Court Opinion

ID: 8825598
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 15:46:35.283918+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:46.099916
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Thompson delivered the opinion of the court. There is no assignment of error in the record under which either of the last two errors relied upon can be raised, neither of those questions were raised by any objection before the master to his findings, nor is there any exception before the trial court concerning such findings by the master. The evidence does show that the elevator is worth not to exceed $4,000 and that the lot with the residence thereon is worth from $600 to $800 and is the homestead of Leoni Ford, the wife of appellee, Arthur Ford. The original bill alleges the insolvency of Ford, that the lot described in said mortgage as Lot 1, in Block 4, is worth not to exceed $1,000 and is subject to the estate of homestead therein owned by Leoni Ford, wife of Arthur Ford, and that the elevator is worth not to exceed $4,500, and said mortgaged premises are wholly insufficient to pay the amount due on the note and mortgage. The amended supplemental bill does not repeat any of these allegations and makes no reference to them, further than that it alleges that Rexroat is willing to take said mortgaged premises, leasehold interest and property subject to the estate of homestead therein in full satisfaction of the amount due. If either of these two questions, now presented for review, which are only technical questions, had been raised in the trial court in any way, a simple amendment would have obviated the questions now raised for the first time. Objections that do not raise jurisdictional questions cannot be raised for the first time in this court, where their nature is such.that if they had been specifically made in the trial court they could have been remedied. It has also been held that the original bill is still a part of complainant’s bill, although the amended bill does not include all of its provisions. Lewis v. Lanphere, 79 Ill. 187; A. J. Lindemarnn & Hoverson Co. v. Advance Stove Works, 170 Ill. App. 423; 1 Encyc. of Pl. & Pr. 505. The remaining question, and the only meritorious one presented, is, whether the elevator property is a chattel real or is personal property. The answer to that question depends on the nature of the lease to that part of the right of way upon which the elevator was located. The lease was made January 1, 1911, between the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company and Arthur Fordi It describes by metes and bounds the part of the right of way leased, and the period of time for-which the lease was made as follows: “To have and to hold the same from January 1, 1911, until such time as this contract shall have been terminated as hereinafter provided.” The rental is $5 per year payable in advance, and the premises leased are to be used for the location of a g'rain elevator. “It is further agreed that either party may terminate this lease any time upon giving the other thirty days’ notice of such termination; provided, however, that rent shall be paid by said lessee to the date of termination fixed by said notice; and if rent has been paid in advance the proportionate amount for the unexpired term shall be returned to the lessee.” Appellant admits that if the elevator is a chattel real, then the lien of the mortgage is superior to that of his judgment, but contends that the elevator was personal property because there was no fixed term in years and that the lessee had under the terms of the lease only a tenancy at will. A strict tenancy at will “has only the rights of an ancient tenancy at will, being in fact little more than a license to be upon the land, determinable by entry or demand, and does not render the occupant liable in use and occupation for rent or entitle him to notice to quit.” A general tenancy at will “confers the rights which tenancies at will subsequently acquired such as a reasonable notice to quit and subjects the occupant to all the liabilities of tenants, proper such as for use and occupation.” Taylor’s L. & T., sec. 60; 38 Cyc. 124. At common law a tenant at will was not entitled to notice to quit before he could he ejected although a demand for possession was required. Under the lease by which Ford occupied the part of the right of way leased to him, the lease could only he terminated by either party giving the other thirty days’ notice of such termination. There was a fixed tenancy for thirty days and it could only be terminated at the end of that notice. The case of Knapp v. Jones, 143 Ill. 375, is very similar to the present case. It involved a lease of a part of a right of way, originally for a year, from a railroad company to a party to erect and operate an elevator thereon. The lease expired and was renewed for two years with'the right to terminate it upon sixty days’ notice. In a controversy between a mortgagee and judgment creditors, the elevator was held to be a chattel real. A similar ruling was made in Cross v. Weare Commission Co., 153 Ill. 499. If the lessee has under the terms of the lease the right to possession of the premises for any fixed time* even although the lessor has the right to terminate it by notice, yet if it can only be terminated by giving notice a certain fixed time before its termination, the lease is not a tenancy at will. The Knapp ease, supra, is conclusive of this case, that the mortgage was on a chattel real and the trial court properly decreed that appellee’s mortgage was a valid first lien and the lien of the attachment was subject thereto. The appellant does not contend that the elevator property was worth more than $4,000. The argument is that if appellee takes the residence property at its value then there would be something left in the elevator property to apply on his judgment. The mortgage was not a lien on the residence because its value was less than $1,000 and it was a homestead. The mortgage created a lien only on the elevator property. “While it is a general rule that, where there are other creditors, strict foreclosures are not favored in equity, yet the rule is not an arbitrary one. A strict foreclosure may be allowed where there are other creditors and the property is of less value than the debt, the mortgagor is insolvent and the mortgagee is willing to take the property in discharge of his debt. ” Barnes v. Ward, 190 Ill. App. 392, and cases cited. When there is no possibility of any benefit accruing to the judgment creditor from an ordinary foreclosure, there is no reason why a holder of a first lien should be penalized by being made to pay unnecessary and useless costs, when the property is vacant and unoccupied, and there is no possibility of his being reimbursed. There was no error in granting a strict foreclosure. The decree is affirmed. Affirmed.