Radcliff v. Hanger

239 Ill. App. 292, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 43
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 1925
DocketGen. No. 7,912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 Ill. App. 292 (Radcliff v. Hanger) 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
Radcliff v. Hanger, 239 Ill. App. 292, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 43 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Crow

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes on appeal from the circuit court of McLean county where the plaintiffs (appellees) obtained a judgment against defendants (appellants) for the sum of $450 and for costs.

Appellants had worked for J. L. Beath for many years and after his death for his widow, in the husiness of selling paints and accessories. The building in which the business was conducted was owned by Mr. Beath, and after his death, by his widow. Some time after the death of Mr. Beath, appellants bought the business and conducted it in the building in which it had always been conducted. The business seems to have been an old one. There were shelves in the building used for the merchandise therein. They were placed by Mr. Beath and remained there until a sale of the building to appellees in 1924. The controversy arises out of the removal by appellants of the shelving, certain heating and lighting system for the room consisting of electric light fixtures, appliances, switches, electric wire conduits, and electric wires in the conduits utilized in the building as part of the lighting system. After the sale of the real estate to appellees, appellants moved out and took away all the articles mentioned. Thereupon suit was brought to recover from appellants the value of the articles taken away. At the trial by jury a verdict was returned for $450, on which judgment was rendered after motion for new trial had been overruled.

There is some controversy as to whether the shelving removed by appellants was attached to the walls and the first or subfloor. There were two floors in the room, one known as the subfloor and the other a finished floor laid on it. Reading all the evidence as abstracted the most that can be said is, it is not certain whether the shelves were fastened to the walls and to the subfloor. There was a contrariety of evidence as to that, but the most reasonable conclusion to be drawn from all the evidence is that the shelves were at some time nailed to the subfloor, and to cleats fastened in or to the walls of the room. They had at some time, surely, if the testimony of some of the witnesses is true. Appellants knew for some time they could not get a new lease and must move out. That the heating apparatus, wires and conduits had been fastened is not a matter of doubt. Some witnesses say that in pulling the nails holding the shelves some of the bricks of the wall were tom out. The shelving had been in the building a long time. One witness said he had known it 40 years and he thought the shelving had been there all the time. This witness said there were 75 or 100 nail holes altogether that he saw. The jury having heard all the evidence and seen the witnesses and observed their manner of testifying were in better position to appraise the evidence than we who only see it as presented in an abstract. The preponderance of evidence is not determined by the number of witnesses. We are not warranted in reversing the judgment upon the facts unless we are compelled to say from an examination of all the evidence it clearly does not support the verdict. This we cannot say.

It is contended that as matter of law the verdict was wrong and that the judgment, therefore, was erroneous because under section 35 of chapter 80, SmithHurd’s Statutes, relating to Landlord and Tenant [Cahill’s St. ch. 80, [[35], the tenants had the right to remove the fixtures. That section is: “Subject to the right of the landlord to distrain for rent, a tenant shall have the right to remove from the demised premises all removable fixtures erected thereon by him during the term of his lease, or of any renewal thereof, or of any successive leasing of the premises while he remains in possession in his character as tenant.”

Appellants relying on the Act of 1905 for their protection, the legal question presented, independent of any question of fact is, does the law apply to the case made by them on the facts? Fellows v. Johnson, 183 Ill. App. 42, decided by the Appellate Court of the Second District, is quoted as applicable. It is clear that the reason or motive of the legislature in passing the act was as stated by Judge Games, who wrote the opinion. The tenant there did not remove the fixtures until after the possession had been surrendered. The court holds he could not remove them, regardless of any rule of the common law that might have protected his rights before that legislation. Appellants here contend that that case, interpreting the statute, by inference protects them. The section of the statute used in this case is interpreted and discussed in Miller v. Bennett, post,, p. 306, the present term of this court.

We are of the opinion it is not authority in support of their contention. All that the court held, or could hold as law presented by the record was, that the tenant, not having removed the alleged removable fixture until after he had surrendered possession, could not afterward do so. There was no occasion to hold more and the court did not undertake to go beyond the question presented for decision. The specific question there presented is not presented here. In this case, before the defendant abandoned or surrendered the premises, they dismantled the shelving, which they did not put in, and wiring, conduits, pipes and radiators used for heating purposes. Appellants put in the heating fixtures, but of that appellees had no notice. Their lease expired September 1. They were permitted by appellees to stay beyond the first of the month, paying therefor. During that period they committed the act complained of.

Appellees had come into possession of the property as purchasers by deed dated 1924. Appellants had attorned to them and recognized, without reservation or restriction, their rights as purchasers. Nothing is claimed by appellants to have been said by either of them as to any claim of right to the fixtures. In a conversation between Badcliff and Hanger before the purchase of the premises was consummated, Hanger told him his only interest in the premises was his tenancy to the first of September. In applying the section they invoke as their defense, it must be noted it regulates only the rights existing between landlord and tenant. It rylg-tes to the rights in removable fixtures while in that relation. Previous to its enactment, removable fixtures, as between landlord and tenant, might, of course, be removed. They may under that section still be removed. It was not the legislative purpose to establish that right. But all uncertainty as to when they may or must be removed is eliminated. That was the purpose. There was conflict of decision on that question, not only of the courts of the different states, but of our own courts. Now the rule as to the right of removal where the controversy arises between landlord and tenant, so far as legislative language can make it clear, is, such fixtures must be removed by the tenant “during the term of his lease, or of any renewal thereof, or of any successive leasing * * * while he remains in possession in his character as tenant.” It would seem to be clear that the last qualifying clause as to time of removal as between landlord and tenant means, while he remains in possession in his character as tenant under such lease or leases. As between the original lessor and lessees this construction is clear. The controversy here being between tenants in possession under a temporary arrangement with purchasers without notice, the tenants making known no claim to fixtures, it is more in accord with the settled rule with regard to the rights of the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 Ill. App. 292, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radcliff-v-hanger-illappct-1925.