Roberts v. Mills
Roberts v. Mills
Opinion of the Court
The action was for damages for the removal of a certain building from the lands of plaintiff situ *558 ated in the town of Coalinga, in the county of Fresno, and defendant had judgment for his costs, from which judgment the appeal has been taken.
Of the undisputed facts we may recite the following: On May 31, 1905, plaintiff and one M. S. Gibson were the equal owners of lots 17 and 18, block 29, of said town, said Gibson being in the sole possession and control of said lots, occupying a part of the same with a building, in which he was conducting a saloon, the rear end of the lots being vacant, the plaintiff residing elsewhere. On said date said Gibson made and executed a lease for the rear twenty-five feet of said lots to one I. Salhinger, for a term of five years, at a monthly rental of fifteen dollars, payable on the first day of each month. This lease was signed by Gibson in person and as an attorney in fact for M. L. Williams, who is now Maggie L. Roberts, the plaintiff herein. Said lease was properly acknowledged and thereafter recorded in the county recorder’s office. The building in question was subsequently constructed on said rear portion of said lots. There was no removal clause in said lease. On the seventeenth day of October, 1905, said Salhinger by a written instrument duly executed and acknowledged, granted, sold, and conveyed to Richard Mills, the defendant herein, “and to his executors, administrators and assigns, that certain one-story frame building located on the fraction of the rear end of lots numbers 17 and 18, block number 29, town site of Coalinga. . . . Together with all the right, title and interest of the party df the first part in and to a certain five-year lease of said above-described fractional lots executed by M. S. Gibson and M. L. Williams on the 31st day of May, 1905.” And the said Mills thereafter entered into the possession and use of said building.
As to the character of this structure, the court found that within the terms of said written lease “the said Salhinger erected and constructed a frame building upon said lots, placing the said building on said lots on mud sills on the surface of said ground and the same was built and constructed as a trade fixture to be removed upon the termination of said lease or any continuation thereof. That thereafter and during the term of said lease the said Salhinger sold, assigned and conveyed all his right, title and interest in and to said lease and sold and assigned and conveyed *559 the building situate on said leased premises to the defendant herein, Richard Mills, and the said Richard Mills continued in the possession thereof and as tenant of the said M. S. Gibson and the plaintiff herein until the removal of the building from the said premises.
“That during the running of the said lease made and executed by M. S. Gibson and the plaintiff to Salhinger, and subsequent to the purchase of the said lease and the said building by the said defendant, Richard Mills, the said M. S. Gibson, for and on behalf of himself personally and for and on behalf of the said Maggie L. Williams, entered into a verbal agreement with the said defendant, Richard Mills, wherein the said Richard Mills agreed to pay to the said M. S. Gibson personally and as agent, the one-half of all of the net proceeds received as rent for the use and occupation of said building, and the said M. S. Gibson personally and as agent for the said plaintiff agreed to accept said net rent in full payment of the rent for the ground on which the said building or any additional building erected by the said defendant, Richard Mills, stood. That it was also agreed between the said M. S. Gibson personally and as agent for Maggie L. Williams and the said Richard Mills, defendant herein, that the said Richard Mills should have the right to remove said building at any time he desired to do so and that the said M. S. Gibson personally and as agent should have the right to order the said building removed on reasonable notice at any time that he should desire to erect another building on said ground or to use for any other purpose the said portion of said lots 17 and 18 in said block 29 occupied by said building or buildings. That the said verbal agreement became an executed oral agreement of monthly tenancy for the said portion of said lots 17 and 18 occupied by the said buildings and was continued as a monthly tenancy from month to month until the removal of the buildings thereon by the said defendant, Richard Mills, and the said plaintiff accepted and received her portion of the said rent in full settlement for the use and occupation of the said portion of lots 17 and 18 of the buildings by the said defendant and the same became a settled and executed agreement of monthly tenancy by and on behalf of said plaintiff, with the right on the part of the defendant to remove the buildings at any time.”
*560
One point relates to the question whether the building became a “trade fixture” as found by the court, or became a part of the realty as provided in section 660 of the Civil Code. However, as to this, we think there can be no doubt that the evidence supports the finding. That this building was to be erected for purposes of trade appears in the written lease, and the evidence shows that it was so used by the tenants.
The manner in which the building was erected would also indicate that it was not intended to become a part of the realty, but that it was understood that it might be moved off by the tenant. Defendant testified that the “wooden uprights were resting on little boards and around the bottom of the boards on the sides and ends of the building was a four by four scantling. ... It was on top of the soil when it was built, but the soil was piled up on the outside afterward.” J. M. McIntyre testified that it was “just a board and batten building; twelve-inch boards for the sides; no studding or anything; made of twelve-inch boards and four-inch batten on the outside; and it was built—well, like most of the houses over there at that time; with a board laid down; or a two-inch plank and then posts up and four by four on that and then the boards nailed to that.” It may be added that the agreement made by Mr. Gibson and the defendant as to the removal of the building furnishes a contemporaneous construction of the undertaking as to the *561 character of the building. It is true that there is no direct evidence of any such agreement with Mr. Salhinger, the original lessee, but it is worthy of note that the latter only a short time after he put up the building sold it to defendant. It is not to be supposed that he would undertake to transfer property which he had no reason to believe that he owned. Indeed, the most rational explanation of his conduct is based upon the theory that the original understanding was that the building might be removed as a “trade fixture.”
It is to be observed that the finding of the trial court brings the case within said section 1019 rather than section 1013 of the Civil Code. To make the latter applicable it would be necessary to show an agreement to that effect between the original parties to warrant the removal, whereas a “trade fixture” under the conditions specified in said section 1019 may be removed without such agreement.
After a careful reading of the entire record we are satisfied that the conclusion of the lower court is just and should be upheld.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Finch, P. J., and Hart, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MAGGIE L. ROBERTS, Appellant, v. RICHARD MILLS, Respondent
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published