Sherman House Hotel Co. v. Cirkle

136 Ill. App. 381, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 634
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 4, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,339
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 Ill. App. 381 (Sherman House Hotel Co. v. Cirkle) 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
Sherman House Hotel Co. v. Cirkle, 136 Ill. App. 381, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 634 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The cause must be remanded to the Circuit Court for a new trial for errors in procedure, and therefore we do not find it necessary to consider or to express any opinion upon the merits of the cause.

The lease contained a provision for re-entry by appellant for condition broken and the removal of appellee, using such force as might be necessary in so doing, with or without process of law. The lease also provided that “the said party of the second part hereby waives his right to any notice from said party of the first part of its election to declare said lease at an end under any of its provisions, or any demand for the payment of rent or for the possession of the premises leased herein.”

Evidence was introduced by appellant tending to show a violation by appellee of the provision of the lease whereby appellee covenanted that he would not underlet said premises or any part thereof, or assign the lease without the written assent of appellant, and tending also to show a violation of the provision specifying the kind of merchandise which might be sold in the booth.

Appellant" requested an instruction which was refused by-the court as requested; but the court modified it and gave it to the .jury in the form below set forth, the italicized portion of the instruction being the modification or addition made by the court:

. “The court instructs the jury as a matter of law that if the jury believe from the evidence and under the instructions of this court that the plaintiff, Cirkle, violated the terms and conditions in the lease under which he occupied the premises in question undef the defendant, and if the jury further believe from the evidence that the defendant declared said term ended because- of such violations, then, by the terms of the lease the défendant had a right to remove the plaintiff or his employees and property, using such force as was necessary to do so, and the plaintiff cannot recover in this action. Before the defendant had a legal right to use force in putting the plaintiff out of the leased premises, the law and the lease required of the said defendant that he should, in a formal and distinct manner, declare tp the plaintiff that the term of his lease was ended.”

Appellant assigns error upon the giving of the instruction as modified, contending that the law and the lease did not require it to disclose to appellee in a formal and distinct manner that the term of this lease was ended.

“At the common law, whenever the right of entry existed the disseizee might lawfully regain the possession by force.” .1 Chitty’s Gen. Practice, 46. In Hyatt v. Woods, 4 John., 150, the court said: “If the entry in such case be with a strong hand a multitude of people, it is an offense for which the party entering must answer criminally.” Our statute of forcible entry and detainer took away the right from the landlord or person whose possession had been invaded to make a forcible entry, and gave a civil remedy to regain possession. Fabri v. Bryan et al., 80 Ill., 182. The question presented is whether a wrongdoer by contract may not waive the civil remedy provided by the statute and authorize a re-entry as at common law.

In Ambrose v. Boot, 11 Ill., 497, an agreement was before the court providing that in case of default in paying a certain installment of the purchase price of a certain mill property on a day named, the vendor Boot might “enter and take possession of said mill, using all the force necessary to obtain the actual possession thereof; and such entry shall not be regarded as a trespass, nor sued for as such, nor in anywise unlawful.” The court in upholding the agreement and the retaking of possession thereunder, at page 499, said:

“This was not an agreement to do an unlawful act. It cannot be supposed that the parties had it in contemplation at the time of executing the contract, that the plaintiff could wrongfully attempt to retain the possession, or that there would be any occasion to resort to force to put him out. The agreement was not made for the purpose of committing an illegal act, nor with a knowledge that one would be committed, and had the defendant complied with his obligation, as the law will presume was his intention at the time, none would have followed. * * * Under our statute of forcible entry and detainer, a party having by law a right of entry, has no authority to make such entry by force; but this statute provides a civil remedy which the wrongdoer in possession may at any time waive.”

This case was cited, followed and approved in Page el al. v. DePuy, 40 Ill., 506, where a lease containing a similar provision of re-entry and removal was before the court, and the re-entry and removal was justified upon the ground that it was authorized to be made, and the law does not prevent a person from giving such authority.

And again Fabri v. Bryan, supra, where the tenant held over, the court said where a similar licence to the landlord to the one contained in the lease in this case was before it, that an entry by the landlord unaccompanied by unnecessary force was lawful because sanctioned by the agreement of the parties.

It is clear, we think, under these authorities, that appellee could waive the civil remedy provided by the statute, and that by the lease pleaded by him and in evidence, he did waive it.

The particular vice in the instruction insisted upon by appellant is that the instruction states the law to be that “the law and the lease required of the said defendant that he should, in a formal and distinct manner, declare to the plaintiff that the term of this lease was ended,” before the appellant had the legal right to use force in putting appellee out of the leased premises.

The lease before us contained the following at the end of, and as a part of the provision under consideration:

“And the said party of the second part hereby waives his right to any notice from said party of the first part of its election to declare this lease at an end under any of its provisions, or any demand, for the payment of rent or the possession of the premises leased herein.”

There was evidence before the jury of various acts in contravention of the conditions of the lease which would warrant the jury in finding that appellant was justified in forfeiting the lease. It is, beyond question, within the right and power of a tenant to waive his right to notice from his landlord of the election of the latter to declare his lease ended.

By the clause above quoted this declaration in a formal and distinct manner to appellee was waived. The language used in the lease is unambiguous and clear. The instruction as modified, in view of the provisions of the lease and the law, was therefore erroneous.

Furthermore, the right of appellant to re-enter, under the provisions of the lease, upon covenant broken, existed independently of an express forfeiture of the lease. Schaefer v. Silverstein, 46 Ill. App., 608. For this reason also the instruction was erroneous.

By the additional counts to his declaration appellee averred that the principal part of his business conducted in the leased premises was the sale of theatre tickets at a profit to the appellee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 381, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-house-hotel-co-v-cirkle-illappct-1907.