Nachbour v. Wiener

34 Ill. App. 237, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 234
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 237 (Nachbour v. Wiener) 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
Nachbour v. Wiener, 34 Ill. App. 237, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 234 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, J.

This was a suit in assumpsit brought to the January term of the Will County Circuit Court, and was brought for the purpose of recovering one month’s rent for a certain store building, which appellants had before that time rented of appellee. A jury was waived and the case tried by the court, by agreement, under a stipulation, to the effect that all formal pleadings should be waived, and that both parties should be at liberty to offer any proof that would or could be admissible under formal pleadings, appropriate to the nature of the controversy, and no question arises on the pleadings.

The suit was to recover the rent claimed to be.due for the month of December, amounting to $125. A trial resulted in the court giving the plaintiff a judgment for the full amount of his claim. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and now appellants bring the case here on appeal and ask for a reversal of the judgment. The usual errors are assigned. A somewhat extensive statement of the facts involved is necessary to a correct understanding of the case, and about what are the facts there seems to be little or no dispute.

Appellants were merchants, doing a large retail business in the city of Joliet, at 223 Jefferson street, one of the principal business streets in the city. They had occupied this place for a number of years as the tenant of Henry Fish. It appears also that appellants occupied in conjunction with this Fish room another room, known as the Claflin room or store, and that these two store-rooms were connected by an opening or archway between them, so as to throw them together and make one store-room of the two buildings.

On the 11th day of June, 1884, appellants obtained a new lease from Fish for the first floor and basement for five years, at an annual rental of $1,050, payable monthly, at the rate of $87.50 per month, in advance. In Hay, 1887, appellee purchased these premises from Fish and took an assignment of the lease, and thereafter appellants paid rent to appellee under the lease. After appellee became the owner of the premises, appellants desired appellee to enlarge his building, so as to give them more room. The room already occupied was 105 feet deep by twenty-two wide. The lot was twenty-seven feet longer than the building. The second story only extended back sixty feet. It was agreed among the parties that if appellee would extend his entire building, both first and second stories, to the alley, that appellants would occupy it for the full unexpired term of the lease, and pay him an additional rent of $37.50 per month. This appellee proceeded to do, and extended the lower story twenty-seven feet to the alley, and the upper story seventy-two feet to the alley, and in December, 1887, appellants took possession of this new part. The rear end of the old building was removed so as to make the lower room all one room. There was a stairway leading from the rear end of this new room below to the second story. The upper story was lighted by a skylight. There was also a stairway leading from the front part and between the two buildings occupied by the store, up to the second floor of both buildings. There was also a door out of the lower story of the new extension into the alley. In addition to these added rooms appellee raised the ceiling of the old room and put a skylight in the second floor with a railing about it, and in other ways much improved the old room. After these additions to the building were completed as agreed upon appellants occupied the whole of it,' and there, after paid $125 per month, until in October, 1888, when, instead of paying the $125 per month they tendered appellee $87.50 per month, the agreed price under the old lease. In September, 1888, appellants spoke to appellee about renewing the lease when it should expire in 1890, and desired to renew it at the same rental, which was then amounting to about $1,500 per year; appellee replied that he was willing to renew the lease, but must have $2,400 per year rent. Appellants replied that it was too much, and that they were then paying enough, and further that they were offered fine quarters in another building, just being completed, at satisfactory rents,, and that unless appellee would consent to renew the lease at the same rent they would go into the other building at the expiration of the lease.

Appellants said, “Very well, if you won’t take any less we can’t rent it,” and appellee replied, “ Any time you don’t want it I will take it off from your hands ; all I want is a week’s notice.”

Thereupon appellants, without any notice of any kind to appellee, disposed of that half of their store room known as the Claflin store, on the same or next day after the refusal of appellee to renew the lease at $1,500 per year. Within two or three days thereafter appellee came again to appellants’ store and asked if they would let him have the Claflin room also with his own, if he should relieve them of the lease, when appellants then replied that they could not do it, as it was already rented. Appellee refused then to accept the one-half of the store occupied by appellant, and refused to release them from their lease, insisting that his proposition to release them was upon the basis of his (appellee) getting both rooms. On the first of October following appellants removed all their goods out of the new part of the building, both upstairs and down, and nailed up aboard partition between the old and new part of the lower story, at the point where the old end wall had been taken out, leaving the size of one room the same as it was before the new extension had been erected. When this partition wall was nailed up no door was left or made between the rooms. Before the first day of October, 1888, appellants then tendered appellee $87.50 for the rent of the old room, and offered him the keys to the new room for the alley door, both of which appellee refused, demanding the full amount of his rent. Appellantsdid not offer to surrender the frontpart of the store, but have kept it and removed all their goods to their new store, and have kept the front part of appellee’s building locked up.

They now insist on a severance of the lease and a division of the rooms, leaving the old rooms as they were under the original lease ; and as to the new part of the store and to the new renting they set up and rely on the statute of frauds.

Appellee predicates his right to recover on the lease, and the new parol arrangement to pay an additional rent, in consideration of these improvements, made at their request. As to these improvements and the additional rent to be paid they all rest in parol. There was no writing whatever relating to them separately. Appellants rely upon the statute of frauds, and insist that inasmuch as the new arrangement for the enlargement of the building and the increased rent to be paid therefor was to extend for a greater length of time than one year, that thbrefore the new contract was void and can not be enforced in a court of law.

It will be seen that the stipulation entered into by the parties is very broad and permits the plaintiff to recover for any kind of a cause of action and under any kind of a declaration which might be framed under'the facts shown in the evidence and allows the defendant to offer any kind of appropriate defense without pleas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 237, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nachbour-v-wiener-illappct-1889.