Schmohl v. Fiddick

34 Ill. App. 190, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 227
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 190 (Schmohl v. Fiddick) 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
Schmohl v. Fiddick, 34 Ill. App. 190, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 227 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, J.

This was a bill filed by appellee against appellants to restrain them from doing certain acts which they threatened to do, injurious to appellee’s business. The facts are these: Appellee was a dry goods merchant doing business in the city of Galena. Appellant Lena Schmohl was building a new house suitable for stores, and desired to rent it to appellee, who wanted a larger building than he was occupying, with improved facilities for doing business. Hegotiations were entered upon looking to a leasing of thenewbuildingby appellee, and the terms upon which he could obtain the building discussed and finally agreed upon between the parties before the lease was written.

The whole and only controversy grows out of the true construction to be given to a single clause in the lease (which was finally executed) between the parties relating to the operation of an elevator in the building. The lease was to fun five years from the first of May, 1887, at a rental of $1,200 per annum.

The following .clause was written in the lease: “ And it is further agreed that said party of the first part shall heat said floors at a temperature of about seventy degrees during the term when so required. Said first party further agrees to complete said premises ready for occupancy by said second party, and further that she will cause to be placed (therein) and in successful operation therein a steam or hydraulic elevator for the use of said second party for operation between said first and third floors.”

The building was completed and the elevator in successful operation, as required by the lease, and appellee took possession about the 1st of April, 1887, and occupied it until July 1, 1887, without any controversy about the elevator, when appellant John G. Schmohl presented appellee a bill of $14.50 for water rents and oil used in operating the elevator for three months preceding, and demanded its payment. Appellee declined to pay the bill for the reason that it was the duty of appellants under the lease to be at all expense in operating the elevator. On July 1st, appellants cut off the water from the elevator and stopped it. Appellee, thereupon, to prevent serious interruption to his business, paid the $14.50 under protest, insisting that he was not liable therefor, and thereupon appellants again turned the water on the elevator. On the 1st of October, 1887, appellants again demanded of appellee $29 for water and oil used in operating the elevator six months, ending Dec. 81,1887, and threatened to again cut off the water if it was not paid. In order to again prevent this threatened injury and interruption to his business, appellee again paid this $29 under protest.

. When appellee first moved into the building, appellants furnished water and oil for the operation of the elevator from April 1 to July 1, 1887, without consulting appellee or in any way asking him to be at any expense in the matter.' Appellee contends and testifies that prior to the time the lease was reduced to writing, it was fully agreed and understood that appellants were to maintain and operate the elevator at then-own expense during the full term of the lease, and that the amount of rent paid was to cover that expense. This is denied in the answer, not under oath. All the business was done, so far as appellants were concerned, by John G. Schmohl, who is the son of Lena Schmohl. When the lease was reduced to writing, containing the provisions above recited, appellee objected to signing it because it was not expressly stated therein, in plain terms, that appellants should “ maintain ” the operation of the elevator. Appellant then agreed to write a new lease to embody the words necessary to require appellants to maintain the operation of the elevator, but when he returned with the new lease the word “ maintain ” was still left out. Appellee still objected to signing the lease and thereupon John G. Schmohl took his pen to interline the word “ maintained ” in the lease, but instead of putting that very important word in the lease, he interlined the word “ therein, ” included in parenthesis above. Appellee again objected that the word he wanted in was still left out in defiance of the original agreement and in neglect of the agreement and purpose for, which the new lease was just rewritten. Appellant then replied with some warmth and some adjectives not necessary to here repeat, “ What is the use of being so particular? we expect to run the elevator anyway.” Appellee being assured that it was appellant’s intention to run the elevator, and that that was what the lease then meant, he then signed it. James E. Kelly, a salesman in the store of appellee, fully corroborates appellee in his account of the different conversations about the signing of this lease, and its terms, and of the objections of appellee to both leases until John G. Schmohl assured him that it was his intention to run the elevator anyway, and that the lease as written meant the same thing as it would if changed to suit appellee.

John G. Schmohl says he has no recollection of using the language attributed to him by Fiddick and Kelly and thinks he did not use it. But-we think his mere failure to remember the use of such language, is not sufficient to overcome the positive declaration of Fiddick and Kelly, that he did use it, and that he meant and intended to induce in the minds of Fiddick and Kelly the belief that he would maintain the elevator and that the lease as he had written it required him to do so. This view of the case is much strengthened by the admitted fact of • Schmohl consenting to rewrite the lease so that the very words desired by appellee might be put into the lease. The words required by appellee were written on a slip of paper by his attorney as being necessary to go into the lease to ■ insure the operation of the elevator at the expense of Schmohl, and that slip of paper handed to Schmohl when he went to rewrite the lease. There was no other necessity for rewriting the lease except to get those words in and it was for that express purpose that Schmohl said he would rewrite it, and yet within an hour or so he returns with a new lease; the very word wanted was again left out and when he was again challenged on that matter, he took up his pen as if to interline the word, but instead interlined another word about which there was no controversy.

The evidence satisfies us that John G. Schmohl was seeking an unjust advantage over appellee and induced him to sign this lease with a belief that it would be construed to mean what he, Schmohl, then said it would mean, and that it would compel appellants to do what they were going to do anyway— viz., maintain in operation this elevator, at their own expense for the full term of the lease; and we are also satisfied from the evidence that appellee signed the lease upon the belief and faith that the construction then placed upon it by John G. Schmohl would be in good faith carried out, and that appellants would then perform the lease as they themselves then construed it.

It will be seen upon inspecting the clause of the lease which we have above copied relating to the elevator, that the interlineation of the word “ therein,” which we have inclosed in parenthesis, by John G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 190, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmohl-v-fiddick-illappct-1889.