Spelson ex rel. Cran v. Leiter

254 Ill. App. 19, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 171
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 3, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,430
StatusPublished

This text of 254 Ill. App. 19 (Spelson ex rel. Cran v. Leiter) 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
Spelson ex rel. Cran v. Leiter, 254 Ill. App. 19, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 171 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action in assumpsit, commenced June 22, 1928, in the municipal.court of Chicago and based upon the provisions of a written lease by defendants to plaintiffs, there was a finding and judgment, entered February 1, 1929, against defendants for $11,000, and they appealed.

The lease is dated J armary 2,1926, and by it defendants, as first parties, demised to plaintiffs, as second parties, for the period of five years from May 1,1928, until and including April 30, 1933, the ground-floor store known as No. 4 South Clark Street, Chicago, and also 100 square feet in the basement, to be used for a restaurant, soda fountain, confectionery, and sale of cigars and cigarettes, and for no other purpose. The rent for the entire term was $70,000, payable in monthly instalments, as stated, on the first day of each and every month. The monthly instalments for the first year were fixed at $1,000 each. The lease contained provisions, usual in such instruments, and also the following provision:

“It is hereby covenanted and agreed . . . that in case the lessors (defendants) shall desire to sell the premises of which the demised premises are a part, or to make a 99-year lease of said premises, or to lease the entire building in which said premises are situated to one party, or to remodel the building now on said premises, or to erect a new building thereon, they shall be entitled to terminate this lease by giving to the lessee (plaintiffs) six months’ notice in writing of their desire so to terminate this lease, and by repaying to the lessee, upon the surrender of said demised premises, an amount equal to six months’ rent herein reserved. And the lessee hereby covenants and agrees that, at the expiration of the period of such six months ’ notice, he will peaceably surrender to the lessors possession of the premises hereby demised, and the said lessee shall not be entitled to receive the said sum equal to six months’ rent herein reserved, unless he shall so peaceably surrender possession at the expiration of said six months’ period as hereinbefore provided. ’ ’

Attached to the lease is a rider or memorandum, signed by the parties, to the effect that the lessors (defendants) agree to pay to the lessees (plaintiffs) certain amounts “in the event this lease is canceled before its expiration,” viz, $5,000, “if canceled during the year 1928”'; $4,000, if canceled during 1929; $3,000, if canceled during 1930; and $2,000, if canceled during 1931. And it is stated that “these amounts are in addition to the amount of one-half of the year’s rental provided in the lease for the cancellation on the six months’ notice.”

In plaintiffs’ statement of claim the lease and rider are set forth, and it is alleged that prior to May 1, 1928, “defendants caused or permitted the building on said premises to be torn down or destroyed and said premises leased to another, thereby cancelling said lease”; and that thereby defendants became indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of $5,000, which defendants have failed and refused to pay. The clause in the lease, as first above mentioned, is then set forth, and it is further alleged that defendants either, made a 99-year lease or other lease on the premises or erected another building thereon, and, prior to May 1, 1928, without notice in writing to plaintiffs, caused the building on the premises to be torn down and destroyed and a new building started thereon; that by reason thereof “defendants elected to take advantage of said clause of said lease and terminate said lease”; that defendants thereby became indebted to plaintiffs in the further sum of $6,000, “being one-half of the year’s rent during which the lease was so terminated,” which sum defendants also have failed and refused to pay; and that defendants’ total indebtedness to plaintiffs is $11,000, together with interest, etc.

Defendants in their affidavit of merits denied that they were indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of $11,000, or in any sum. As to the payments mentioned in the rider to be made to plaintiffs they alleged that the same “were to reimburse the lessees (plaintiffs) for expenditure to be made by them in improving the premises described in said lease, and in installing fixtures, etc.”; that defendants at no time canceled the lease; that plaintiffs did not spend any sums in improving the premises; and that, therefore, they are not entitled to be reimbursed. Defendants further denied that they had caused the building to be torn down or that they had canceled plaintiffs’ lease. And they alleged that, subsequent to the making of the lease, they entered into a 99-year lease with the Madison-Clark Building Corp., an Illinois corporation, for the entire ground and building (of which the premises leased to plaintiffs constituted a part); that said 99-year lease “was especially made subject to all existing leases and was thus made subject to the lease made to plaintiffs”; and that defendants took no part in tearing down the building, but that the same was torn down by the Madison-Clark Building Corp.

Upon the trial, after plaintiffs had introduced the lease and attached rider, Spelson, one of the plaintiffs, testified that he took the lease to the recorder’s office of Cook county and had it there recorded on April 22, 1926; that thereafter and until February, 1928, he “didn’t do anything” with reference to the premises, but was “waiting for possession”; that early in February, 1928, he noticed that the building was being torn down, that shortly thereafter he and his coplaintiff called on one Rogers, attorney for defendants, who informed them in effect that defendants, as trustees of the Leiter estate, had made a 99-year lease of the entire premises to the Madison-Clark Building Corp., that the lease had been made subject to the lease to them (plaintiffs), that said corporation was apparently wrecking the building for the purpose of erecting a new one, and that any claim of plaintiffs would have to be taken up with said corporation, etc.; that plaintiffs had never received any notice from defendants . that plaintiffs ’ lease was to be canceled; that they had never taken possession of the premises leased to them because, prior to May 1,1928, the old building had completely been torn down; that they had never paid any rent to defendants, but that on May 1,1928 (the beginning of the term of their lease), they had tendered to defendants checks for $1,000 in payment of the first month’s rent, which tender defendants had refused. The other plaintiff, Speliotopolus, corroborated Spelson as to what Rogers had told plaintiffs in February, 1928, and further testified that following said interview with Rogers they did nothing further in the matter and for the reason that plaintiffs “couldn’t locate” the Madison-Clark Building Corp., and “couldn’t find out who they were. ’ ’

Defendants introduced in evidence the 99-year lease. It is dated November 1, 1926, recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county on December 11, 1926, and is for the term from November 1, 1926, to October 31, 2025. In sections 1 and 2 of article III of the lease it is provided:

“Section 1.

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Bluebook (online)
254 Ill. App. 19, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spelson-ex-rel-cran-v-leiter-illappct-1929.