituted a proceeding against all but four of the tenants of the premises, seeking a reasonable return from the building under the then existent provisions of section 4 of these statutes. The so-called alternative proceeding under section 4 had not yet been enacted by chapter 534 of the Laws of 1949. In that proceeding, the landlord was successful at Special Term before MCNALLY, J., in establishing its right to the fixation of a 'reasonable' rent under section 4 in a definite monthly amount to be determined by the court, at the expiration of the variable leases, in substitution for the monthly basic rent and the percentage of gross rents provided thereby ( Cortlandts&sDey Streets Corp. v. New York Lerner Co., 84 N.Y. S.2d 9). An appeal was taken by some of the tenants, but before it was heard the entire proceeding was discontinued by stipulation, apparently in order to enable the landlord to institute an 'alternative' proceeding under the 1949 amendment. The landlord is now embarrassed in maintaining the alternative proceeding, owing to the amendment to section 4 enacted by the chapters 326 and 327 of the Laws of 1950, which limits recovery in the alternative proceeding to an amount not more than 15% greater than the amount of the rent being paid by the tenant in the previous year. This may result in the landlord's withdrawing the pending alternative proceeding, and again instituting the older type of proceeding which was passed upon by Justice MCNALLY.
As matters now stand, the alternative proceeding is pending, and all that we are called upon to determine on this application for a declaratory judgment upon submitted facts, is whether a proceeding under section 4 to determine the reasonable rent in excess of the emergency rent is maintainable where an expired variable lease is concerned. The answer to this question depends upon whether sections 13 and 14 of these acts mean that the only recourse of a landlord, upon the expiration of such a lease, is to continue indefinitely under its terms except for the addition of 15% to the basic rent as the emergency rent or, if 15% cannot be added to the fixed monthly rent under the majority opinion's interpretation of chapters 326 and 327 of the Laws of 1950, then to adjust the fixed monthly rent to approximate the rent paid for the most nearly comparable space. It would appear to make little difference to whether a proceeding under section 4 is maintainable--though it would bear upon the amount of rent to be fixed--whether the landlord has applied for a reasonable rent under subdivision 1 or on a square footage basis under subdivision 2 of section 4, as now amended by chapter 326 of the Laws of 1950, which imposes a 15% ceiling upon increases in rental during a single year in proceedings brought under subdivision 2.
We are not called upon, at this time, to determine the exact method of applying to a variable lease the 15% ceiling placed over annual increases under subdivision 2 of section 4, added by chapters 326 and 327 of the Laws of 1950. It is enough to observe, in that connection, that we think that determination of such a ceiling in the case of variable leases is not so impossible as to indicate that the Legislature intended that section 4 should not apply to expired leases of that character.
If the applicability of section 4 to expired variable leases is decided in this declaratory judgment action, such a determination will not be affected (although the amount to be recovered would be) by whether the landlord withdraws the proceeding under subdivision 2 and institutes another under subdivision 1.
Directing attention to the basic question whether the Legislature intended to extend to variable leases either proceeding authorized by section 4 for the fixation of a reasonable rent in excess of the emergency rent, it is necessary to analyze further section 13 of the Business Rent Law and section 14 of the Commercial Rent Law which are cited as being exclusive with reference to the procedure respecting such leases. They relate to variable and graduated leases. These are different types of lease, a variable lease being defined as one 'wherein the specified rent or any part thereof is variable according to volume or other criteria of volume of the tenant's business', and a graduated lease being defined as one 'wherein the rental stipulated is in a graduated scale.' These sections undertake to define what shall be the emergency rent in the case of these two types of lease. If a graduated lease has been in effect, 'upon the expiration of such lease, the emergency rent shall be a reasonable rent to be fixed by agreement, by arbitration, or by the supreme court upon the basis of the rent charged for the most nearly comparable commercial [or business] space in the same building or other rental area * * *. Pending the fixation of such reasonable rent, without prejudice to their respective rights, the tenant shall pay and the landlord may accept rent upon the basis charged during the last month of the expired lease.' Sections 13 and 14 thus provide, in the instance of a graduated lease, that for the duration of the lease it shall be enforced according to its terms without regard to statutory enactments prescribing an 'emergency' or a 'reasonable' rent applicable to other kinds of lease, and that upon the expiration thereof, if the tenant remains in possession, the rent shall be determined in accordance with the rent charged for the most nearly comparable space or other rental area. Rent thus fixed on expiration of a graduated lease, is defined by sections 13 and 14 as being both an emergency rent and a reasonable rent. It is to be arrived at by criteria different from those applicable in determining the 'emergency' rent or the 'reasonable' rent under the usual type of lease.
