Court Opinion

ID: 5447352
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:13:07.247603+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:14.437273
License: Public Domain

Belcher, C.
The plaintiff commenced this action to obtain an injunction restraining the defendants from removing a building from a lot of land owned by him.
The ease was tried, and the findings and judgment were in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.
It appears that in 1881 one Bartlett was the owner of beach and water lot Ho. 586, in the city of San Francisco, and leased the same to the defendants from month to month for a lumber-yard. The defendants erected on the lot the building in question to be used by them as an office in conducting their business. The building was a one-story wooden structure twenty feet square, and for its foundation they placed mudsills on the sur*18face of the ground, and on these mudsills were short posts on which the main sills rested.
The defendants occupied_the lot as tenants of Bartlett, and paid him monthly rent therefor until about September 1,1885, when he sold and conveyed the same to one Jennings. Jennings recognized and renewed the said lease, and the defendants thereafter held and occupied the lot as his tenants from month to month; and it was understood and agreed by him that the said building was the property of defendants, and might be removed by them from the lot at any time.
In December, 1891, Jennings conveyed to the plaintiff, by an ordinary bargain and sale deed, the said lot, “ together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, and the reversion and reversions, remainder and remainders, rents, issues, and profits thereof.”
When the plaintiff "bought the property he had no knowledge or notice of the agreement between Jennings and defendants that they might remove the building from the lot at any time, other than such as would be given by their occupancy as tenants.
No new lease or agreement as to lease was made between plaintiff and defendants, but they continued to hold the property from month to month, and to pay to the plaintiff the same rent as before, until December, 1892, when they attempted to remove the building, and this action was commenced.
The contention of appellant is: 1. That the building was affixed to the land, and was a part of the realty, and that he was an innocent purchaser of the land and building, and hence was not bound by the oral agreement of Jennings that defendants could remove the building; 2. That defendants took a new lease from plaintiff, without any new arrangement as to removal, and that they had no right to remove after they ceased to be tenants of Jennings.
The questions arising under appellant’s first conten*19tion are very elaborately discussed by counsel, but we do not deem it necessary to consider them. In our opinion the building, if a fixture, was a trade fixture, which, under section 1019 of the Civil Code, defendants had a right to remove at any time during the continuance of their term. (Security etc. Co. v. Willamette etc. Co., 99 Cal. 636.)
The only questions then are: Did the term of defendants’ lease end when plaintiff purchased the property? And did the occupancy of the premises after the purchase, without objection, and the payment to and acceptance by the plaintiff of the monthly rent, constitute a new lease, or only a continuance of the old one?
It is clear that the mere transfer of the title did not in any way change, modify, or affect the lease. The grantee simply took the place of his grantor, and became the landlord of defendants. The lease continued as before, subject only to change in the mode prescribed by statute.
. Section 789 of the Civil Code provides: “A tenancy or other estate at will, however created, may be terminated by the landlord’s giving notice in writing to the tenant, in the manner prescribed by section 1162 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to remove from the premises within a period of not less than one month, to be specified in the notice.”
And section 827 of the same code provides: “In all leases of lands or tenements, or of any interest therein, from month to month, the landlord may, upon giving notice in writing, at least fifteen days before the expiration of the month, change the terms of the lease, to take effect at the expiration of the month.”
Here no notice was given by plaintiff, and no attempt was made by him to terminate the lease or change its terms in any way. On the contrary, he accepted the customary rent, and allowed the occupancy to continue for a full year. This, it seems to us, shows the recognition and continuance by plaintiff of the old lease, and not the talking of a new one by defendants.
*20It follows, in our opinion, that when defendants commenced to remove the building, it was during the continuance of their term of lease, and they had a right to make the removal.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Searls, C., and Temple, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
McFarland, J., Db Haven, J., Fitzgerald, J.