Barnes v. Northern Trust Co.

48 N.E. 31, 169 Ill. 112
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 31 (Barnes v. Northern Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Northern Trust Co., 48 N.E. 31, 169 Ill. 112 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The rent under the lease appears to have been paid by the defendants to the lessor, Henry Schuttler, for the months of March and April, 1890. In June, 1890, the firm of A. S. Barnes & Co. turned over their business to a corporation, known as the “American Book Company.” It is not shown positively in the testimony, that the American Book Company was merely the incorporation of the firm of A. S. Barnes & Co., organized by the same parties as stockholders and directors, who theretofore composed said firm; but, after the transfer of the business of the firm to the corporation, Charles J. Barnes was the manager of the corporation, the American Book Company. It would appear, that the American Book Company was either the assignee or the sub-tenant of the firm of A. S. Barnes & Co. The monthly payments of rent to Schuttler before November 26,1890, the date of the assignment of the lease by Schuttler to ajipellee, and the monthly payments of rent after the date of the assignment to appellee, from May, 1890, to May, 1893, inclusive, were made by the American Book Company. The checks for such monthly payments wrnre signed by the American Book Company, by Charles J. Barnes, manager. The monthly payments of rent from May, 1893, to January 1, 1894, were made to the appellee, the Northern Trust Company, by Charles J. Barnes. It would appear, that the American Book Company ceased to occupy the premises after May or June, 1893. During a part of the period from May, 1893, to January, 1894, appellant leased the premises from week to week to one Topakyan. On February 8, 1894, appellant, Charles J. Barnes, leased the premises from March 1, 1894, to December 31, 1894, to one Them, and collected some rent from him.

All the questions of fact in the case are settled by the judgments of the Appellate and circuit courts. It is claimed by appellant, that certain errors were committed by the trial court in the giving and refusal of instructions, and in the admission and exclusion of evidence. We do not deem it necessary to set forth the instructions in full, nor to call attention to the objections made to them except in a general way.

First•—The instructions asked by appellant, which were refused, and of the refusal of which complaint is made, proceeded upon the theory, that, after the assignment of the lease was made by the original lessor, Henry Schuttler, to the appellee, the Northern Trust Company, it was necessary to show an attornment by the lessees to appellee, the assignee of the lease, in order to make the lessees liable for rent according to the terms of the lease. If such attornment was necessary, then there was error in refusing the instructions asked by appellant. The third of appellant’s refused instructions expressly covered the question of attornment. All the refused instructions of appellant were impliedly framed upon the theory that attornment was necessary, because they predicated the right of the defendant to a verdict upon a discharge or release of the original lessees by the original lessor, Henry Schuttler, and ignored any question of such release by the appellee, as assignee of the lease from such original lessor. The question is thus presented, whether, under our statute as it now exists, attornment by the lessee to the assignee of the lessor is necessary in order to make the lessee liable to the assignee for the rent.

In Fisher v. Deering, 60 Ill. 114, we held, that, at ancient common law, a lease, like any other agreement or chose in action, was not assignable, so as to give the assignee an action against the tenant; that, by the 32 Henry VIII, (chap, 34, sec. 1,) the assignee of the reversion became invested with the rents, and, where the tenant attorned to him, he might maintain an action of debt to recover subsequently accruing rents; that, although the assignment of the reversion created a privity of estate between the assignee and the tenant, still it required an attornment, to create such a privity of contract, even under the 32 Henry VIII, as would authorize the assignee to sue for and recover rent in his own name; and that the 32 Henry VIII, (chap. 34, sec. 1,) was adopted prior to the fourth year of James I, and was applicable to our condition, and was in force in this State.

Since the decision in Fisher v. Deering, supra, was rendered, the legislature in 1874 enacted what is now section 14 of chapter 80 of the Revised Statutes in relation to Landlord and Tenant. (2 Starr & Cur. Stat.—2d'ed.-— p. 2513). Said section 14 is as follows: “The grantees of any demised lands, tenements, rents, or other hereditaments, or of the reversion thereof, the assignees of the lessor of any demise, and the heirs and personal representatives of the lessor, grantee or assignee, shall have the same remedies by entry, action or otherwise, for the non-performance of any agreement in the lease, or for the recovery of any rent, or for the doing of any waste or other cause of forfeiture, as their grantor or lessor might have had, if such reversion had remained in such lessor or grantor.” We are of the opinion, that the enactment of said section 14 dispenses with the necessity of an attornment, and abrogated the rule announced in Fisher v. Deering, supra. It was so held by the Appellate Court for the Third District in Howland v. White, 48 Ill. App. 236, where it was said: “All leases except leases at will may be assigned if there is no restriction in the lease itself, (12 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1029), and the assignee of a lease is granted, by said section 14 of chapter 80 of the Revised Statutes, the same remedies by action or otherwise for non-performance of any agreement in the lease for the recovery of rent or other causes of forfeiture, as the lessor might have had while the owner of the lease; and attornment must, we think, be hereafter deemed unnecessary to vest the assignee of the lease with, the full rights of his assignor, the original lessor.”

In Thomasson v. Wilson, 146 Ill. 384, on the trial of an action of forcible entry and detainer before the court without a jury, the defendant submitted and asked the court to hold as the law of the case, certain propositions which were refused; and the first of said refused propositions was as follows: “The plaintiff cannot, as the devisee or grantee of the lessor of Annestine Laddness, maintain this action without showing an attornment from said lessee, Annestine Laddness, to said plaintiff.” In that case, in commenting upon this refused instruction, we said (p. 389): “The court determined correctly in refusing to hold the first proposition submitted to be held as the law of the case, for the reason that the same right of entry, by action or otherwise, is given by the statute to the grantee of the lessor as the lessor might have had.”

Here, the appellee is the assignee of the lessor, Henry Schuttler. As such assignee, the appellee has the same remedy by action for the recovery of the rent as its lessor might have had before the assignment to it. Hence an attornment by the lessees, constituting the firm of A. S. Barnes & Co., was unnecessary to the right of the appelleé to recover. It follows, that there was no error in refusing the instructions asked by the appellant, which held directly and indirectly that such attornment was necessary.

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48 N.E. 31, 169 Ill. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-northern-trust-co-ill-1897.