Sections 13 and 14 define merely what is the emergency rent but not the reasonable rent in case of variable leases. Payment of the percentage rent in such a lease, it is provided, 'shall continue without change, but where such lease provides for the payment of a fixed, basic or minimum rent, such fixed amount shall be subject to the provisions of this act, including all of the provisions of this section.' That sentence defines what constitutes the emergency rent for a variable lease, but does not purport to define what shall be the reasonable rent, and certainly does not state that in case of a variable lease, unlike all other leases, there shall be no procedure for the fixation of a reasonable rent. It was evidently not the intention of the Legislature to freeze variable leases after their expiration for the indefinite future, unlike the legislative treatment of every other type of lease, even with the addition of 15% to the fixed or basic rental, without being subject to change in accordance with changes in circumstance. It is particularly unlikely that the Legislature would have singled out as the one unchangeable item in the fixation of rent in statutory landlord and tenant relationships, rentals computed upon the volume of the tenant's business, which is more liable to change and less likely to remain stabilized than any other feature which could have been selected. Since sections 13 and 14 contain no provision for the fixation of a reasonable rent at the end of the terms of variable leases, the rational interpretation is that the legislative intent was that the emergency rent should be computed in an amount 15% in excess of the fixed rent on the freeze date, plus the stipulated percentage rent but that, in the alternative, the determination of a reasonable rent should be left to a proceeding under section 4 of the acts. Our statement in Matter of 500 Fifth Ave. (Wise Shoe Co.) (274 A.D. 241, 243, affd. 300 N.Y. 491) that 'The variable lease does not lend itself to the emergency rent formula except in respect to a fixed minimum rent and it was considered fair and equitable that such leases should be continued in accordance with their terms except for the application of the 15% emergency rent increase to the minimum rent figure', meant simply that such was the formula for determining the emergency rent; it had nothing to do with what should be done to establish a 'reasonable' rent in the conception of section 4. The statement by MCNALLY, J., was correct that the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) concerned only the emergency rent (84 N.Y. S.2d 9, 11). The Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) was a proceeding instituted under section 13 on the theory that a graduated lease was involved, in which the court was asked to determine the emergency or reasonable rent under that section on the basis of the most nearly comparable space. It was held that the landlord was not entitled to the fixation of such a rent, inasmuch as the instrument was not a graduated but a variable lease. The landlord's petition was therefore dismissed. No application was made to the court in the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) on the theory that it was a variable lease, and this court observed, in that connection, that upon the expiration of a variable lease the emergency rent is to be arrived at by adding 15% to the basic minimum rental, leaving the percentage rent the same. This court discussed the emergency rent in these two types of lease after expiration of term, stating (p. 243): 'It may be seen, therefore, that the opposite treatment was given to the two types of lease in determining the rent to be paid after the expiration of the lease. The variable lease was substantially preserved and the graduated lease was abrogated.' That was stated to be what happens in determining the emergency rent in these types of lease upon expiration of term. It was held that the emergency rent in the case of a variable lease is not to be fixed in the manner provided by section 13 of the Business Rent Law for a graduated lease; nor does it seem to us that the amendment to section 13 by chapter 326 of the Laws of 1950, on which the majority opinion herein turns, that the basic rent in variable leases should be 'subject to the provisions of this act including all of the provisions of this section' (adding the italicized words) was intended to change this ruling. The italicized words refer to provisions in the section which apply to variable leases, not such as by their language relate only to graduated leases. Certainly the sentence in sections 13 and 14 next following the words