17 F. Cas. 845 | D. Mass. | 1869
I do not find that this lease purports to give the petitioner a lien on the furniture, but on the fixtures only. No doubt the word “fixtures" may be often used in a broad sense to include all fittings, whether affixed to the realty or not, but I do not consider such a meaning attaches to it in this case. The parties are stipulating concerning the demised premises, and they agree that the lessee shall put in the trade fixtures, and may remove them at the end of the term, if he can do so without injury to the freehold, and if all his covenants have been kept, but not during the term. It is easy to see that the lease was not written by a lawyer, but this clause is very well calculated to express the contract that the tenant’s right to remove the fixtures should depend on his compliance with the covenant to pay rent. Taken in its ordinary sense, and in connection with the proviso that in case of breach, the petitioner might enter and expel the lessee and jemove his “effects,” it must refer merely to fixtures strictly so called. If the parties intended to give the landlord a lien on those articles which were merely fitted to the room but not affixed, they ought to have made this intent clear, and to have regulated the matter more carefully. But it is very doubtful whether such a covenant would have created a lien that could have been enforced against the assignee. Distress for rent has no place in the law of Massachusetts, and an agreement that chattels on the premises shall be at the disposal of the lessor as security for rent is not valid against creditors of the lessee before entry. Butterfield v. Baker, 5 Pick. 522. The bankrupt law [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)] preserves all liens, but it does not undertake to enforce a mere covenant of this kind which by the law of the place creates no valid lien.
So far as the fixtures are concerned, I see no objection to the lien. The act of affixing them to the freehold takes them out of the category of chattels, and is notice to creditors and to all the world, that the right of removal will depend on the contract between landlord and tenant. The right of the tenant to remove trade fixtures may well enough be called rather a privilege than a property, and it is one that he may lawfully waive or modify by the terms of the lease, without the form of either a pledge or a mortgage.
Applying these rules to the evidence, it is found that the sets of drawers, which were carefully fitted to the shop, but in no way fastened to it, are furniture, and belong to the assignee; the other things, which are trade fixtures, he can take only on payment of the arrears of rent. So ordered.