Beard v. Haskell Park Building Corp.

248 Ill. App. 467, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 650
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1928
DocketGen. No. 7,819
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 248 Ill. App. 467 (Beard v. Haskell Park Building Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Haskell Park Building Corp., 248 Ill. App. 467, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 650 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought to recover for goods stolen from a trunk stored by plaintiff in the trunk room of an apartment building owned by defendant. A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $942. From a judgment on the verdict this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellant is a corporation, owning and operating a 5-story brick apartment building at the corner of two intersecting streets in the city of Eockford. The first floor of the building is divided into three storerooms, a lobby, and-janitor’s quarters. The house hostess in the lobby could see anyone coming into the building from either of the two street entrances, her duty being the care of the service within the building. Any package coming or going would first have to come to her attention. There is' a service entrance in the rear of the building directly opposite the janitor’s living room. It opens onto a stairway leading to the basement. The trunk room is in the basement and to reach that room it is necessary to pass the janitor’s room and either the boiler room or the workroom where repairs are made.

The janitor, with his wife, lived in the building a short distance from the trunk room, and from his room it was possible to hear anyone walking to the trunk room. Either the janitor or his wife were always there in the daytime. His duties were to take care of the boiler and basement and do odd jobs. He acted as watchman and custodian of the trunk room. He testified that the door of the trunk room was always locked at night, and sometimes in the daytime; that as a part of his duties, he always watched the trunks and people who came around there. The key to the trunk room door became lost, but it is not clear whether it was lost before or after the contents of the trunk were stolen. He also testified that the room was always locked at night with another key.

Plaintiff, a school teacher in Rockford, was preparing to leave the city for the summer, following the close of the school term in June, 1926. Desiring to obtain an apartment in appellant’s building for the next school term, she and her friend, Lois Morris, called on appellant’s agent, Johnson, about June 1st. The next day a written lease for the apartment, dated June 2, 1926, was executed between the parties for a term to commence August 31,1926, and ending June 17, 1927, at a rental of sixty-five ($65) dollars per month. The lease contains no reference to the storage of trunks or other articles. She paid $20 on the rental of the apartment to Johnson, before the execution of the lease, and it was credited on the first month’s rent. The balance of the rent for that month was paid August 30th. She and Johnson had a conversation about the storing of her trunk during the summer months. She testified that after she paid the $20 but before the lease was signed, she told Johnson she had some things she wanted to store, and asked him if he had a place; that he replied there was a storeroom and that she was perfectly welcome to store her things in it. In this she is corroborated by Miss Morris.

Johnson testified that at the time the lease was entered into, no arrangement was made for the storage of any trunk, but that about 10 days or two weeks afterwards, Miss Beard called him by telephone and asked if she could keep her trunks in the apartment for storage during the summer; that he asked her if there was anything in the trunks, and she replied there was nothing of any value; that he explained that there was a storage room in the building for the storage of empty trunks- but that the company would assume no liability for the loss of any contents of a trunk. This is denied by appellee. Johnson also testified that at the time he had the conversation with appellee and Miss Morris, he explained the custom about the use of the building and the service furnished, and that the rental was paid for the use of the apartment only. Miss Beard testified that she sent her trunk to the building on June 19, 1926; that she followed it about two hours afterwards, and went down to the storeroom with the janitor; that the trunk was standing on end and she asked him to set it down because it was not packed tight; that he did so and then showed her out, locking the door after them; that she saw a number of trunks and other things in the room, but particularly noticed only the trunks.

It is conceded by both parties that the maids employed by appellant used the storeroom for their pails and equipment; that only empty trunks were ordinarily stored there, and that the contents of plaintiff’s trunk were stolen after it was stored. Appellee’s itemized statement of the articles that she claims were in the trunk includes a solid gold watch, four pairs of earrings, five rings, one large necklace, a bracelet, two strings of beads, two bar pins, a jewel case and other articles, besides expensive wearing apparel. She placed their aggregate value at $942 and stated that that was less than she paid for them. The necklace and two of the rings are alleged to be heirlooms and two of the dresses are valued at $80 each.

Besides the jaintor and house hostess, appellant employed two maids. The reputation of each of them for honesty was good. One of the maids was superintendent of a Sunday school and the other was a leader of a church choir. The janitor and house hostess had been in appellant’s employ for several years, and appellant took the precaution to make special inquiry as to the reputation of the maids.

The record does not show, and appellee does not claim, that she gave appellant any information whatever that her trunk contained heirlooms, jewelry, and expensive wearing apparel. According to her own testimony, she merely asked to store some “things.” We think the evidence shows sufficient facts known to appellee to bring notice to her that the character of the storage was not such as to warrant her in placing valuables worth almost $1,000 in a trunk and leaving it there for storage without apprising appellant of the true character and value of the articles.

In her brief, it is intimated that the storage of her goods was incident to the operation of the building as an apartment hotel and was one of the services for which she was to pay. There is no evidence in this case to warrant the assertion that the building was operated as a hotel or that appellee so considered it. It is clearly shown by the testimony that it was an apartment building and that she knew it. The earnest money on the lease, according to her testimony, was paid before she asked permission to store her things, so that the storage was not contemplated in the leasing of the apartment. She treated the permission as a gratuity and under such circumstances the law raises the presumption that she knew the degree of appellant’s liability incident thereto. She saw the character of the storage room when she left her trunk there.

She takes the position that leaving the door unlocked in the daytime was gross negligence, in that the maids and employees had access to it. ' A storage room located in the basement of an apartment house near the boiler room and in which the maids kept their pails, mops and other utensils, would not appear to an ordinarily prudent person as a safe or proper place to keep jewelry and expensive clothing worth nearly $1,000. She did not inform appellant that the contents of her trunk were of any great value. The record does not tend to show that the maids and.

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Bluebook (online)
248 Ill. App. 467, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-haskell-park-building-corp-illappct-1928.