23 Utah 586 | Utah | 1901
After stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the court:
This case presents several important questions, and they have been presented in a manner that is very creditable to the counsel representing the respective litigants. The appellant insists that the court erred in holding that the improvements belonged to the respondent company, and claims that, admitting a new verbal lease was entered into at the expiration of the first, with the same conditions except as to time,
Many authorities bold that where a new lease is entered into with the same terms as the former, and the rights of the tenant are not reserved, the right to remove the fixtures under the former is gone, unless exercised during the life of the first. This rule is urged by the appellant. Loughran v. Ross, 45 N. Y. 792, 6 Am. Rep. 173. As we have seen, the facts found and proved do not bring this case within the above rule. The findings are that the old lease was extended together with such rights as respondent held under it to remove the improvements.
2. Appellant contends that the respondent company vacated the property on February 28, 1900, knowing that the owner claimed the improvements, and that by failing to remove the fixtures it lost its right under the lease to remove them. The general doctrine in such case is that such fixtures or improvements should be removed before the expiration of the term.of the lease. The application of this rule must depend upon the facts. In the present case the court found, and there is testimony tending to sustain such finding, that prior and subsequent to the vacation of the premises by the respondent company, on February 28, 1900, the two parties entered into negotiations, which were pending at the time of the vacation of the premises, and thereafter up to the time when this suit was commenced and the temporary restraining order was granted against the removal of the improvements; that such negotiations were entered into in good faith by the defendant company for the purpose of reaching an agreement either as to a purchase by the appellant of such improvements, or a rental of the same, and the payment to the defendant company of a proportion of the rent obtained from the same; that on and prior to the day when the premises were vacated, and during
3. It is also' claimed that it was error1, under the circumstances, to grant a specific performance of the contract, even if the respondent company had a right to remove the property. We do not concur in this view. The enforcement of a specific performance of a contract is discretionary with the court, and such performance will be decreed unless it affirmatively appears that great hardship and injustice will be done to one party without considerable benefit to the other, or in cases where the public interests would be prejudiced thereby. Conger v. Railroad Co., 120 N. Y. 29, 23 N. E. 983. But the nature of the relief sought, .and the rights of the respondent-under the contract, do not necessarily imply that a specific performance is asked or was granted. The respondent simply asks to take away certain personal property it placed upon the land, which belonged to it originally, and which appellant agreed it should remove for the consideration named in the contract It was competent for the respondent to seek a recovery of the property in the action brought against it by the appellant to quiet title to the improvements.
4. In its ease on rebuttal, the appellant sought to show the value of the improvements placed upon the property by the respondent on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1898, as old lumber and brick, for the purpose of removal from the ground. Under objection, the evidence was rejected as being irrelevant, incompetent, and immaterial. The respondent constructed these improvements at a cost of about $3,700, with the conceded right to remove them. It offered to sell them to the appellant for $1,000. As we have seen, the appellant procured delay in the removal of the improvements, and finally com