Weeks-Betts Hardware Co. v. Roosevelt Lead & Zinc Co.

153 Mo. App. 387 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911

GRAY, J.

This action was instituted in the circuit court of Jasper county, October 30, 1909, by the plaintiff, to recover the value of certain mining machinery. At the time the suit was instituted the appellant herein, the Roosevelt Lead & Zinc Company, a corporation, was not made a party defendant. An amended petition was filed in which the following allegation relating to the appellant is found: “Plaintiff states that the Roosevelt Lead & Zinc Company is now in possession of said property and holding same and is claiming to hold some interest in said property and objecting to the plaintiff taking possession of same, and this amended petition is filed for the purpose of bringing said Roosevelt Lead & Zinc Company into court as a defendant that it may set up its claim if any it has.” The appel*390lant appeared in obedience to summons and filed its answer consisting of a general denial. The cause was tried without a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and the appellant appealed.

The plaintiff’s petition alleged that it was the owner and entitled to the possession of one sludge table, about 3600 feet of 2-inch gas pipe; one dummy tailing elevator, including belts, cups and appliances, located on the McKinley lease on the Connor land near Prosperity, Missouri; that the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of said property by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed to it by the defendant, John W. McClellan & Company, on the 20th day of November, 1908, and duly recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Jasper county, Missouri, and which mortgage was executed for the purpose of securing the payment to plaintiff of two promissory notes amounting to $509.19; that the notes were past due and unpaid, and plaintiff had demanded possession of the property from the defendants, and possession had been refused; and further praying for damages for the unlawful detention and conversion of the property.

The testimony tended to prove that the appellant was the owner of a mining plant and mining lease on a tract of land in Jasper county, known as the Connor land; that the defendant, McClellan & Company had a contract or -lease with the appellant for one year, with an option to purchase the mill or lease within the one year; that previous to the time of the execution of that contract, other parties had been in possession of the mill, and operating it under similar contracts. There was no sludge table or dummy elevator at the plant when the contract between the appellant and McClellan was entered into. At one time a sludge table had been used in connection with the plant, but the same had been moved away, and nothing but the foundation remained.

*391The relation that the sludge table bore to the mining plant was shown by the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness, Mr. Weeks, as follows:

“Q. Mr. Weeks, tell the court whether or not the removal and taking away of a sludge table from the mill when it was there in a position this was in, would interfere with the operation of the main mill? A. No, sir, it is not a part. Those additions are of very recent date, the mill run for many years without any sludge apparatus.
“Q. Now, in taking it away, would there still be a complete concentrating plant? A. Certainly.
“Q. The attachment to the mill was merely the connecting of the power to run such table? A. Yes.
“Q. That is all the attachment there was to the mill? A. Yes, throw the belt off and cut out that part.
“Q. And the cable to this dummy elevator was merely a different way of communicating power, one by belt and one by cable? A. Connected by a cable to a different place.
“Q. It was not tied to the cable or a cable belt? A. Yes, a transmission cable.
“Q. The dummy elevator might be taken away without interfering with the operation of the mill? A. It run many years without one.
“Q. How is this sludge table fastened so far as to ground or foundation ? A. It has a separate foundation of its own.
“Q. These sludge tables, just tell the court what is necessary in the moving — taking them up and moving? A. Very easy to move. Of course, they are not a very large concern, put them on the wagons, just simply a table, about the same pattern, while they are a great many different makes, they are practically the same.”
And on cross-examination:
“Q. Mr. Weeks, the sludge table is set on a cement foundation, is it not? A. I think it is in that case.
*392“Q. The cement foundation is set in the ground? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And the sludge table is the table that is used to further clean the ore that is milled in the concentrating plant? A. No, not further clean the ore of this mill, it is to extract the sludge.
“Q. Let me get at it this way: As a result of operating on the mill proper, as originally constructed, there is simply the jig tanks, crushers and so on, and leaves what is called sludge? A. Yes. .
“Q. And in that sludge there is more or less ore? A. Yes.
“Q. This sludge table is used to extract that? A. Yes, sir.”

Thus it will be seen that the sludge table and dummy elevator were simply additions to the mill and added to it by McClellan & Company after that company had contracted with the appellant.

It is further shown that in taking away the dummy elevator and sludge table, no injury would be done to the real estate and they were simply “trade fixtures.” [Powell v. Plank, 141 Mo. App. 406, 125 S. W. 836.]

There is no dispute about the facts and the rights of the parties must be determined' by. the construction of the paragraph in the contract between McClellan & Company and the appellant, and reading as follows: “The second party further agreed to keep the mining plant hereby leased in good repair and to make all improvements, repairs and replacements necessary to keep the same in good running order and repair, and to pay for such at their own expense, but such improvements, repairs and replacements, when made, shall become a part of the mill and the property of the first party and shall be delivered to the first party at the expiration of this lease whether by lapse of time or forfeiture.”

It is the contention of the appellant that under this clause of the contract, it became the owner of all improvements and additions made upon the mill and *393property by McClellan & Company while in possession of the property under the contract. It is the contention of the respondent that the clause of the contract does not include the machinery in. controversy.

