Springer v. DeWolf

56 L.R.A. 465, 194 Ill. 218
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 56 L.R.A. 465 (Springer v. DeWolf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springer v. DeWolf, 56 L.R.A. 465, 194 Ill. 218 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

The Branch Appellate Court, in affirming, on appeal, the decree of the superior court, made the statement and rendered the opinion following:

“In this case a bill was filed by appellee to foreclose a lien for rent under a ninety-nine-year ground lease of the premises known as 188 Monroe street, Chicago. Said lease is dated November 24, 1888, and is by Calvin DeWolf, lessor, to William E. Slosson, lessee. The fee simple title to said premises passed by conveyance from Calvin DeWolf to Wallace DeWolf, and from the latter to the appellee, prior to the filing of said bill. April 4, 1899, said Slosson executed and delivered to the appellant the following transfer or conveyance, to-wit:

“ ‘For fifteen hundred ($1500) dollars in hand paid by Warren Springer, of Chicago, Illinois, to William E. Slosson, lessee in the within lease, and in consideration of the assumption by the said Warren Springer of all the obligations and liabilities of the lessee arising under said lease, the said William E. Slosson and Katie F. Slosson, his wife, have sold, assigned and transferred, and do hereby sell, assign and transfer, to the said Warren Springer, all the right, title and interest of the lessee herein in and to the within described premises, with all the rights, privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining, for the whole of the remainder of the term of said lease, and for all renewals and extension thereof, and all dower and other rights of Katie F. Slosson.
“ ‘Signed and sealed at Chicago, Illinois, this fourth day of April, 1889.
William E. Slosson, [Seal.]
Katie F. Slosson. [Seal.]’

“A copy of the above was enclosed in the following letter from appellant, to-wit:

“ ‘Warren Springer, Heal Estate and Loans, ) 207 South Canal St., Chicago, May 22,1889. S
“ ‘ Wallace L. DeWolf, 184 Dearborn St., City:
“ ‘Dear Sir — I enclose you herewith a copy of the assignment of William E. Slosson to me of the lease of the premises on Monroe street, as per your request this day. Please send me your written consent to this assignment, as well as your assent to the extension of the time for putting the improvements on the said premises to June 1,1890, all confirming our conversation of this day, and very much oblige.
“‘Yours truly,
Warren Springer.’
“Afterward the appellee and the appellant executed their certain agreement in writing, dated July 29, 1890, in which it is agreed by and between them that the time for placing the improvements on said premises be extended to January 29,1892, and that in the meantime the appellant should, in addition to the performance of the other covenants in said lease, furnish to appellee insurance on the buildings then upon said premises in the sum of §5000. Afterward the same parties, by their agreement in writing dated June 30,1891, further extended the time for making said improvements to January 1, 1895, which also provided that appellant would furnish to appellee insurance upon said buildings in the sum of $6000, ‘in addition to the performance of the other covenants in said lease.’
“Upon the said conveyance or transfer to appellant by said Slosson, April 4, 1889, appellant went into possession of said premises, and continued in said possession until July 29,1897. Appellant assigned said lease to John McGinniss by his instrument in writing of that date, and said McGinniss, under date of August 6, 1897, assigned said lease to Charles E. Miller. Subsequent to the time when appellant turned over the possession of said premises to McGinniss, nine payments were made to appellee on account of the rent due under- said lease, each and all by the check of appellant, the last one being February 5, 1898. The bill of complaint was filed on March 3, 1898. The appellant and said Slosson, McGinniss and Miller, with others, were made parties defendant to said bill.
“In the trial court a decree was entered, wherein it was found that there was due to appellee, under said lease, the sum of $12,876.13, which included rent up to the time of the entry of such decree; that appellant was personally liable therefor; that of said sum of $12,876.13, the sum of $9293.64 accrued after the assignment to said Miller, and who is also personally liable to appellee therefor, and that the master proceed to sell the interest of the parties defendant in and to said premises. The appellant, Warren Springer, alone appealed from that decree.”

Mr. Justice Horton

delivered the opinion:

“The important question in this case is whether the appellant is liable for the ground rent reserved by the lease mentioned, and accruing' after the conveyance by him to McGinniss. All the substantial questions presented in the brief of counsel for appellant are embraced in that proposition. To determine that question we must consider whether there was privity of contract as well as of estate between the appellant and the appellee. As between the lessor and the lessee both exist, bnt the privity of estate may be terminated by an assignment of the lease by the lessee. Not so as to the privity of contract. The lessee cannot shake off his contractual liability by making such an assignment. When there is no assumption by the assignee of the obligations of the lease, then, as between the lessor and the assignee, there is privity of estate only, and the assignee is liable for the rent while such privity of estate exists, and no longer. But the assignee may terminate such liability by assigning the lease and going out of possession. Consolidated Coal Co. v. Peers, 166 Ill. 361.

“In the conveyance from Slosson to the appellant, dated April 4, 1889, it is provided that for §1500, ‘and in consideration of the assumption by said Warren Springer of all the obligations and liabilities of the lessee arising» under said lease,’ Slosson and wife ‘sold, assigned and transferred’ to appellant the leasehold estate. It will be noticed that that transfer is a conveyance of such estate. It does not, in its language, purport to assign the lease, although it has that effect in law. By their certain quit-claim, also dated April 4,1889, said Slosson and wife conveyed to appellant the building situated upon the demised premises, in which quit-claim it is stated that said Slosson had that day ‘sold and assigned said lease, and all the right, title and interest of the lessee therein, ’ to appellant.

“In its relation to the question now under consideration, — that is, the assumption of liabilities by the appellant, — we apprehend it makes but little, if any, difference whether the transfer of the leasehold estate is in form an assignment or a conveyance. The principle upon which the question of liability rests is substantially the same in either case. That conveyance of the leasehold was accepted by appellant, and he went into possession of the demised premises. A part of the consideration for such conveyance, as therein expressed, was ‘the assumption by the said Warren Springer of all the obligations and liabilities of the lessee arising under said lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 L.R.A. 465, 194 Ill. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springer-v-dewolf-ill-1901.