inserted by the 1950 amendments was not designed to apply to variable leases, since by its wording it is confined to graduated leases which are dealt with differently by the section. If the conclusion of the majority be correct, that it was the intention of the 1950 Legislature to place the determination of the fixed, basic or minimum rent under sections 13 and 14 at the end of variable leases on a parity with the fixation of the entire rent upon the expiration of graduated leases, the words would not have been left in the statutes that in fixing the emergency rent for a variable lease, unlike a graduated lease, the basic rent shall be arrived at in accordance with the other provisions of the act as well as those of sections 13 and 14. The parties in the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) were left where they were upon coming into court, continuing to pay the emergency rent for a variable lease computed by adding 15% to the basic rent. Yet, if the 1950 amendment had the effect ascribed to it by the majority opinion, the Legislature must have intended to overrule that decision, since, under the majority ruling herein, it necessarily follows that the emergency basic rent in a variable lease is to be arrived at in the same manner as in case of a graduated lease, which is not measured by adding 15% but by comparability. Recourse to other portions of the act is necessary if the emergency rent in a variable lease is to be determined in the manner described in the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) by adding 15% to the basic rent. Section 13 contains no mention of adding 15% in any type of lease. The emergency rent and reasonable rent for graduated leases are defined by sections 13 and 14 as being identical. If the construction by the majority of the 1950 amendment be correct, that the provisions of sections 13 and 14 authorize and require the same procedure for the fixation of a reasonable basic rent in a variable lease, as they do for the entire rent in a graduated lease, and that the rest of the act cannot be resorted to in order to establish or supplement the procedure, such reasoning requires that sections 13 and 14 alone be held to regulate the procedure for determining the emergency rent in a variable lease. That would mean that the 1950 Legislature, by this merely formal amendment, overruled the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra). If such an important result had been intended, it would have been done in language better adapted to that purpose. We do not adopt the construction placed upon the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) in Matter of J. A. Kennedy Realty Corp. (C. Ludwig Baumanns&sCo.), (277 A.D. 790 [[2d Dept.]) decided since the argument of this appeal. But the rulings in both the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) and the J. A. Kennedy Realty Corp. case (supra) would appear to have been materially altered by the effect given by the majority of this court herein to chapters 326 and 327 of the Laws of 1950.
Unlike the disposition made of graduated leases by the Legislature under sections 13 and 14, resort must still be had, as we think, to other provisions of the act in order to determine what shall be done upon the expiration of a variable lease. Thus, if the emergency rent is to be paid, reference needs to be made to subdivision (c) of section 2 for adding 15% to the basic or minimum rent in order to determine the emergency rent. What was said about this in the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) still holds true. By the same token, if the landlord elects to apply for a reasonable rent in excess of the emergency rent, reference is made to section 4. At the expiration of a variable lease, the landlord has the alternative of continuing with the emergency rent, if the tenant desires to remain or, if the facts justify it, he may apply for the determination of a 'reasonable' rent under section 4 in lieu of the former combination of a basic rent plus a percentage upon the volume of the tenant's business. It is noteworthy that in Twentieth Century Associates v. Waldman (294 N.Y. 571, 581) speaking of section 4, the Court of Appeals said concerning the emergency rent laws as a whole: 'Certainly there was nothing arbitrary or unreasonable in the remedy which the Legislature applied, providing, as it did, for arbitration or judicial determination of fair and reasonable rentals in all cases. * * * Judicial determination of a reasonable rent was thus made available to the landlord in every case.' Such a construction was placed upon these statutes when their constitutionality was upheld.
