Edward Solomon, Inc. v. Padorr

282 Ill. App. 269, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 646
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketGen. No. 38,206
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 282 Ill. App. 269 (Edward Solomon, Inc. v. Padorr) 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
Edward Solomon, Inc. v. Padorr, 282 Ill. App. 269, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 646 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

I. Defendant's Northern Trust Company, trustee, and Stanley Field are owners and Henrici, Inc., the lessee of the premises known as 209 South Wabash avenue, Chicago. They have appealed from a decree entered in favor of the complainant in a suit brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. The cause was heard upon exceptions of defendants to the report of a master. These exceptions were overruled and foreclosure granted, as recommended, for the sum of $2,255 found to be due.

January 31, 1929, the owners made a long term lease of the premises to William M. Collins, which was later assigned to Henrici, Inc. May 1, 1933, Henrici, Inc., subleased a portion of the premises to Visitors Tourists Service, Inc., a corporation, and others. May 24, 1933, II. Wold, doing business as H. Wold and Company, entered into a written contract with the Visitors Tourists Service, Inc., to furnish labor and material for laying cement floors and doing other work in the building on the premises. The work was done and material furnished as agreed. The claim of Wold has been assigned to Edward Solomon, Inc. The Visitors Tourists Service, Inc., failed to pay the amount due under the contract, and complainant thereupon took the necessary steps to perfect its claim for lien.

II. The question for determination on this appeal is whether within the meaning of section 1 of the Mechanics’ Lien Act (Ill. State Bar Stats. 1935, ch. 82, p. 2012) the owner lessors, and Henrici, Inc., sublessor, are liable upon the theory that complainant contracted “with one whom such owner has authorized or knowingly permitted to contract for the improvements.’’ The master found that “by virtue of the terms of said ground lease and sublease” defendants “knowingly permitted said labor and material to be furnished and performed as aforesaid, and failed to object thereto.”

Unless knowledge can be inferred from the terms of the lease and the sublease, it has not been proved, since there is no other evidence tending to show lmowledge on the part of any defendant. Indeed, as to Henrici, Inc., there is affirmative evidence to the effect that there was no such knowledge.

By the ground lease it was agreed that nothing therein should “authorize the lessee to do any act” which would incumber the title nor subject the lessors’ estate to any claim for lien or incumbrance, whether by operation of law or by virtue of express or implied contract by the lessee, and that any such lien arising from any act or omission of the lessee should accrue only against the leasehold estate and be subject to the paramount title and rights of the lessors.

The ground lease further obligated the lessee to erect a building upon the premises and to rebuild it in case of destruction by fire. Apparently referring to this situation, it was provided that the lessee would not enter into any contract for labor or material “in connection with any building to be placed upon said premises or to be rebuilt thereon” where the contract involved an amount in excess of $5,000, unless there was a condition in the contract that no lien would be claimed, and unless the contractor should thereby waive any and all right of claim to a lien so far as the lessors’ interest was concerned. The lessee covenanted and agreed that he would cause waivers of lien as against the interest of the lessors in the demised premises to be duly executed “by the contractors furnishing labor, service or material in or about the erection or re-building of any such building,” the same to be furnished as soon as the contractors should enter upon the performance of work or the furnishing of material.

The ground lease also provided that upon the ex-pi ration of the lease the lessors would pay to the lessee 80 per cent of the increased value of the demised premises, by reason of the improvements then thereon.

The sublease from Henrici, Inc., to the Visitors Tourists Service, Inc., provided:

‘ ‘ 3. The parties of the second and third part (sub-lessees) agree at their expense to partition off in a manner satisfactory to the party of the first part that portion of the basement of the above described premises containing machinery, electrical equipment, and heating apparatus, and it is further covenanted and agreed between the parties hereto that the parties of the second and third part may make openings in the partition between the two (2) stores of the premises above demised and may re-surface the floors in the above demised premises; provided, however, that the parties of the second and third part shall before starting any such work deposit with the party of the first part sufficient money to cover the cost of making such improvements, including labor and material, and shall also deposit with the party of the first part waivers of mechanics’ lien claims executed by the contractors who are to do the work or furnish the material, and provided further that, upon the termination of this lease, the openings in the partition between the two stores above demised shall be closed at the expense of the parties of the second and third part.

“5. It is further covenanted and agreed between the parties hereto that the parties of the second and third part will not make any additions or improvements upon the premises hereinabove demised without the written consent of the party of the first part and without the first depositing with the party of the first part sufficient money to cover the cost of making such improvements, including labor and material, and without depositing with the party of the first part also waivers of mechanics’ lien claims executed by the contractors.”

The sublease also provides that in addition to rent, money shall be deposited by the sublessees with the sublessor sufficient to guarantee the vacation of the premises at the end of the lease, the restoration of the partitions between the two stores demised, the delivery of the premises in as good condition as when received, ordinary wear excepted, and the payment of all claims which might become liens upon the premises; further, that all improvements on the demised premises shall become the property of Henrici, Inc., at the termination of the lease.

III. The question to be decided requires the analysis of the provisions of the sublease and the proper interpretation thereof.

Complainant states the “main question that is pertinent to the issues in this case” in the form of question and answer. In substance, it asks, Does the sublease authorize the sublessees to make improvements and alterations 1 If the answer is “No,” it says, then there is no right to a lien; if “Yes” then there is such right. After quoting the language of the sublease only in part, it says that this lease did, by express and unequivocal terms, authorize the sublessees to contract for improvements and alterations and the resurfacing of the floors, and since the same was plainly authorized the lien must be allowed.

Notwithstanding language used in some of the cases which might seem to approve, we think this reasoning by complainant as applied here is fallacious. It is true the sublease by implication authorized the alterations and improvements which the sublessee agreed to máke, and to that extent the sublessor had knowledge, but the authorization was not unlimited or unconditional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 Ill. App. 269, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-solomon-inc-v-padorr-illappct-1935.