One Eobert Martin and wife, August 10,1880, leased of the plaintiff a part of a certain lot in the city of Milwaukee, which was unimproved ground, for the term of *108five years from September 1,1880. There was a mortgage clause in said lease, whereby the said Martin and wife mortgaged “ all buildings erected or placed upon said premises,” together with other personal property, to secure the rent. The said lessees erected on said ground a light two-story wooden building, woodshed, and appurtenances for their business of a saloon, and so erected as to be subject to removal without injury to the freehold. The lease was renewable at the end of the term for another five years, but at an increased rent. On October 12, 1882, the said lessees assigned said lease to the defendant with the consent of the plaintiff as lessor, and by his request said chattel mortgage clause on the improvements was continued by said assignment. On May 3, 1883, the plaintiff made his affidavit to renew said chattel mortgage on the files of the clerk. The said original lessees first mortgaged the said buildings to the defendant to secure $1,000 on June 15, 1883, and afterwards sold and conveyed their interest in the said improvements to the defendant. Before the assigned lease of the defendant expired the plaintiff renewed the same with increased rents for another three years, with the option for two years more. Before this lease expired the plaintiff brought this suit to restrain the defendant from removing said building from said premises. The said plaintiff filled out' and wrote all the leases and renewals himself.
These are the material facts of this case, and the superior court very properly found that the said buildings were the property of the defendant, and that the plaintiff had never purchased the same and has no interest in them, and that the defendant has the right to remove them during his term, and vacated the. injunction and dismissed the complaint, with damages and costs. The plaintiff appears to have expected that the lessees, Martin and wife, would construct on the lot temporary buildings for his trade and *109occupation, that he would have the right to sell or remove; and he recognized their right to do so by taking a mortgage thereon with their furniture as collateral security for his rent. He renewed the mortgage and continued it after the defendant had bought and owned the buildings. There could not be stronger estoppel against his right to now claim them. It is estoppel on estoppel, thrice repeated. The plaintiff not only has no equity on which to restrain the defendant from removing the buildings, but he has not the semblance of any legal right to them.
By the Court.— The judgment of the superior court is affirmed.