Lake View Avenue Building Corp. v. McFarland

265 Ill. App. 517, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 801
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
DocketGen. No. 35,105
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 265 Ill. App. 517 (Lake View Avenue Building Corp. v. McFarland) 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
Lake View Avenue Building Corp. v. McFarland, 265 Ill. App. 517, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 801 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff obtained judgment by confession in the municipal court of Chicago against defendant in the sum of $325, for rental alleged to be due under a written indenture of léase. This judgment was subsequently opened on defendant’s motion and leave was given him to appear and defend. Trial was had by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for defendant, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

It appears from the evidence that plaintiff demised to defendant an apartment on the top floor of its building located at 2440 Lake View avenue in Chicago for a term of three years commencing October 1, 1927, at a stipulated monthly rental of $295. Defendant was allowed free occupancy of the demised premises for a period of five months and occupied the same until July, 1928, when he vacated the same because the landlord failed to repair a defective roof which caused water to drip through the ceiling of his apartment after every rainfall. The judgment by confession was rendered for rental alleged to be due for August, 1928, the month following defendant’s removal from said premises.

Defendant’s affidavit of merit avers among other things, “that at the time said lease was made plaintiff knew that the roof of said apartment was defective and dangerous, but suppressed its knowledge of the condition; that defendant could not discover the dangerous and defective condition of the said roof by reason of the character of its-construction; that during the defendant’s occupation of the premises, by reason of the defective condition of the said roof the said premises and the furniture and, other property of the defendant were damaged by the flooding of water and rain through said roof upon at least ten different occasions; that upon each such occurrence the defendant promptly notified the plaintiff and the plaintiff promised the defendant to repair the said defective roof; and the defendant, relying upon the plaintiff’s promise to repair the said defective roof, and believing that the plaintiff was engaged in making such repairs as would prevent the recurrence of such flooding of the defendant’s premises, remained in possession of said premises; that the defendant believed that the plaintiff had performed his promises to make the necessary repairs to the roof; that, when the defendant’s premises were again flooded by water and rain, the lighting fixtures in the dining room became rusted and filled with water and particles of plaster fell from the ceiling in the dining room and one of the bedrooms; that when the defendant called the plaintiff’s attention to these matters, the plaintiff said that the nature of the defect had not been previously understood, but that such repairs would immediately be made, that there would be no further trouble; that notwithstanding this assurance by the plaintiff and further similar promises and representations by the plaintiff upon subsequent occasions, the plaintiff took no action remedying said intolerable conditions; that on July 28, 1928, the defendant ceasing to rely upon and have confidence in the promises of the plaintiff, removed from said premises together with his household goods and other belongings.”

Considerable evidence was adduced at the hearing upon the salient question of fact relating to the leakage of water through the ceiling of the demised premises. Grace McFarland, wife of defendant testified that “the water came through in the dining room, all over the ceiling. It got so bad it dropped rusty water out of the chandelier. It stayed wet so long that the plaster flaked and fell down. It was that way during the ten months we lived there. The leak occurred every time it rained. I can remember putting down pails and buckets at least a dozen times. The chandelier was a sort of urn shape and I noticed it dripped out of that drop by drop and it was very rusty. I had Joe (meaning Joe Simon, engineer of the building) come up and empty it and he poured out a gallon of water into a pail. He did that a good many times.” Defendant’s testimony was to like effect.

Joe Simon, the engineer in charge of the premises, testified that his attention was called to the leak in the ceiling and he observed water coming through the center fixture, but that he “couldn’t do anything about the leak. I guess Mr. McFarland put a pan under the leak or something. I couldn’t find out where the water was coming from.” When asked whether he had talked to defendant on more than one occasion regarding the leak in the roof, Simon stated he did not remember but “maybe I did. I do remember one occasion.” From an examination of the evidence, the fact of the leakage and its continuance during the entire period of occupancy seems to have been definitely established, the only conflict being as to the extent and cause thereof.

The defense interposed to the payment of rent is twofold; it is averred that plaintiff had knowledge of the defective and dangerous condition of the roof, but withheld this information from defendant; and facts are also alleged upon which the defense of a constructive eviction might be predicated. With reference to the first of these defenses, plaintiff insists that the evidence fails to sustain the charge that the leakage was caused by a defective roof, and also that no proof was offered to show knowledge of the defect and suppression of such knowledge by plaintiff. While it is true that the precise cause of the leakage through the ceiling of the demised premises was not known or explained at the hearing, there is abundant evidence that water dripped through the ceiling following every rainfall during the entire period of occupancy, and it is a fair inference that the dripping came from the roof through the ceiling into defendant’s apartment. The roof being no part of the demised premises, it was the landlord’s duty to maintain the same in good repair.

Plaintiff urges several grounds for reversal, but the controlling question is whether the continued leakage of water through the ceiling of the apartment during the period of occupancy, together with the fact that plaintiff, with knowledge of this condition, failed to remedy the defect, constituted an omission of duty on the part of plaintiff which deprived defendant of the enjoyment of the demised premises, and rendered them unfit for occupancy to such an extent as to constitute a constructive eviction as a matter of law.

Plaintiff relies chiefly on the early cases of Keating v. Springer, 146 Ill. 481, and Barrett v. Boddie, 158 Ill. 479, wherein the court held that to constitute eviction there must be something of a grave and permanent character done by the landlord, for the purpose and with the intention of depriving the tenant of the enjoyment of the demised premises. However, our Supreme Court has apparently modified the doctrine enunciated in the foregoing cases in its later decisions, for in Gibbons v. Hoefeld, 299 Ill. 455, they stated in the course of their opinion that “we do not understand the law to be that an omission of duty by the landlord which has the effect of depriving the tenant of the enjoyment of the demised premises must be shown to have been with the intent that such should be the effect of the omission. ’ ’

The cases of Gibbons v. Hoefeld, supra, and Kinsey v. Zimmerman, 329 Ill. 75, seem to enunciate the principles governing the present rule applicable to constructive eviction.

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Bluebook (online)
265 Ill. App. 517, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-view-avenue-building-corp-v-mcfarland-illappct-1932.