Salinger v. North American Woolen Mills Co.

73 S.E. 312, 70 W. Va. 151, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 208
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 312 (Salinger v. North American Woolen Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salinger v. North American Woolen Mills Co., 73 S.E. 312, 70 W. Va. 151, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 208 (W. Va. 1911).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

Plaintiff, on bill filed, obtained an injunction restraining defendants and all other persons, from “destroying, removing, painting over, interfering with, or in any wise molesting, defacing, or changing the painted advertisement and signs” placed by him on the front outer walls of the upper stories of the store building occupied by him on Court Square in the City of Parkersburg.

On bill, answers of defendants, and affidavits filed on behalf of plaintiff the court, in vacation, on motion of defendants dissolved the injunction, and plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff is lessee under Strong, the owner of the building, of the store room occupied by him, while defendants, Kinney & Carroll, are lessees of the two upper stories of the same building. Plaintiff first entered in October, 1907, as assignee of •Bauch, a prior lessee. Subsequently, on April 1, 1908, the date of the expiration of the Bauch lease, pursuant to agreement, Salinger obtained from Strong, a new lease for five years, [153]*153on the terms of the olcl, with privilege of an additional term of five years. Following this new lease, Strong, by agreement with plaintiff, built an addition in the rear, and on October 1, 1908, the prior lease of April 1, was surrendered, and a second lease, covering the new addition, on the terms of the first, except that the rent was increased from sixty to one hundred dollars per month, was executed.

The grounds of relief alleged are, not that plaintiff’s lease, in terms, gave him any right to occupy the front walls of the upper stories of the building with his signs, but that prior to purchasing the lease from Rauch, and as an inducement thereto, Strong agreed that he might paint signs on said walls; and that Iiinney & Carroll, tenants of the upper stories, and who had been such tenants for many years prior to plaintiff’s purchase of the Rauch lease, had also consented thereto; and that before occupying said store room, with his stock of goods, he had actually painted said signs on said upper walls, as they were at the time of filing his bill, and that he was so occupying said walls with his signs to the knowledge and acquiescence of Strong, and the knowledge and acquiescence of Kinney & Carroll, when Strong executed to him, the two leases of April 1, and October 1, 1908, and when in August, 1910, the North American Woolen Mills Co., or Boso its manager, claiming the right by contract with said Kinney & Carroll, and with Strong the landlord, undertook to enter and paint out said signs, and occupy said walls with signs advertising the business of said Woolen Mills Company, and for which he sought to enjoin them.

The answer of Strong denies the alleged agreement, and denies that the subject of so occupying said upper walls with signs was ever mentioned by plaintiff prior or subsequent to plaintiff’s purchase of the Rauch lease. His only admission is that some time after he executed the lease of April 1, 1908, plaintiff said to him that he was going to paint the upper walls, but that no mention was then or at any time made about painting signs thereon. He admits knowledge that plaintiff had painted signs on these walls, but he disclaims the ■ right, as against Kinney & Carroll, his upper tenants, to authorize plaintiff to so occupy said walls, and he denies that he ever undertook to do so. He says he had no objection, if Kinney & Carroll [154]*154had none, to plaintiffs use of said walls; and the latter, while denying any agreement with plaintiff that he might so occupy said walls, say they were not disposed to annoy or interfere with plaintiff in such use, so long as they had no opportunity to otherwise occupy said walls; but that having had opportunity in August, 1910, to lease said walls at a profit they had executed the contract to Boso for his Woolen Mills Company, and they denied any right in plaintiff by contract, license or otherwise to longer Occupy said walls with his signs.

While admitting said signs may be of value to plaintiff, all the answers deny any alleged intention to injure him or his business, in making the contract with Boso, or that depriving him of the use of said walls for his signs will have that effect.

No evidence was offered in support of the bill, except the ex-parte affidavit of plaintiff himself, to the effect that on August 20; 1910, M. Carroll, of the firm of Kinney & Carroll, had said to him that his firm had been compelled to sign the contract with Boso, for fear that if they did not do so Strong, the landlord, would require them to vacate the building, and that he, Carroll, personally did not then or at any time lay claim to any right to use said front walls for display signs or the right to lease the same to anybody else, and that he would not have signed the contract with Boso, except for the threat of Strong and Boso to cancel their lease, a lease from month to month.

On this state of the pleadings and proofs, was the injunction properly dissolved? That a moral wrong may possibly be in-liicted on plaintiff may be admitted. But the rights of plaintiff to longer occupy said walls with his signs, depend solely on the nature of that right.

It is conceded that his lease does not in terms give him such right,'and we must say from the record, that he had no contract resting in parol, either with Strong, the landlord, or with Kinney & Carroll, the upper tenants, to so occupy said upper walls with his signs, for the allegations of his bill, as to any such contract or agreement are denied by the answers, and there is no proof thereof. The rights of the. plaintiff, therefore, rests solely upon the fact that Strong, and Kinney & Carroll knew of plaintiff’s use of said walls, and for so long a time did not object thereto. We do not see how this knowledge of Strong, at the [155]*155time he executed the leases to plaintiff can in any way affect the lights of the American Woolen Mills Company or Boso, under their contract with Kinney & Carroll, the upper tenants. The written lease from Strong to Salinger became the repository of plaintiff’s contract, and all preceding negotiations were consummated in it, and it furnishes the controlling evidence, in the absence of fraud or mistake, of the terms and conditions upon which the property was demised. Jones on Landlord and Tenant, section 133. This is an elementary principle of contracts.

It is contended by counsel for defendants that the acquies-cense of Strong, and of Kinney & Carroll, in the use of said walls by plaintiff, amounted to a mere license, revocable at pleasure, and not to an easement. This proposition seems well founded in law. 3 Minor Inst. 23; Mumford v. Whitney, 30 Am. Dec. 68; Lowell v. Strahan, 145 Mass. 1, 1 Am. St. Rep. 422. The proposition is particularly applicable where the license appertains to the occupancy of outside walls for advertising signs. Jones on Landlord and Tenant, section 40.

' The question then is, who had the right to give such license ? If Kinney & Carroll, the upper tenants, had the right to control the use of the outer walls of that portion of the building occupied by them, they alone had the right to give the privilege or license to plaintiff, and no act of Strong could bind them, unless they had knowledge thereof and approved or acquiesced therein. Their answer is a denial of any knowledge of Strong’s action or contract with plaintiff, and asserts their right to the use of said outer walls, and their legal right to contract the use thereof to the Woolen Mills Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 312, 70 W. Va. 151, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salinger-v-north-american-woolen-mills-co-wva-1911.