The cases referred to in plaintiffs' briefs, which are cited in support of the conclusion that a reasonable rent under section 4 cannot be fixed in excess of the emergency rent upon the expiration of a variable lease, have been examined carefully. They do not lead to that result. Either graduated leases were involved, or the leases had not expired, or the controversy related to whether the landlord was entitled to charge as much as an emergency rent computed at 15% in excess of the basic or minimum rent on freeze date plus the percentage of the tenant's gross receipts. None of the cited cases involved the question whether a reasonable rent could be obtained under section 4 in excess of the emergency rent after the expiration of a variable lease, except the case of J. A. Kennedy Realty Corp. which has been mentioned above. If no proceeding to fix such a rent can be maintained, then the Legislature has left the situation such that for the duration of the emergency no change can be made, at the landlord's instance, in the emergency rental in the case of variable leases. There is no reason to believe that the Legislature intended to discriminate in this respect against variable leases, nor to deny the right, after expiration of term, to the fixation of a reasonable rent in excess of the emergency rent. The quotation from the OPINION of Appeals in Twentieth Century Associates v. Waldman (supra) set forth above, indicates that the Legislature had no such discriminatory purpose. The landlord may in our view continue to receive the emergency rent (15% in excess of basic monthly rent on the freeze date plus the percentage of gross receipts), after such a lease has expired but, as with the ordinary type of lease, he may, at his election, apply for a 'reasonable' rent, as defined by section 4, in event that under the facts of the particular case such a rent would be greater than the amount of the emergency rent. As this court stated in the Wise Shoe Co. case (supra) a landlord may not obtain a 'reasonable' rent plus a percentage of the gross receipts. If he gives up the percentage, however, then there is no reason on account of which a 'reasonable' flat rental should not be permitted under section 4 if the rental space is worth it.
If the amendment to sections 13 and 14 enacted by chapters 326 and 327 of the Laws of 1950 is construed to render inapplicable to variable leases other provisions of the emergency rent laws, and to substitute in place of a section 4 proceeding to determine the reasonable rent, an adjustment of the fixed monthly rental so as to correspond to the rent paid for the most nearly comparable rental area, there are likely to be unexpected results. It would mean that the landlord would continue to receive the same percentage of the volume of the tenant's business as was payable before expiration of the lease and, in addition, a fixed monthly rent as great as the entire rent paid for the most nearly comparable space. That would result in giving the landlord a bonus in the amount of the percentage rent over and above the full rental paid for similar rental areas. The only alternatives to this, if comparability is the criterion, would require using the sum total of the percentage rent and basic rent for purposes of comparison, which the Legislature hardly intended, or to compare the basic rent with other rental areas also under variable leases. The latter would, in practice, be equivalent to ruling out any procedure under which the reasonable rent could be determined, since it would be impossible to find comparable space occupied by a tenant conducting a comparable business who had agreed to pay his landlord the same percentage of his gross receipts.
The majority opinion selects the alternative of combining the percentage rent and basic rent for purposes of comparison with other rental areas, but that is really altering indirectly the percentage rent which the statute under this view requires shall continue without change. It may also be noted that, if it be practicable to establish the amount of the percentage rent by competent evidence for this purpose, that is, in itself, an answer to the reasoning that it would be impracticable to do so in order to apply the 15% ceiling imposed in 1950 upon annual increases pursuant to subdivision 2 of section 4. The asserted impracticability of doing the latter was urged as an indication that the Legislature did not intend section 4 to apply to variable leases.
Declaratory judgment should be entered in favor of defendant in accordance with this opinion.
DORE, J., and SHIENTAG, J., concur with GLENNON, J.; VAN VOORHIS, J., dissents and votes to enter declaratory judgment in favor of defendant in opinion in which PECK, P. J., concurs.
Judgment directed in favor of the plaintiffs, without costs, in accordance with the stipulation. Settle order on notice.