E. R. Darlington Lumber Co. v. Burton

156 Ill. App. 82, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 356
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 156 Ill. App. 82 (E. R. Darlington Lumber Co. v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. R. Darlington Lumber Co. v. Burton, 156 Ill. App. 82, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 356 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree rendered in a proceeding by appellant to- establish a mechanic’s lien. The facts disclosed by the record, briefly stated, are as follows: On December 9, 1905, Amanda Burton and others, hereinafter designated as the Burton heirs, being the owners in fee as tenants in common of a tract of about 40 acres of land and another of about 120 acres, in the vicinity of Gillespie, Macoupin county, by written lease demised said premises to L. B. Armstrong and R. O. Isaacs for the term of five years. The annual rent reserved for the former tract was $240 per year, payable on January first of each year, and the taxes, and for the latter tract $360 per year payable on July first of each year.

The lease further provides that the premises should be used for park purposes, and that the lessees might improve the same, and should have the privilege of building a dam to form a lake, also roadways, driveways and either permanent or temporary buildings upon the premises; that upon the termination of the lease either by forfeiture or expiration the lessees or their successors should have the right to remove from said premises any buildings or fixtures they might erect thereon, if they so elected; that the nonpayment of rent should operate as a forfeiture of the lease, and that the lessors might at their election enter into and take possession of the premises; that said lease might be extended or that the lessees should have the privilege of purchasing the premises upon certain terms and conditions, and that the lease should be binding upon the heirs, executors and administrators of the parties. At the time of the execution and delivery of the lease, a corporation known as the Gillespie Park Amusement Company was being organized by Armstrong, Isaacs and others, and the lease was taken for the benefit of such proposed corporation, although the lessors had no knowledge of such fact. When the corporation was fully organized the lease was delivered to its officers, but no formal assignment thereof was made to the corporation.

The company entered into possession of the premises, and in the spring and summer of 1906 improved the same as provided in the lease, by building a dancing pavilion, skating rink, band stand, ice cream stand, and also by the construction of a dam to form a lake, purchasing the materials therefor from the appellant, E. E. Darlington Lumber Company, except the paints, which were furnished by the Behrens Drug and Mercantile Company. The rent was paid to and including the installment which fell due January 1, 1907, but the subsequently maturing rent was not paid. The lessees also failed to pay the taxes on the forty acre tract for the years 1906 and 1907, and the same were paid by the Burton heirs.

The present bill was thereafter filed by E. E. Darlington Lumber Company against the Burton heirs, Armstrong, Isaacs, the Gillespie” Park Amusement Company and the Behrens Drug and Mercantile Company, for the purpose of establishing a lien on said premises for the unpaid balance of its bill, alleging the facts substantially as above set forth, and further alleging that $460 of the materials furnished by it were uséd in the construction of a dam which was an improvement to said premises not of a nature to be removed, nor susceptible of being removed. Answers1 were filed'by all defendants. A cross-bill was filed by the Burton heirs, alleging the non-payment of rent as above set forth, and praying that the rights of thé complainant, if any, in said premises, and in the improvement of the leasehold interest be made subject and subordinate to their claim for rents. An answer was filed to the cross bill, and on January 16, 1908, a decree was entered finding the amount due E. B. Darlington Lumber Company for materials furnished to Gillespie Bark Amusement Company to be $1077.90, with interest from January 1, 1907; that there was due the Behrens Drug and Mercantile Company $55.75 with interest from January 1, 1907; that a lease was executed and delivered as above stated, and possession taken thereunder; that the premises were improved by the Gillespie Park Amusement Company under the lease; that the rent was paid to and including the installment which fell due January 1, 1907; that subsequently accruing rent had not been paid; that taxes upon the forty acre tract aggregating $68.68 which should have been paid by the lessees had been paid by the Burton heirs.

A lien was decreed in favor of E. B. Darlington Lumber Company and Behrens Drug and Mercantile Company, for the amount of their respective claims, but such lien was restricted to the leasehold interest in the premises and improvements thereon, and the decree expressly found that apart from títe leasehold interest and improvements there was no lien on the interest of the Burton heirs in the premises. The decree further provided that if such payments were not made within thirty days, the master in chancery should sell the leasehold interest and improvements, but that the purchaser or purchasers at such sale should have no rights in said premises or said improvements different or greater than the lessees in said lease, or their assigns, would have, were not such sale made, and ordered the master in chancery to bring the money realized from the sale into court to abide further orders. To reverse said decree this appeal is prosecuted by the E. R. Darlington Lumber Company.

It is contended by appellant that the Burton heirs, having by the express terms of the lease authorized the improvements to be made and placed upon the premises, by virtue of section 1, of the statute entitled “Liens” (R. S. 1908, page 1363), thereby subjected their fee simple interest therein to a lien for the materials furnished for such improvements and that the chancellor erred in not so decreeing.

In Brokaw v. Tyler, 91 Ill. App. 148, the lease to the premises upon which improvements were made, authorized the tenant to make improvements, and notwithstanding it was stipulated that such tenant should keep the premises free of all liens on account of such improvements, it was held that the lien attached to the fee. In Reliable P. & H. Co. v. Dallenbach, 145 Ill. App. 473, in which the lease to the premises provided that the building situated thereon should be used as a theater only and that the lessee should have the privilege at his own- expense to make alterations and repairs to the building, we held that a lien for labor and materials in remodeling and repairing the heating and plumbing system necessary to fit the building for use as a theater, was enforceable against the fee title to the premises. Neither of the leases involved in the foregoing cases contained any provision as to the ownership of the improvements authorized, upon the expiration of the term granted.

In Lumber Co. v. Jones, 187 Ill. 203, and Electric Co. v. Amusement Co., 236 Ill. 452, it was held that when the owner of the fee of leased land consents that the lessee shall make improvements which are by the terms of the lease to become the property of the lessor upon the termination of the lease, by expiration or otherwise, he thereby subjects his interest to mechanic’s liens for such labor and materials as may be furnished for such improvements.

Henry v. Miller, 145 Ill. App.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 Ill. App. 82, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-r-darlington-lumber-co-v-burton-illappct-1910.