Poppers v. Meager

47 Ill. App. 593, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 121
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Ill. App. 593 (Poppers v. Meager) 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
Poppers v. Meager, 47 Ill. App. 593, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 121 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gary.

The appellant was tenant of the appellee for a term expiring April 30, 1889, under a lease which contained this covenant on his part:

“ Eighth. At the termination of this lease by lapse of time or otherwise, to yield up immediate possession to said partjr of the first part, and failing so to do, to pay as liquidated damages for the whole time such possession is withheld, the sum of thirty dollars per day.”

The rent reserved in the lease was $500 per month.

About the time that the lease expired—whether before or after, was the subject of conflicting testimony—the Grand Eapids Furniture Company began negotiations with the appellee, both acting through agents, for a lease of the same premises for a term of five years, the company to deal as it pleased with the appellant, who was holding over without consent of the appellee. That lease was to run from the first day of May, 1889. Leases were prepared by jthe agent of the appellee, and taken to be considered by the company, but not executed by either party. May 28, 1889, the company paid to the appellee rent (so called in the receipt given) for that month. The testimony was conflicting, whether there was any communication between the parties to this suit after April 30, 1889, until the demand for possession in July.

The appellant being shown the receipt taken by the agent of the company, paid to him, what they, as between themselves, called rent for the premises, for May, June and July.

In July the appellee returned to the company the rnonéy received May 28, 1889. On this state of facts the court below found—trying the cause without a jury—that the appellant was responsible for the time he continued in the premises after April 30, at the rate of thirty dollars per day, refusing the propositions of law submitted by the appellant, as follows:

“ 1. If the court believes, from the evidence, that at or about the time of the expiration of the lease from the plaintiff to the defendant, in question, the plaintiff by her agents entered into negotiations with the Grand Eapids Furniture Company for a lease of the premises in question from plaintiff to said company, and that a draft of such lease was prepared and given to the agent of said company for execution by said company, and to be returned to the plaintiff duly executed by said company the next day, and •that said company then paid to the agent of plaintiff the sum of four hundred and sixteen and 66-100 dollars (§416.66), the amount of rent in and by said draft of said proposed lease provided, for the month of May, 1889, arid received from said agent of plaintiff the receipt given in evidence for said sum of money, and that the defendant was informed of said negotiations, and of the acceptance of said rent for said month of May by said plaintiff’s agents from said company, and that while said negotiations were pending between the plaintiff and said company the defendant remained in the possession of said premises with the consent of said company, and without any demand having been made by the plaintiff upon the defendant for the possession of said premises, and that the defendant paid the rent for said premises to said company for the months of May, June and July, 1889, and that the defendant had no notice that said negotiations between the plaintiff and said company had been declared off before the defendant paid the rent for the month of July, 1889, and that no demand had been made by or on behalf of the plaintiff upon the defendant for the possession of the said premises prior to the latter part of July, or the first day of August, 1889, then as a matter of law, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages against the defendant for holding possession of said premises for the time prior to the making of such demand, although such proposed lease was never in fact executed by said company.
2. If the court believes from the evidence that about the middle of May, 1889, the Grand Eapids Furniture Company made an application to the plaintiff’s agents for a lease of the premises in question while the defendant was in possession thereof, and that said plaintiff’s agents informed the representatives of said company making said application, that the plaintiff had a tenant there that she or her agents had some trouble with, and that in case said application was accepted, it would have to be with the understanding that the issuing of a lease would be giving possession of the premises; that said agents could not guarantee to put said company into possession, and that said company must take it in that way ; that if it wanted to take the chances of litigation with the defendant to oust him, well and good. And if the court further believes from the evidence that said company made its application for said lease upon those conditions, and upon the condition that it was to pay the rent for said premises from May 1,1889, and that the representative of said company informed said plaintiff’s agents that he thought he could arrange with the defendant to buy him out, and that thereupon said company’s representative paid to said plaintiff’s agents the rent for the month of May, 1889, took away with him the draft of the lease offered in evidence, with the promise on his part that said draft of said lease should be executed by said company and returned to plaintiff duly executed the day following, and if the court further believes from the evidence that the . defendant was informed of said negotiations between the plaintiff’s agents and said company, and that thereupon an arrangement was made by the defendant and said company whereby the defendant in good faith agreed to' sell, and said company agreed to buy, the stock of furniture of the defendant in said premises, and that it was agreed between said company and the defendant that he should remain in possession of said premises until said purchase of said stock of furniture by said company should be consummated, and pay said company during such occupancy the same rent that said company was to pay said plaintiff, and that in pursuance of such agreement the defendant did pay said company such rent for the months of May, June and July, 1889, before the defendant had any notice or knowledge of the arrangement subsequently made, whereby the plaintiff’s agents paid back the rent which said company had paid to them, as shown by the evidence, and that no demand was made by or on behalf of the plaintiff upon the defendant for the possession of said premises prior to the latter part of July or the first day of August, 1889, then as .a matter of law, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any damages against the defendant for holding the possession of said premises for the time prior to the making of such demand.
3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Ill. App. 593, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poppers-v-meager-illappct-1893.