249 Pa. 607 | Pa. | 1915
Opinion by
By a lease dated July 1, 1902, William J. Donohugh let to the Paxson & Comfort Company a seven story building located at Nos. 526-528 Cherry street, in the City of Philadelphia, for the term of ten years. . The lease contained a provision that certain fittings, fire doors, elevators, elevator work, cement work, partitions and enclosures “shall at all times be and remain the property of the lessee and may be removed thereform at the will of the lessee, or at the expiration of this lease, or of any term which may be an extension thereof.” Wilr liam J. Donohugh died in 1906 and the plaintiffs in this action are his executors and trustees. At the expiration oñthe lease it was renewed for the further period of one year from July 1, 1912. Sometime prior to March 31, 1913, the Paxson & Comfort Company went into bankruptcy, and Edward T. Comfort was made trustee in bankruptcy for the company. The trustee notified the representatives of William J. Donohugh of the lessee’s intention to terminate the lease at the expiration of the term ending July 1,1913. A lease was entered into about August 1, 1913, dated July 1, 1913, and for a term of one month'from that date, renewable from month to month, between the agent of the decedent’s estate and Edward T. Comfort for the fourth, fifth and seventh floors of the Cherry street building. The lease of July 1, 1913, was assigned about January 31, 1914, to George C. J. Fleck who is now the tenant of the premises under the lease. The elevator and other fixtures which the Paxson & Comfort Company, the lessee, had the right to remove under the original lease were sold by the com? .pajiy’s trustee in bankruptcy to Fleck. By virtue of a
. This was a bill filed by the plaintiffs to restrain George C. J. Fleck, Edward T. Comfort, and Edward T. Comfort, trustee in bankruptcy of the Paxson & Comfort Company, the defendants, from removing from the demised premises the intermediate floor between the first and second floors, the steam fittings, gas fittings, fire' doors, elevators, elevator work, cement work, partitions, enclosures and all permanent fixtures. The learned court below entered a decree dismissing the bill and the plaintiffs have taken this appeal
■ The defendants claim that the lease dated July 1,1913, between the plaintiffs and Edward T. Comfort, although signed by him, was really made for the Paxson & Comfort Company which, they allege, was the real tenant of the premises, that when the lease was executed it was orally agreed betwéen the parties that it should be treated as an extension of the former lease to the company, which gave the latter the right to remove the fixtures, the subject of this controversy, and that Comfort was acting for the company in assigning to Fleck the lease and the company’s right to the fixtures, and, therefore, Fleck can remove the fixtures. The learned judge of the court below admitted parol testimony to sustain the defendant’s contention, and found that Comfort, who is named as lessee in the lease dated July 1,1913, was acting for and on behalf of the Paxson & Comfort Company, that
The controlling question in the case is whether the learned court below erred in overruling the plaintiffs’ motion to strike out the parol testimony on which the court based its findings that Edward T. Comfort in executing the lease of July 1, 1913, was acting on behalf and for the benefit of the Paxson & Comfort Company and that there was an agreement that Comfort might remove the fixtures in controversy at the eud of the term. This is the subject of the eighteenth assignment of error. Under the original lease it was expressly stipulated, as will be observed, that the lessee had the right to remove the fixtures, and if the provisions of that lease, by extension, were operative there could be no question of the right of the defendants to remove them. If, however, the lease to Comfort was not an extension of the original lease but was a new lease taken by him in his individual capacity, and not as representing the Paxson .& Comfort Company, then Comfort, or his assignee, would have no right to remove the fixtures after the expiration of the term. There is no provision in the lease of July 1, 1913, which changes the common law in this respect; on the contrary it contains a covenant that at the termination of the term the lessee “will deliver up the said premises in as good condition, order and repair as the same now are, reasonable wear and tear, and damage by accidental fire excepted.” The question, therefore, is whether parol evidence was admissible to show that by agreement of the parties Comfort was acting
We think the learned court was in error in refusing to strike out the parol testimony offered by the defendants to show that in executing the lease of 1913 Comfort was acting for the Paxson & Comfort Company, and that it was the intention of the parties to treat the fixtures mentioned in the lease as the property of the Paxson & Comfort Company. There is no allegation that there was any fraud, accident or mistake in the execution of the lease. It is conceded, or must be, that it was the intention of both parties to the lease that it should be taken in the name of Edward T. Comfort, as lessee. The counsel representing the company admitted in his testimony that the plaintiffs objected to renting to the company because it was bankrupt, and wanted Comfort to execute the lease personally because he was financially responsible. There is no ambiguity or any. uncertainty as to the parties to the instrument or as to any of its provisions. It is not pretended that it contains the provision in the original lease which permits the lessee to remove the fixtures. The covenants of the lessee are to be performed by Comfort individually and not by the Paxson & Comfort Company. So far as the lease discloses, the company is not a party to it, has no rights under it, and is not obligated to perform any covenants contained in it. No reference is made to the lease of 1902 nor to any. of its terms or provisions. In other words, the lease of 1913, executed by Comfort as lessee, so far as its written terms disclose, was not intended to be and is not a renewal of the lease of 1902 or any renewals of that lease. It is clear, therefore, that the parol evidence admitted by the learned court and on which it based its findings of fact and conclusions of law was incompetent and the motion to strike it out should have prevailed. It established a parol agreement in direct
The decree of the court below is reversed, and the bill is reinstated with a procedendo.