Millers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Insurance Exchange Building Corp.

218 Ill. App. 12, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 254
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 12, 1920
DocketGen. No. 25,092
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 218 Ill. App. 12 (Millers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Insurance Exchange Building Corp.) 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
Millers Mutual Casualty Co. v. Insurance Exchange Building Corp., 218 Ill. App. 12, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 254 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

• Mr. Justice Dever

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought suit in the superior court for the recovery of damages against the defendants. The declaration consisted of two counts, the first of which alleged that the plaintiff was a tenant of defendants in the Insurance Exchange Building in Chicago under a written lease which provided among other things that the plaintiff might sublet the demised premises or any part thereof provided the proposed sublessee was. in all respects satisfactory to the lessor, the defendant.

It was further alleged in the declaration that the defendants

“Arbitrarily, wrongfully, wilfully and maliciously * * * interfered with and obstructed the performance of said contract * * * and prevented the plaintiff and said company from carrying out their contract, and * * * Refused to permit the plaintiff to deliver or said company to take over or accept said demised premises * * * in this that said defendants and each of them expressly declared and stated to the plaintiff that they would not permit plaintiff to sublet any- of plaintiff’s said office space at a profit to the plaintiff and would not permit plaintiff to sublet the same or any part thereof to any person whatever * * * by reason of which declarations and statements of the defendants, the said Bollins Burdick Hunter Company then and there refused to carry out its said agreement.”

A demurrer was filed to the declaration which was sustained by the trial judge and the plaintiff, electing to stand by its declaration, a judgment was entered in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff brings the case here by appeal for review.

For the plaintiff it is insisted that its right of action, as stated in the declaration, is not based upon the lease or any provision therein. We are unable to agree with this contention. It is charged in the declaration that the defendants arbitrarily, wrongfully, etc., interfered with the right claimed by the plaintiff to sublet the demised premises to Eollins Burdick Hunter Company. It is apparent that the plaintiff’s action grew out of the contract of letting between it and the building corporation and as a part of this contract the plaintiff had the right to sublet the demised premises only in the event that the proposed sublessee was in all respects satisfactory to the lessor. The relationship created by the lease between the parties thereto is that of landlord and tenant. It will not be contended that in the absence of such relationship the plaintiff would have any cause of-action against defendants. Whether the action brought by plaintiff be viewed as an action on the contract or for a tort it is perfectly clear that the plaintiff’s rights, whatever they may be held to be, grew out of the relationship created by the lease. If we accept the view of the plaintiff that the action is one in tort, the declaration becomes obnoxious to demurrer for the reason that the particular facts upon which the plaintiff predicates the alleged wrongdoing do not amount to an actionable tort. It is true that the declaration charges that the defendants acting arbitrarily, wrongfully, wilfully and maliciously interfered with and obstructed the performance of the contract, that is, the proposed contract between the plaintiff and the sublessee, but this wrongful conduct, as appears- from the face of the declaration, consists of an express declaration on the part of the defendants to the plaintiff, and not to the proposed sub-lessee, that the defendants would not permit plaintiff to sublet any part of plaintiff’s office to the Eollins Burdick Hunter Company, and it appears from the declaration that the defendant lessor had a right' to refuse to give consent to the subletting. This was a right reserved to the lessor in the lease.

There is no allegation in the declaration that the defendants, or either of them, sought to prevent the proposed sublessee from entering into a contract with the plaintiff by any means other than the alleged statement made to the plaintiff that the defendants would not agree to a subletting of the premises. It may be admitted that the right to acquire property resides in every man and that an unlawful interference with this right may constitute an actionable wrong. Brennan v. United Hatters, 73 N. J. L. 729, 742. But as we read the declaration in the present case it cannot be said that the alleged conduct of the defendants was unlawful. Nor do we think that the plaintiff is aided by the allegations of the declaration that the proposed sublessee was at the time of the commission of the alleged wrong a tenant of the lessor. It does not follow as a matter of course from this fact that the owner of the building can be said to have acted wrongfully or unlawfully when it declined to accept the sublessee as a tenant of all or a part of the premises demised to the plaintiff. We are inclined to agree with the conclusion of the trial judge that the defendants upon any theory of the case were not required to consent to a subletting of the premises to the Bollings Burdick Hunter Company. The declaration alleges that the plaintiff was about to conclude a contract of letting with Bollins Burdick Hunter Company and thát such contract would have been consummated had it not been for the wrongful and malicious interference of the defendants, and this wrongful and malicious interference is shown by the declaration to be merely that the defendants declined to accept the proposed sublessee as a tenant of the premises. The declaration on its face does not allege an actionable wrong of any sort.

The cases cited by plaintiff are not in point as the facts alleged in the declaration show that the defendants did not unlawfully, by direct or indirect means, obstruct or interfere with any right legally vested in the plaintiff. Purington v. Hinchliff, 219 Ill. 159; May v. Wood, 172 Mass. 11.

The defendants acted within their rights as defined by the lease. They did not wilfully and wrongfully cause a breach of the proposed contract between the plaintiff and the sublessee. The case cannot be said to be one involving unlawful conduct on the part of an outside or third person, and even if the defendants in their conduct were actuated by malice, this fact would not give rise to a cause of action against them if their conduct was not legally wrongful. The cases relied upon by counsel for plaintiff do not aid us in solving the difficulty.

In the case of Goodrich v. Van Nortwick, 43 Ill. 445, a case involving an agreement for the purchase of a fanning mill, where a right was reserved to the buyer to return the mill within 30 days if it did not suit him, the Supreme Court said:

“If it did not suit appellee then he had the right to return the property, and he was by the terms of the contract to be sole judge of whether it suited him. That did not depend upon the opinion or judgment of other persons. It was a right he reserved by his contract, and having reserved the right, he could not be prevented from exercising it within the limited period.”

In the case of Union League Club v. Blymyer Ice Mach. Co., 204 Ill. 117, a case involving a contract for the sale of a machine, under the terms of which the purchaser was permitted to refuse to accept the machine in case it proved unsatisfactory to it, the evidence in the case showed that the purchaser used the machine for many months after the date when, under the terms of the contract, it could have rejected it. The Supreme Court in deciding the case said:

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Bluebook (online)
218 Ill. App. 12, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millers-mutual-casualty-co-v-insurance-exchange-building-corp-illappct-1920.