Action by Blackwell Printing Company, grantee in a warranty deed conveying a building located in the 1600 Block of Locust Street in St. Louis, against Blackwell-Wielandy Company, a tenant in the building since 1919, for damages claimed to have been suffered by plaintiff as a result of the alleged unlawful removal by defendant, during its occupancy of the building, of a ventilating system, two conveyor systems and two wash basins installed in the basement of the building. A trial jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $20,000 damages and $4,800 interest. The trial court set aside the verdict and granted defendant a new trial for the reason, among others, that plaintiff failed to introduce sufficient proof of the value of the items removed from the premises. Plaintiff has appealed, claiming that no new trial should have been awarded and urging reinstatement of the verdict. Defendant, joining issue on the sufficiency of the proof of damages, goes further and in Point II of its brief seeks to raise the question whether plain
“II.
“(A) The verdict should have been set aside for the additional reason that under the facts and the law plaintiff could not recover damages for the conveyor system because:
“(1) The evidence shows this was a trade fixture and as such is removable;
“(2) It was agreed by the Realty Company and defendant (the tenant) that it belonged to the tenant;
“(3) This was made known to the purchaser ;
“(4) The deed properly omitted transfer of ‘fixtures’ which the seller couldn’t transfer because it didn’t own them, as plaintiff well knew;
“(5) It was removed by the tenant (defendant) while a tenant of plaintiff.
“(B) With regard to the Bradley washer and the ventilating fan and duct work, the sales contract specifically put plaintiff on notice that the seller only agreed to sell ‘articles provided for tenant use’ ‘not owned by Blackwell-Wielandy Company.’
“(a) Such articles excluded ‘ventilating and exhaust fans,’ ‘plumbing equipment and fixtures.’ ”
Point II, if meritorious, is dispositive of the case in its entirety, so we consider it first.
Preliminarily, plaintiff-appellant questions the sufficiency of Point II of defendant-respondent’s brief to comply with the requirements of Civil Rule 83.05(e), V.A.M.R. We agree that Point II (B) does not briefly and concisely state what actions or rulings of the court are claimed to be erroneous or why it is contended the court was wrong in any action or ruling sought to be reviewed, and for failure to comply with the rule we will not notice Point II (B).
Point II (A), however, considered in conjunction with respondent’s statement near the close of the argument portion of its brief that the motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained, is sufficient to present for review the question of the right of plaintiff to recover damages for the removal of the conveyor systems.
Plaintiff alleged in its petition that it is the sole owner and entitled to the possession of the two conveyor systems. The burden was on plaintiff to establish its ownership. In an effort to sustain this burden plaintiff introduced in evidence the lease dated September 13, 1960 between Blackwell-Wielandy Realty Company and defendant; the sales contract by the terms of which the realty company agreed to sell to Hartley B. Comfort or assignee the building, grounds, etc.; the surrender of lease executed by defendant; the general warranty deed from the realty company conveying the building, etc. to Mr. Comfort’s assignee, Blackwell Printing Company, plaintiff herein; a letter from defendant to Mr. Comfort and his reply; and the testimony of the operator of Acme Erectors, Inc., that the conveyors were anchored to the floor by drilling holes in the floor at approximately 10-foot intervals, and putting bolts known as AJ anchors in the holes; that conveyors were affixed to the floor on both rails; that there was a hole cut through the floor through which the conveyor went, and the floor was supported by steel I-beams.
This evidence was not sufficient to make a submissible case of ownership of the conveyor systems by plaintiff or its predecessor in title, the realty company. Plaintiff did not show that the realty company acquired title to and the right to sell the conveyor systems by having purchased, installed or paid for them in the first instance (they were bought, installed and paid for by the defendant) or that the
Plaintiff argues that defendant corporation was “quite aware of the terms of the contract which was agreed to with the Realty Company, and
accepted the provision for the conveyors which had been made for its benefit”;
that the defendant and the realty corporations were controlled by the same group of stockholders, more than half in interest of whom owned stock in both corporations; that there were com
The surrender of lease, whereby defendant as tenant surrendered to the landlord the leasehold estate which had until May 31, 1965 to run, contributes nothing to plaintiff’s case by the mere recital, at the conclusion of the legal description, of the words “together with all of the improvements and fixtures including elevators on said described parcel of ground, or which may hereafter be erected thereon, and the appurtenances thereto belonging.” The tenant was surrendering to the landlord only those leased improvements and fixtures owned by the landlord and leased to the tenant. There is no basis for a finding that the tenant thereby recognized that the landlord owned this property or that the tenant thereby intended to transfer title to property owned by the tenant.
The general warranty deed from the realty company to plaintiff conveyed the lot of ground particularly described, “together with all improvements thereon,” which plainly refers to the building. The conveyance does not mention fixtures and equipment. This omission is significant, although their attempted conveyance would have added nothing to plaintiff’s claim in the absence of a showing that the grantor had a right to convey.
