39 Neb. 220 | Neb. | 1894
This action was brought in the court below by appellee M. E. Free to foreclose a chattel mortgage given by the defendants Stuart & Schmensky on two greenhouses erected by them on leased real estate owned by appellants George W. Sautter and Frank Sautter. The cause was
“1. In the spring of 1888 the said George W. and Frank Sautter were the owners in fee of a certain dwelling house, with outbuildings and about ten acres of land surrounding, in the outskirts of the city of Omaha, and within the limits of said city. That at said time said Sautter brothers rented the house and outbuildings only from April 1, 1888, to March 1,1889, to the defendant C. Schmensky for $100. The rent for this term was paid.
“2. At the end of this term said George ~W. and Frank Sautter rented the house, barn, orchard, vineyard, and all the land for one year for $200, the lease expiring March 1, 1890, and of this rent the tenant Schmensky paid $93, leaving a balance still unpaid of $107.
“3. At the end of this term, on March 3, 1890, said George W. and Frank Sautter rented the same premises for another year to said Schmensky for $225, the lease expiring March 1, 1891. Of this rent there was paid $13.40.
“4. At the end of the last term the tenant, Schmensky, held over until May 12, 1891, at which time the tenant quit the possession and occupation of the premises, leaving a total of rent unpaid amounting to the sum of $341.60, no part of which has yet been paid.
“5. That in the spring of 1890, said Schmensky requested permission of said George W. and Frank Sautter, owners of said premises, to erect thereon two buildings and a boiler house, and that the same were erected during the spring and early summer of 1890. They were erected by building the same out of planks and posts, with the use of glass and sash, as is usually the case in greenhouses, the said boards or planks being fastened to a number of upright posts that were inserted and fastened into the ground for a distance of about two feet below the surface. The framework was built around said posts.
*224 “6. That there was also constructed in said greenhouses a boiler for the purpose of heating the same, by building a brick foundation down into the ground, and building said brick up over and around said boiler, leaving it stationary, and pipes were attached to and ran from said boiler through the various portions of the house so constructed, and fastened to the said greenhouse in ’ order thereby to conduct the heated water and for the purpose of keeping the temperature in a condition required for greenhouses. The two buildings used as greenhouses were each sevenly-five feet long and ten feet w'ide, and were covered with glass and sash. They were constructed by nailing strips running from post to post, and onto those strips the planks for the sides and ends were nailed securely, and said houses and boiler are still remaining on said premises as when originally constructed.
“7. On January 14, 1891, said Schmensky and one Stuart, who were partners as Stuart & Schmensky, executed to plaintiff a chattel mortgage, a true copy of which is attached and made a part of plaintiff’s petition herein, and the same was filed in the office of the county clerk of Douglas county, Nebraska, on said 14th day of January, 1891, at the hour of 3:45 P. M., and duly indexed in said office as required by law in case of chattel mortgages, said chattel mortgage being to secure the amount of money stated therein, and the amount now due thereon and unpaid by said mortgagors to the plaintiff is $182.40.
“8. Said property was leased for the purpose of using the residence as a dwelling house, and the land for the purpose of gardening, raising flowers and shrubs, it having been used for this purpose for several years last past. At the time said houses were constructed there was nothing said by the tenant about removing said greenhouses, boiler, and boiler house at the expiration of the lease, or at any other time.
“9. The plaintiff claims a lien on said houses and boiler.*225 by virtue of the foregoing chattel mortgage, and the defendants George W. and'Frank Sautter claim them as fixtures to, and a part of, said land.”
The trial court found that Stuart & Schmensky executed and delivered to plaintiff the chattel mortgage, described in the petition, to secure an indebtedness of $163.84; that the buildings described in said mortgage were erected by the mortgagors upon leased premises and were such fixtures as the tenants had a right to remove; and that said houses are subject to the said chattel mortgage. From a decree of foreclosure and sale, the Sautters appeal to this court.
The point in dispute is, which party is entitled to the buildings covered by the mortgage? The mortgages claims them by virtue of his mortgage, while the appellants insist that, as the improvements were erected by tenants on leased premises, they are a part of the realty, and neither the tenants nor the mortgagee had a right to remove them, at least, after the expiration of the tenancy.
The larger portion of the brief of counsel on either side is devoted to the discussion of the law of fixtures, and what are, and what are not, movable fixtures. The decisions on the subject are at variance and irreconcilable. We have not the time at our disposal now to review the authorities cited in the briefs, or to discuss the question; nor is it essential that we should do so. For the purposes of this case we will assume that the buildings in controversy were trade fixtures, and were erected under such circumstances as to entitle the tenants to remove them, had they exercised that right in time. The authorities are quite uniform to the effect that, in the absence of an agreement or understanding to the contrary, a tenant cannot re-enter and remove his fixtures and improvements after the expiration of his tenancy. By surrendering possession he forfeits his rights to them. The rule on the subject is well stated by Mr. Taylor in his valuable work on Landlord and Tenant thus: “ The decisions also agree, that whatever fixtures the ten
It appears from the stipulation that the lease, under which the tenants occupied the premises, expired on March 1, 1891, and that on the 12th day of May following they quit possession without removing the buildings which they had erected by permission of the owner of the realty. The record fails to disclose that there was any agreement or understanding between the parties about the removal of the improvements at the expiration of the lease, or any other time. In view of these facts there could be no doubt that the tenants have forfeited their right of removal.
It is finally contended that since the tenancy had not expired when the mortgage was given, and inasmuch as the
Our conclusion is that the trial court erred in decreeing the foreclosure of the mortgage.- The decree is, therefore, reversed and the action .
Dismissed.