258 P. 417 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for damages alleged to have been caused to him by reason of the removal by defendant of a refrigerator from certain premises which defendant leased from plaintiff.
It appears that the building in which the refrigerator was installed had no studding in its construction, but that the walls thereof were built by placing wooden boards in an upright position and thereafter covering the cracks between such boards with battens. When the refrigerator was installed a section of the side wall of the building was removed and the refrigerator was taken into the building through the opening thus made. There was no floor in the floor space of the building occupied by the refrigerator, so that the refrigerator rested directly on the floor joists. The refrigerator was taller than the height of the walls of the building, and it became necessary to remove a part of the roof of the building in order to install the refrigerator, after which that part of the roof which had been cut away was rebuilt so as to form a proper but detached covering for the refrigerator, as well as for the building in which the refrigerator was located. No part of the refrigerator was physically attached by nails, bolts, screws, or otherwise to any part of the building excepting that on each of the sides of the refrigerator, at a point where it passed through the ceiling of the building, a strip of quarter-round molding was tacked to the ceiling and to the refrigerator, "making *667 a neat-looking job inside the building." It further appears that defendant was engaged in conducting a grocery business in the storeroom in which the refrigerator was placed, and that it was used by defendant in connection with the operation of his business as a grocer.
[1] The principal questions in the case are whether the refrigerator was a fixture, and whether the tenant had the right to remove the refrigerator. Section
In the case of Marker v. Williams,
In the instant case it is apparent that in no just sense could the flimsy attachment of the refrigerator to the ceiling of the storeroom by means of the quarter-round molding be considered as "permanent" within the meaning of the language contained in section
It is suggested that the provisions of section
In other words, if the refrigerator had not been so affixed to the premises as to become an "integral part" thereof, it might have been legally removed, provided that in effecting such removal no injury was done to the premises.
From what heretofore has been stated herein, it has been attempted to show that in the opinion of this court the attachment of the refrigerator to the ceiling of the storeroom by means of the quarter-round molding did not have the effect of making the refrigerator an "integral part of the premises" nor any part thereof. Primarily, the refrigerator was defendant's property and he had a right to its possession. [2] But in its removal from premises belonging to plaintiff, defendant was bound, at his peril, to do no injury to property belonging to plaintiff. The evidence shows that a portion of the roof and one wall of the building was torn out by defendant in effecting the removal of the refrigerator, and consequently that considerable "injury *669 to the premises" was thus effected. It is therefore proper that defendant respond in damages. With reference thereto, the findings by the trial court are: "That by reason of the removal of said roof and wall of said building, . . . plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $309.50, . . ."
The trial court included in its judgment damages in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $500 as the value of the refrigerator which defendant removed from the premises. In view of the fact that defendant was the legal owner of the refrigerator, we think error was committed in allowing plaintiff damages for its value.
It is ordered that finding II and the findings concerning damages by reason of the removal of said refrigerator, in the loss to plaintiff of the value thereof, be modified in accordance with the views hereinabove stated, and that the judgment be and hereby is so modified that thereby plaintiff shall have and recover of and from defendant the sum of $309.50, with costs; and that as so modified the judgment shall be and it is affirmed.
Conrey, P.J., and York, J., concurred.