The exchange of correspondence between Mr. Comfort and defendant affords plaintiff no comfort. In it defendant’s Mr. Eb-ling called attention to the fact that there had been no discussion by defendant’s representatives with Mr. Comfort with respect to the sale of the building (with the exception of a discussion about two air conditioning units, not involved here) and that in the contract of sale between Mr. Comfort and the realty company the agreement was to transfer the plot of ground, together with all improvements
not owned by de
fendant, and that the power conveyors were specifically excluded. Mr. Comfort’s answer, that “Our council [sic] advises us that once material is fastened to the building it becomes a part of the real estate and this is what we purchased subject to the certain conditions specifically listed in the real estate contract,” indicates the basis of plaintiff’s claim of title to the conveyors, namely, that by operation of law the conveyors became fixtures, but its theory was beclouded by Norris H. Allen, called as a witness by plaintiff, who testified on cross-examination that never in all of the negotiations leading up to the sale did anyone representing the then owner of the building claim that any of the fixtures paid for and put in the building became
Mr. Comfort, testifying' for plaintiff, conceded that during the negotiations the realty company’s lawyer sent Mr. Comfort’s lawyer a letter, which he read, which stated “B. W. has a conveyor in the basement, which runs to a loading dock, with a 20 inch width. B. W. has another one in its building that is adequate for its use. This could be purchased by Comfort Printing or be removed by B. W.”
The testimony as to the manner in which the conveyor systems were bolted to the floor does not make a submissible case of ownership in the realty company on the theory that when so affixed to the premises they became a part of the freehold as fixtures. The elements of a fixture are annexation, adaptability and intent. Bastas v. McCurdy, Mo.App.,
All of the evidence which we may take into consideration indicates that these items were “trade fixtures,” i.e., “articles or appliances which are in some manner or to some degree annexed to or connected with the realty by the tenant for the purpose of carrying on the particular trade or business for which the premises were demised to him by the landlord, but which, notwithstanding their annexation or connection, do not become a part of the realty, remaining instead the property or chattels of the tenant, removable by him before the expiration of the term of his lease or the period thereafter during which he holds the premises with the landlord’s consent.” Matz v. Miami Club Restaurant, Mo.App.,
In Endler v. State Bank & Trust Co. of Wellston,
Plaintiff contends, however, that under the provisions of the sale contract the conveyors had to be removed before the closing date and “not afterwards.” Again it must be remembered that this was not a contractual obligation assumed by defendant. Defendant was not a party signatory to the contract of sale. There is a general rule of law, however, that the right of a tenant to remove fixtures must be exercised during the tenant’s term. Idalia Realty & Development Co. v. Norman, Mo.App.,
Turning now to appellant’s point that the court erred in granting a new trial on the ground that there was no submissible evidence of the value of the fixtures, and confining ourselves to the propriety of the ruling only insofar as it affects the ventilating system and wash basins, our page-by-page review of the testimony reveals that St. Louis Blow Pipe & Heater Company made a bid on February 13,1964, quot
This was all of the evidence adduced by plaintiff on the issue of damages. There was no testimony as to the difference between the reasonable market value of the building and lot immediately before and immediately after the removal.
“[T]he measure of damages in a case of this kind is the difference between the reasonable market value of the premises immediately before the removal and immediately thereafter. Schaefer v. Frazier-Davis Const. Co., Mo.App.,
Although respondent has not quarreled with the form of the jury instructions on damages the circuit court found that it had erred in giving them. They were based upon M.A.I. Nos. 4.01 and 9.01 (the approved instruction in eminent domain cases when all of the property of the condemnee is taken). We reaffirm the circuit court’s ruling that they were erroneous. To avoid error on retrial new instructions consistent with this opinion and based upon the rules laid down in Schaefer, supra, and the cases cited therein, should be drafted and given.
Under Civil Rule 83.13 it is our duty to “award a new trial or partial new trial, reverse or affirm the judgment or order of the trial court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given, as to the appellate court shall seem agreeable to law. * * *” On the issues raised with respect to the ventilator system and wash basins the trial court properly ordered a new trial for failure of proof of their value and with respect to those issues the trial court is affirmed and the cause remanded for a partial new trial. On the issue of the conveyor system no new trial should have been granted because as a matter of law on the undisputed facts it was a trade fixture which respondent had a right to remove. This item of plaintiff’s claim should have been withdrawn from the consideration of the jury at the close of all the evidence. This not having been done the court should have sustained defendant’s motion for judgment in accordance with defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as to that item. We remand the cause for the entry of such an order with respect to the conveyor system.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The foregoing opinion by HOUSER, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All of the Judges concur.
