First Trust & Savings Bank v. Economical Drug Co.

250 Ill. App. 112, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 237
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1928
DocketGen. No. 32,531
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 250 Ill. App. 112 (First Trust & Savings Bank v. Economical Drug Co.) 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
First Trust & Savings Bank v. Economical Drug Co., 250 Ill. App. 112, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 237 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainant, as trustee of the estate of Lucius G. Fisher, deceased, filed its bill in equity against defendant praying for an injunction enjoining it from cooking and from selling in the premises demised to it in the Fisher Building, situate on the northeast corner of Van Burén and Dearborn Streets, in the city of Chicago, any edibles, except candy, etc. There was a reference to a master who reported that complainant was not entitled to the relief prayed and recommended that the bill be dismissed for want of equity. On a hearing before the chancellor, the report of the master, together with his recommendation, was approved, and a decree entered dismissing the bill for want of equity, and complainant brings the record to this court for review by appeal.

The term granted by the lease was 10 years from May 1, 1924. The premises demised were to be used as a drug store with the right to sell candy, cigars and soft drinks, and for no other purpose.

The clauses in the lease between the parties, which are involved in the controversy projected by the bill, are the following:

‘' That the lessor * * * has demised and leased * * stores * * * in the Fisher Building * * * to be occupied by said lessee for a drug store, with the right to sell candy, cigars, and soft drinks, and for no other purpose whatsoever.”

Paragraph 11. ‘ ‘ The said lessee is hereby given the exclusive right to maintain a drug store in the said building, as aforesaid, with the limitations and restrictions herein contained, and also the exclusive right to sell cigars and cigarettes.”

Paragraph 17. “It is expressly understood that the lease dated April 24th, 1916, from Charles B. Osborne, as trustee under said last will and testament of Lucius Q-. Fisher, deceased, to the John R. Thompson Company gives to said John R. Thompson Company the exclusive right to maintain a restaurant in said building, and the lessee herein further covenants and agrees that it will not sell anything in the way of edibles on said premises that will in any way conflict with said exclusive right, and that it will do no cooking on said premises.”

The following clauses in the so-called Thompson lease (which lease is part of the evidence in the record) are pertinent to the rights of the parties to this suit, viz:

“The said lessee is hereby given the exclusive right to maintain a restaurant in said building, except in so far as the lessee of the buffet may furnish a free lunch to its. patrons.
“The said lessee is hereby given the exclusive right to maintain a restaurant in said building but which shall not include the right to sell liquor, cigars, tobacco, or cigarettes except as hereinafter provided.”

A great deal of testimony appears in the record, taken before the master as to a custom prevailing in the so-called “loop” of the city of Chicago regarding what articles are ordinarily sold in a “Drug Store,” and to define the meaning of the word “Drug Store” within such local environment. Such evidence is not only enlightening but historically interesting. However, the inherent difficulty with such evidence is its immateriality to the relief sought by the averments, of the bill and its prayer for relief. The whole controversy injected by the bill is confined to the breach of covenants in the lease regarding the occupation of the premises. In the granting -clause the following words are used:

“That the lessor * * * has demised and leased * * * stores * * * in the Fisher Building * * * to be occupied by said lessee for a drug store with the right to sell candy, cigars and soft drinks, and for no other purpose whatsoever.
“The said lessee is hereby given the exclusive right to maintain a drug store in the said building as aforesaid, with the limitations and restrictions herein contained, and also the exclusive right to sell cigars and cigarettes.”

Then occurs the following provision in Paragraph 17, after reciting the making of the John R. Thompson Company lease with its exclusive right to maintain a restaurant in the “Fisher Building”:

“And the lessee herein further covenants and agrees that it will not sell anything in the way of edibles on said premises that will in any way conflict with said exclusive right, and that it will do no cooking on said premises.”

The foregoing covenants and conditions run during the whole of the term demised in the lease, so that the expiration of the Thompson lease recited in the Drug Company lease and the granting of a new term to the Thompson Company in no way affects or detracts from the force of the covenants and provisions above recited. Furthermore, there is no provision in defendant’s lease that the landlord will not grant a renewal of the Thompson lease with an exclusive covenant to operate and maintain a restaurant in the building. So far as defendant is concerned the landlord was free to deal with the Thompson Company upon such terms and covenants to which they might mutually agree. It seems to us idle to contend that in effect defendant can in any way or manner influence the exclusive right which Thompson procured to operate a restaurant in the Fisher Building, either under the first lease or any renewal or extension of the same, so that defendant is in no way legally concerned in the renewal of the Thompson lease. It bears no equation to its rights in the premises. It is the contract of lease originally be: tween complainant and the Home Drug Company, to the latter of whose rights defendant succeeded, which is the bone of contention. What a drug store by custom dispenses in the loop lends no light to the solution of the problem actually involved in this case. The question is not what a drug store may sell, but what the defendant under the covenants of the lease may not sell. This case must be decided within the four corners of the lease between the parties before us, and we cannot add to or detract from that document by giving any heed or attention to any contemporaneous conversations or oral agreements made either before or subsequent to the execution of the lease. Prior conversations are in law merged in the subsequently executed lease and subsequent ones are impotent to in any manner change the writing. Armstrong Paint & Varnish Works v. Continental Can Co., 301 Ill. 102.

In the instant case defendant expressly admits its violation of the covenant not to sell edibles on the demised premises by admitting that it was selling edibles thereon at and before the filing of complainant’s bill. There is no ambiguity in the several clauses in the lease limiting the power of defendant in the conduct of its-drug business. ‘ That it will not sell anything in the way of edibles,” and that it will in no way do anything that conflicts with Thompson’s exclusive right to maintain a restaurant in the Fisher Building, and that it will do no cooking on the premises, are readily understood phrases and contain nothing of an ambiguous character, so that he that reads can easily understand. The words used to express the meaning intended were plain, and unambiguous, and need no construction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 Ill. App. 112, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-trust-savings-bank-v-economical-drug-co-illappct-1928.