Hock v. Jorgeson

137 Ill. App. 199, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 768
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 11, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,496
StatusPublished

This text of 137 Ill. App. 199 (Hock v. Jorgeson) 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
Hock v. Jorgeson, 137 Ill. App. 199, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 768 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

W. P. Hock, by written lease under seal, of date September 9, 1902, demised to F. C. Jorgeson the premises described as “the four-story and basement building located and known as numbers 208-210 West Lake street,” in the city of Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, “to be occupied for the manufacture of store and office fixtures, and for no other purpose whatever,” for the term from October 1, 1902, until April 30, 1908. The rent reserved in the lease is $11,725, payable in monthly installments of $175, each in advance, upon the first to the fifth day of every month of the term. The lease is signed, “W. P. Hock,” “F. O. Jorgeson,” and is under seal. In and by the lease Jorgeson, the lessee, covenanted as follows:

“Secohd. That he has examined and knows the condition of said premises, and has received the same in good order and repair, except as herein otherwise specified, and that no representations as to the condition of repair thereof have been made by the party of the first part or the agent of said party, prior to or at the execution of this lease, that are not herein expressed or endorsed hereon; and that he will keep said premises in good repair, replacing all broken glass with glass of the same size and quality as that broken; and will keep said premises and appurtenances, including catch basins, vaults and adjoining alleys, in a clean and healthy condition, according to the city ordinances, and the direction of the proper public officers, during the term of this lease, at his own expense; and will, without injury to the roof, remove the snow and ice from the same when neces.sary, and clean the snow and ice from the sidewalks in front of said premises; and upon the termination of this lease, in any way, will yield up said premises to said party of the first part in good condition and repair (loss by fire and ordinary wear excepted), and deliver the keys at the office of Lessor.”

Jorgeson now avers in his bill that he was induced by false and fraudulent representations of William P. Hock, which he believed and relied on, to accept and sign the lease. The alleged false and fraudulent representations are thus averred in the bill:

“Your orator further represents that prior to the signing of said lease, said William P. Hock represented to your orator that he, the said William P. Hock, was the owner of said four-story and basement building located at and known as 208-210 West Lake street, Chicago, Illinois, and that the boiler, engine and steam pipes on said premises were in good order and repair, and that yonr orator believed said representations to be true, and signed said lease in reliance thereon.”

Jorgeson testified that four or five days before September 9th, the date of the lease, he went to 212 West Lake street, where he found Mr. Hock, and told him that he was sent to look at the place by Willis & Frankenstein, a real estate firm, and asked him if the building 208-210 was his, and he said it was, and that he, Hock, took him through the building, and showed him particularly the elevators and the floors, in a general way, except the basement, which he, Jorgeson, could only see part of, as men were then putting in the cement foundation around the boiler and engine. That, September 9th, before the lease was signed, he had another conversation with Mr. Hock in which he asked him “if the boiler, engine, steam pipes and everything in the building was in first-class order, and he said it was.”

Complainant Jorgeson further testified that, after he took possession under the lease, he found the steam pipes tied up with cloth and strings and whitewash all over them, so as not to be discernible to the average person, and that the boiler was defective, particularly in the blow-off pipe, which was below the surface of the cement floor; and the engine had some blow-off pipes filled up with burlaps, or cement sacks, rather, cemented over, which could not be seen till the cement floor had been removed. The boiler had a patch on the fire sheet, and was single riveted, and was partly bricked up. In the early part of May, 1901, the city ordered the boiler shut down, and would not permit it to be used till certain repairs were made, and witness made the repairs and ran the boiler at reduced pressure for about five months, till a new boiler could be put in, which Mr. Hock promised, at the office of the city inspector of boilers, he would put in. The boiler was shut down by the city December 20, 1904, Hock having refused to put in a new one.

On cross-examination Jorgeson testified that the trouble with the steam pipes commenced in October, 1902; that he could not say just when the trouble began, as they had more or less trouble right along; that when one pipe was fixed, another would burst, and the whole thing seemed to be very fiimsily constructed.

John Peterson, called by complainant, testified that he was in complainant’s employ, and inspected the premises in the fall of 1902. He testified, in reference to the condition when the complainant moved into the premises, that the boiler had a patch under the fire sheet and one under the hand-hole, and the blow-off pipe didn’t lead anywhere. The blow-off pipe was at the bottom of the boiler; some of the steam pipes were bursted and had a cloth wound around them and some string outside of it, and were whitewashed. The exhaust pipe was bursted and cement sacks, cemented over, were over it. The pipe lays about eighteen inches under the floor. The boiler was bricked over, and was nearly whitewashed. In the early part of 1904 two of the boiler flues were leaking.

William P. Hock testified that the negotiation in regard to the leasing occupied one or two weeks, and that the complainant went through the building and examined everything.

The complainant paid all rent due by the terms of the lease to and including the month of December, 1904, and December 24,1904, he moved from the premises and sent the key to the defendant, William P. Hock, and it was delivered to him in his wife’s presence.

We think it apparent that some of the alleged defects were discovered very soon after complainant took possession of the leased premises, and complainant’s testimony and that of Peterson, his witness, shows that what he claims to have been serious defects were known to him in October, 1902. Complainant was engaged in the business of manufacturing store and office fixtures, and was engaged in that business, as he testified, before he occupied the leased premises. His business required the use of such appliances as were in the leased premises, and on the hypothesis that there were so serious defects in them as he claims, it seems impossible that he should not have discovered them very soon after he took possession of the premises, if not personally, then by his engineer Clark, who he says was in his employ. Yet he continued in possession of the premises from September 9, 1902, till December 24, 1904, more than two years and three months, paying rent.

In Morey v. Pierce, 14 Ill. App. 91, the plaintiff sued for damages for alleged false and fraudulent representation that the leased premises were free from sewer gas. In less than two weeks after plaintiff took possession she discovered that the premises were seriously affected with sewer gas.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Ill. App. 199, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hock-v-jorgeson-illappct-1907.