91 Wash. 125 | Wash. | 1916
This action was brought for the purpose of recovering possession of certain personal property, or in lieu thereof its reasonable value. The property described in the
In the defendant’s answer to the complaint, it claims to be the owner of all the property described therein and for which the action was brought. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in findings and conclusions and a judgment awarding to the plaintiff possession of one hundred and twenty-one medicine cabinets, one hundred and twenty-five towel hangers, and one hundred and thirteen window shades, and in lieu thereof, if possession be not surrendered, a judgment for $95.60. From this judgment, the defendant appeals.
The facts which gave rise to the litigation are substantially as follows: During the year 1909, the appellant being then the owner of a certain lot in the city of Seattle and the building thereon, known as the Wilhard hotel, leased the same to one F. L. Allen. Allen furnished the building for hotel purposes, and thereafter assigned his lease to a firm known as McNair & McCallum. The towel hangers, window shades, and medicine cabinets here involved were installed either by Allen or by McNair & McCallum. After receiving the assignment of the lease from Allen, McNair & McCallum executed and delivered to the appellant a chattel mortgage on the furniture and equipment in the hotel as security for the payment of the rent specified in the lease. Some time later,
After the appellant took possession of the hotel, it operated it for a period of eight or ten months. During the time the appellant was operating the building, it purchased certain articles for the purpose of further equipping the hotel. When Lucas purchased from McNair & McCallum, he gave them a mortgage of $10,000 on the furniture for the purpose of securing the balance of the purchase price which was not then paid. On November 15, 1913, the appellant leased the premises to one B. H. Silver. On June 5, 1914, Silver mortgaged the property, including that installed therein by the appellant during the time it was operating the hotel, to the plaintiff to secure the payment of the sum of $1,600. Soon after this mortgage was given to the respondent Donahue, the appellant began the foreclosure of its prior mortgage which had been received from McNair & McCallum. On June 10, 1914, the respondent purchased from the appellant its rights under the McNair & McCallum mortgage, and the additional property which had been installed in the building while being operated by the appellant, for the sum of $3,300. On the date mentioned, a receipt was given by the appellant to the respondent for this sum. A few days thereafter, a bill of sale was executed by the appellant and delivered to the respondent, transferring to the latter the property which had been purchased by him. The receipt mentioned and this bill of sale will be referred to in the course of this opinion in greater detail. Silver continued to operate the hotel until about August 24,1914, when possession was surrendered to the appellant, who thereafter operated it until some time in the month of December following, when the appellant notified the respondent to remove his furniture from the building. And here is where the controversy arose, both parties claimed title
Before discussing the merits of the question, it will be necessary to consider the respondent’s motion to dismiss the appeal. This motion is predicated upon the contention that the amount in controversy is less than $200, and that, therefore, this court is without jurisdiction. The value of the property which the plaintiff in his complaint sought to recover was alleged to be $540.10. It is true he only obtained a judgment for $95.60. The amount in controversy as limiting the right to appeal is determined by the averments of the pleadings. Ingham v. Harper & Son, 71 Wash. 286, 128 Pac. 675, Ann. Cas. 1914 C. 528.
In addition to this, the respondent, in making the motion to dismiss, apparently overlooked the fact that the question in controversy here is whether the articles for which he obtained judgment are personal or real property. The motion to dismiss the appeal will be denied.
Upon the merits, the briefs devote some space and cite authorities touching the rule regarding what is known as trade fixtures, when the question arises between landlord and tenant. But whatever the correct statement of the rule may be and its application in a proper case, it here has no bearing. After the articles here in question had been installed by either Allen or McNair & McCallum, the possession of the premises was transferred to Lucas, and Lucas surrendered possession to the appellant, the owner of the property. If a tenant desires to exercise his right to remove trade fixtures, he must do so prior to surrendering possession. A mortgagee from a tenant has no greater right to remove trade fixtures from the premises after the tenant has surrendered possession to the landlord than the tenant himself would have. Whatever right or title the mortgagee from the tenant may have cannot rise higher than its source, and is measured by what the rights of the tenant would be at the time the mortgagee asserts his claim. Bush v. Havird, 12 Idaho 352, 86 Pac. 529;
If the respondent owns, and therefore has a right to the possession of the medicine cabinets, towel hangers, and window shades, it is because he acquired them by reason of the language in the bill of sale from the appellant. The bill of sale recites:
“It being understood that the party of the first part (The Hardman Estate, a corporation) does not in anywise warrant the sale hereby made, and it being further understood that this bill of sale shall not affect the title to the cafe and kitchen equipment contained in the. said hotel Wilhard building or any fixtures attached to said building, whether installed by the party of the first part or otherwise, which said cafe and kitchen equipment and fixtures attached to said building shall remain the property of said party of the first part.”
The receipt for the money paid, which was given a few days before the bill of sale, recited:
“It is understood that The Hardman Estate shall retain the title to all of the cafe and kitchen furniture and equipment, as well as to the electric signs and any other fixtures attached to the building.”
The evidence shows that the window shades were attached to the building in the ordinary manner; that all towel hangers were actually attached to the building by screws; and that the medicine cabinets were not on hangers or hanging by ropes, but were attached by boring a hole in the wall and putting in a block to which the cabinet was fastened by means of screws, or else by fastening the cabinet to the studding by screws. All these articles were fixtures attached to the building. Under the reservation contained in the biE of sale, title thereto remained in the appellant. If the language of the bill of sale, “fixtures attached to said building,” may be said to be of doubtful meaning, then the evidence of the conversation taking place at the time the receipt was given in which the same language appears, shows plainly that it was the
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded with direction to the superior court to enter a. judgment dismissing the action.
Morris, C. J., Parker, Bausman, and Holcomb, JJ., concur.