The Outfitters’ Operating Realty Company, Inc., was adjudicated a bankrupt September 30, 1932. A trustee was elected October 15, 1932. The bankrupt leased appellant’s property at Winston-Salem, N. C., June 28, 1929, for a term of thirty years.
Paragraph. 4 of the lease provided for demolition or reconstruction of the building thereon and the' erection of a new or remodeled building by the lessee. The lessor
On the 19th of March, 1930, the following receipt was given by the lessee:
"We hereby acknowledge receipt of the sum of Pifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) for advance made to us by The Winston-Salem Masonic Temple Company on account of the new building in accordance with the terms of the contract existing between the parties hereto, dated June 29, 1929, * * * and agree to repay said The Winstor~-Salem Masonic Temple Company the said piincipal sum of $50,000.00 with interest thereon from March 19, 1930, in accordance with the terms of said contract, that is: in twenty-nine annual instalments of $1,000.00 each, beginning March 19, 1931, and March 19th of each year haneafter until November 1st, 1950, when the balance of $21,000.00 will be due and payable.
"The said principal sum of $50,000.00 so advanced to bear interest. * * * "
The lease was disaffinned, by the trustee, January 12, 1933.
The claim filed is for the balance of the advance, $48,000 plus interest. Below the claim was cxpunged bccauso it was regarded as a claim for future rout. It was said the bankrupt's promiscs contained in the lease and the receipt to repay the advances are not absolute but contingent upon the continuance of the relation of landlord mid tonant until the matinity of the several installments. Appellant contends that this full amount was a loan and became due immediately as a result of the breach of the lease caused by the bankrnptey.
In Manhattan Properties, Inc., v. Trying Trust Co., 290 U. S. -, 54 S. Ct. 385, 389, 78 L. Ed. - (decided February 5, 1934), the court reviewed the matter of future rent claims there involved, and said:
"There can be no debt provable in bankruptcy arising out o £ a contract which becomes effective only at the claimant's option and afthr the inception of the proceedings, the fulfillment of which is contingent on what may happen from month to month or up to the endo~ the oiiginal term. * * * Such a covenant is not, as petitioners contend, the equivalent of an agreement that bankruptcy shall be a breach of the lease and tho consequent damagos to the lessor be measured by the difference between the present value of the remainder of the term and the total rent to fall duo in the future."
And it was there held that the covenants appearing in the lease in question could not ho made the basis of a proof of debt against the estate.
In the instant case, we must read the terms of the lease and the receipt together in construing the character of the obligation assumed by tho tenant. The promise to repay the advances made in both are unconditionaL Sixty per cent, of the indebtedness is payable during the term and the remainder was payable at the end of thirty years. It is cloar there was no intention by the parties to measure the obligation in terms of the period of occupancy of the property. Jndced, the tenant could anticipate the installments of the full amount and pay. Intorest was payable on the installments as welt as on the principal. The sums thorofor were fixed and an unconditional obligation assumed. The consideration for the promise to repay was not the use and occupancy of the land. On the contrary, the consideration was the advances of money, tho receipt of which was expressly acknowledged by the tenant. For the reasons sufficient to each of the parties, the
But the appellee argues for the result reaehed below principally upon the provision that the installments and advances toward the $50,000 shall be deemed additional rent. Sneh, however, we think was intended to give effect as an additional remedy to the landlord for the purposes of eollection. The rights which the appellant might pursue in making collection were intended to be added to by this provision of the lease. Apex Leasing Co. Inc., v. White Enamel Refrigerator Co., 202 App. Div. 354, 195 N. Y. S. 259. And it is to be noted that the use of the phrase to the effect that the installments should be deemed additional rent occurs as part of the paragraph dealing with the remedies of the landlord for nonpayment.
Appellant refers us to In re H. M. Lasker Co., .Inc., 251 F. 53 (C. C. A. 3), but the principle of that ease merely is that a landlord cannot be allowed dividends from an estate of a bankrupt for rent for the use of premises while he is in. possession. There the claim filed was purely for rent and not for money advances. The parties agreed that the cost of showcases placed in the arcade and that fittings and equipment for the same should be repaid by the lessee to the landlord in yearly installments, “with interest on unpaid balance added to each installment;. sneh five installments to he collectible as rent.” From the opinion of the court, it is clear that the question presented was whether “the landlord may resume possession and still claim rent for the remainder of the term.” The question whether the promise thére to repay for the showcases was uneonditional was not presented or considered, In the instant case, the tenant acknowledged in writing the receipt of the money. In the Lasker Case, the landlord had not advanced the money, hut had spent money for the improvemeht of his own property.
As stated in Gardiner v. Butler & Co., 245 U. S. 603, 605, 38 S. Ct. 214, 62 L. Ed. 505, “But the law as to leases is not a.matter of logic in vacuo; it is a matter of history that has not forgotten Lord Coke.” A breach of an obligation to pay respecting moneys advanced, and for which there is a promise to • repay, should be regarded as any other item of damages resulting from breach of an obligation with respect to a loan. The claim was provable and should have been allowed,
Order reversed,