This contract must be construed with reference to the fact that plaintiff’s evidence tends to prove that the appellant was not the owner of the land, but only had a mining lease thereon, and if its mining plant and machinery were erected for the purpose of mining, cleaning and preparing ore for market, .then it had the right to remove the same at the end of its term, and the same were personal property. [Investment Co. v. Cunningham, 113 Mo. App. 519, 87 S. W. 605.]

We are then confronted with the proposition that the property in question was personal property and the parties were dealing with it as such. The common law rule relating to fixtures and improvements put upon property by a tenant, has been relaxed and what would be a fixture as between vendor and vendee or mortgagor and mortgagee, would not be between landlord and tenant. The property in controversy when it was purchased, was undoubtedly the property of McClellan & Company, and if it ever became the property of the appellant, it was because it was transferred to the appellant by McClellan & Company by the terms of the contract just quoted.

Contracts must be construed with reference to the surrounding circumstances and the condition of the parties. The law is liberal toward tenants who make improvements for their own particular and temporary use, which can be removed without working substantial injury to the rented premises. [Bircher v. Parker, 40 Mo. 118; State v. Newkirk, 49 Mo. 84.]

It will be noticed the contract placed upon McClellan & Company the obligation to keep the mining plant in good repair and to make all improvements, repairs and replacements necessary to keep the same in good running order and repair. And such improvements, *394when made, became a part of the mill and the property of the first party. The contract does not provide that all improvements placed upon the property shall become the property of the appellant, bnt only such improvements and repairs as were necessary to keep, the plant in good repair.

It seems to us that the primary purpose of this clause was to require McClellan & Company to keep the property in repair and to make improvements necessary therefor. And. it does not provide that all improvements placed upon the plant shall become the property of the appellant, but only such improvements as become necessary to keep the property in running order and repair. If it was the intention that the appellant should have all the improvements placed upon the property, why did not the contract so state, instead of limiting the right of appellant to such improvements as were necessary to keep the mill in repair. The testimony shows that the sludge table and dummy elevator were no part of the mill when the contract was entered into. The mill was complete and in running' order without them, and McClellan, was not required to purchase them and install them in order to comply with his contract.

Covenants restricting the tenant’s ordinary right to remove trade fixtures are always strictly construed. [Fox v. Lynch, 64 Atl. 439; Montello Brick Co. v. Trexler, 167 Fed. 482; Wright v. LaMay, 118 N. W. 964; Hey v. Bruner, 61 Pa. 87; Bernheimer v. Adams, 67 N. E. 1080, 175 N. Y. 472.]

In Montello Brick Co. v. Trexler, supra, the landlord had leased premised upon which were three complete brick plants at the time the lease was entered into. The lease contained the following clause: “At the expiration of the term hereby created, the lessee shall return and surrender to the lessor the demised premises in good order and condition, and with all improvements, additions and extensions without any compensa*395tion to be paid for said improvements, additions and extensions.” The lessee erected upon the leased premises an additional plant, and afterwards was ‘ adjudged a bankrupt. The lessor claimed, the new plant under the terms of the lease, but the court held that the clause in the lease restricting the right of the tenant to remove his “trade fixtures,” must be strictly construed, and it did not apply to the new plant erected by the lessee upon the premises.

In Hey v. Bruner, supra, the lessees covenanted: “And at the expiration of the said term shall and will quietly and peaceably yield up and surrender the possession of the said premises demised, together with all and every the improvements and additions which they the said lessees, shall construct and make thereon unto the lessor, in good order and condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted. Lessees shall forthwith take possession, and shall with all convenient.dispatch make alterations, additions and improvements of a permanent character to consist of items agreeably to a specification and plan to be approved by the lessor, and to introduce machinery necessary to the purpose of their business, hosiery manufacturing, permanent additions and improvements to remain, on the property at the expiration of this lease and to belong to the owners of the fee to said premises.” It was held that although the lessor by this lease, intended that the machinery installed should belong to him at the expiration of this lease, yet he did not expressly provide, and therefore, there was no doubt under the lease that lessee had a right to remove the fixtures, consisting of engine, boiler, shafting, hosiery machinery, etc., as trade fixtures.

In Fox v. Lynch, supra, the defendant leased the premises for saloon purposes and agreed with the lessor to keep the same in repair, and at the end of the term to surrender the premises in as good condition as the same were when received, ordinary wear and tear ex*396cepted. During the term of the lease, the lessee removed all the old fixtures and installed others in their stead. In a contest between him and the landlord, the court held that he had a right to remove all the new fixtures substituted for the old ones on the premises at the time he entered into his lease.

When we construe this contract as the law says we shall, strictly in favor of the rights of the tenant, then we must, hold that the sludge table and dummy elevator were not improvements and repairs placed on the property by the tenant in order to keep the same in proper repair and running order, and that only such improvements and repairs became the property of the appellant as were necessary for that purpose.

The appellant also claims that the property was not removed from the premises at the expiration of the rights of McClellan & Company, and therefore, the right to take the same was forfeited. The appellant claimed to be the owner of the fixtures under the contract, and based its right, when respondent asked for the property, upon such grounds. By so doing, it is in no position to now urge that respondent forfeited its right to the property by not removing the same within a reasonable time. [Bernheimer v. Adams, 67 N. E. 1080, 175 N. Y. 472.]

It necessarily follows that the judgment is for the right party and should be affirmed.

All concur.
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