Klee v. Chicago Trust Co.

1 N.E.2d 548, 284 Ill. App. 112, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 584
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 19, 1936
DocketGen. No. 38,424
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 N.E.2d 548 (Klee v. Chicago Trust Co.) 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
Klee v. Chicago Trust Co., 1 N.E.2d 548, 284 Ill. App. 112, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 584 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Denis E. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Frederick G. Klee, plaintiff, from a decree of the superior court dismissing his bill of complaint for want of equity and judgment for costs against the plaintiff upon a report of a master in chancery.

No questions are.being raised upon the pleadings. It is claimed by plaintiff that one Nat Malnick was a real estate agent of Harry Schwartz, deceased, of whose estate defendant is the executor; that the property described in a certain contract was represented to have been situated in Gary, Indiana, on the corner of the intersection of two full section lines and that one of the streets abounding thereon was a boulevard with an electric line and zoned for business purposes ; that all of the representations so made to him were false and untrue; that he relied upon the representations so made in entering into the contract hereby sought to be rescinded.

It is further claimed by plaintiff that the said representations were misrepresentations as to the present, existing and material facts and were made to induce him to enter into the said contract; that the person making the representations either knew that they were untrue or spoke with reckless indifference of the truth or was under a special duty to know the truth; that plaintiff had no knowledge of the falsity of the representations and acted in reliance thereon and that he did not receive that for which he had bargained.

Defendant contends that the contract in the case at bar was entered into by and between the plaintiff and Harry Schwartz, since deceased, on December 4, 1925; that suit for the rescission of same was instituted on March 24, 1931, on the ground of fraud; that the value of the land had decreased from 50 to 60 per cent in the interim and that no action was taken by the plaintiff for the rescission of the contract until after the death of Harry Schwartz, the vendor; that as a result thereof plaintiff is guilty of laches.

It appears from the evidence that Harry Schwartz was the sole owner of the Home Builders & Developers Organization and that Hat Malnick was a salesman for that organization and that a certain contract was entered into between the plaintiff and the Home Builders & Developers Organization through the solicitation of the said Malnick.

It further appears from the evidence that in selling this land to the plaintiff, Malnick wrote on plaintiff’s copy of the contract the words, “Section line, boulevard, electric line” and “business”; that there were two copies of the contract and that Mr. Malnick did not write in “Section line, boulevard, electric line” and “business” on the other copy of the contract; that Malnick told plaintiff that Gary was going to be a big town — put up steel mills and tin mills and that Mr. Insull was going to put up a big power plant and hire about 5,000 people; that Malnick gave the' plaintiff a receipt book and told him to bring it down every time he came to make a payment; that Malnick also said that a lot like this was a valuable lot like 63rd and Halsted streets or Madison and State streets and that such last named property was sold for $10 a foot and now it is worth over $10,000 a foot and we cannot even buy it; that Malnick also told plaintiff that he could double his money if he wanted to sell the lot at any time and that he should give him, Malnick, the resale.

Plaintiff’s mother testified that she talked the matter over with the plaintiff many times and told him that she thought he paid too much for the property; that she told plaintiff she thought he had been cheated.

Frederick Klee, the plaintiff, was permitted to testify without objection and he stated that the first time information came to him that Clinton street was not a section line was about the first part of September, 1930; that he went to Gary one Sunday afternoon and found that Clinton street was not a section line.

When the matter came on before the chancellor with the report of the master, it was agreed that both plaintiff’s copy of the contract and defendant’s copy of the contract contained the following provisions:

“Second party expressly agrees that all representations affecting or relating to said sale and to this contract and to said property are expressed herein and that no waiver or modification of this contract shall be claimed or be of any force or effect unless reduced to writing and signed by second party and by first party, by some agent of first party thereunto duly authorized ; and that salesmen of first party have no authority to modify this contract in any manner.”

According to the evidence, at the time the contract was signed, plaintiff said to Malnick:

“Why Mr. Malnick, you have not included in the contract — (unfinished) I see that it is not inserted in this contract that 5th Avenue is a section line, boulevard, electric line or that the street is 108 feet wide, and it is not on there that Clinton Street is a section line.” Thereupon the salesmen wrote those words on the plaintiff’s copy of the contract.

The evidence further shows that plaintiff signed the contract and paid Malnick $3,250 as a down payment on the purchase price.

According to the terms of the contract the Home Builders and Developers Organization agreed to convey to plaintiff a parcel of real estate 52 feet by 111 feet located on the corner of Clinton street and Fifth avenue in Gary, Indiana, for a total consideration of $6,500, $3,250 of which was paid at the time plaintiff signed the contract and the remainder of which was to be paid in monthly instalments of $25 each until the balance had been completely paid and that plaintiff would then become entitled to a deed to said premises; that plaintiff also obligated himself to pay all taxes and special assessments thereafter levied on the premises.

It appears from the evidence that from the date of the execution of the contract up until June 10, 1930, plaintiff paid to Harry Schwartz the additional sum of $476.98 in instalments of $25; that in September, 1930, plaintiff’s uncle who lived about five miles from Gary, visited plaintiff and he learned for the first time from his uncle that neither Clinton street nor Fifth avenue in Gary, Indiana, were section lines; that plaintiff then visited Gary, inspected the property he had purchased and found that it was some distance away from the nearest section line; that Clinton street adjoining the property in question had not as yet been cut through as a thoroughfare; that the buildings in the vicinity were wooden frame shacks in a dilapidated condition with a schoolhouse and small gasoline station some distance away; that surrounding plaintiff’s lot were about 30 acres of land containing four or five portable schoolhouses; that neither of the streets adjoining the property were section lines, nor was 5th avenue a boulevard; that on 5th avenue in the block in which plaintiff’s property was located were two frame residences and that no business property had been erected.

After inspecting the property plaintiff immediately engaged an attorney to assist him in making an investigation and some settlement with the defendant if the facts warranted it. Plaintiff’s bill of complaint was filed March 24, 1931.

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Related

Klee v. Chicago Trust Co.
6 N.E.2d 442 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E.2d 548, 284 Ill. App. 112, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klee-v-chicago-trust-co-illappct-1936.