Uehara v. Schlade

603 N.E.2d 646, 236 Ill. App. 3d 252, 177 Ill. Dec. 576, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1555
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 1992
Docket1-91-2494
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 603 N.E.2d 646 (Uehara v. Schlade) 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
Uehara v. Schlade, 603 N.E.2d 646, 236 Ill. App. 3d 252, 177 Ill. Dec. 576, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1555 (Ill. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

JUSTICE DiVITO

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant Terry M. Schlade owned a Chicago condominium, which he leased to Rene Rivero. Plaintiff Kuwako Uehara owned the condominium directly below Schlade’s. After a fire in Schlade’s unit, Uehara filed a negligence suit against Schlade and Rivero for damages to her condominium and to her personal property resulting from the fire department’s efforts in putting out the fire as well as for loss of use and incidental expenses while her unit was being repaired. 1 With regard to Schlade, she claimed that her injuries occurred because he breached his duty to maintain his unit in accordance with the “Declaration of Condominium Ownership and of Easements; Restrictions, Covenants, and By-laws” (the Bylaws) of the condominium association and violated his duty to maintain the unit’s smoke detectors under the Smoke Detector Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 1271/2, par. 801 et seq.). The court granted Schlade’s motion for summary judgment, holding that Uehara had no standing to sue for violation of the Bylaws. Although we disagree with the circuit court’s rationale for its order, we nevertheless affirm.

Schlade’s motion for summary judgment contained a copy of his lease with Rivero and a transcript of the deposition and report of the fire department investigator. The investigator stated that as a result of his inspection of the fire scene and an interview with Rivero, a clamp-on lamp in the center bedroom of his unit was “the most logical source” of the fire. He also stated, however, that he had certified his report for further investigation of the apartment’s wiring and fuse box by an electrician. The investigator mentioned that Rivero had told him that the fuses had been malfunctioning, and he added that the smoke detectors were not operating when he examined the unit after the fire. Schlade argued that under the common law, Rivero had the duty to maintain the unit and thus he, as landlord, could not be held liable for any failure to maintain it. He also claimed that under the Smoke Detector Act, he was obliged only to furnish operable smoke detectors, not to maintain them, which was Rivero’s statutory duty as the tenant in possession. Moreover, he continued, he had no notice that the detectors were not operating, and absent such notice, he had no duty to repair or replace them.

Uehara responded that Schlade agreed under the Bylaws to maintain his unit and that this duty, which encompassed the clamp-on lamp, could not be delegated to Rivero because the Bylaws made no provision for doing so. She argued that Schlade’s express covenant in the Bylaws precluded application of the common law of landlord-tenant liability for injuries to third persons. She claimed too that Schlade’s lease agreement with Rivero provided that he retain control over his unit for the purpose of its maintenance. She also contended that factual issues existed concerning whether he had breached this duty and whether he had violated the Smoke Detector Act because, in his deposition, Schlade was unable to say how many smoke detectors were in the unit¡ and he admitted that he had not tested the detectors in the unit nor made an effort to verify that they were working when he leased the apartment to Rivero in October 1987, approximately three months prior to the fire.

In reply, Schlade contended that although Uehara’s complaint sounded in negligence, it was bottomed on a breach of contractual duty, and he argued-that breaches of contractual duty cannot support tort claims. Moreover, he asserted, Uehara presented no facts, just allegations, supporting her claims and thus summary judgment was proper because she had not raised an issue of fact. Schlade also argued that Uehara had no standing to bring her claim for breach of the Bylaws because under article XI, paragraph 1(b), of the Bylaws themselves, only the condominium association, not a unit owner, could take legal action for a breach of the Bylaws. As for Uehara’s argument that the lease agreement between Schlade and Rivero created a duty owed by Schlade to Uehara, Schlade contended, the lease did not expressly create such a duty nor did Uehara demonstrate that she was a third-party beneficiary of the lease. With regard to the Smoke Detector Act, Schlade maintained, his deposition testimony was that the unit was equipped with the number of detectors the Act required and that this testimony was unrebutted. He therefore concluded that there was no issue of material fact as to his violation of the statute.

After hearing argument, the circuit court granted Schlade’s motion for summary judgment, apparently basing its ruling on Uehara’s lack of standing. The court also commented in passing that “you can’t superimpose a tort on a contract action, on a breach of contract action.”

I

Before reaching the merits of Uehara’s appeal, we first must determine whether the circuit court correctly ruled that Uehara has no standing to bring a claim for any breach of the Bylaws. Uehara concedes that article XI of the Bylaws permits the Board to file such a suit, 2 but she insists that this provision does not transfer wholesale an individual owner’s right to sue for damages personal to that individual owner, emphasizing that nowhere is this right said to be exclusive of the unit owners’ rights to pursue legal remedies for individual wrongs. She points in support to article XII, paragraph 3, of the Bylaws, which provides, among other things, that unit owners agree to waive claims against fellow unit owners for casualty damage to their units or to any personal property located therein if such damage is covered by insurance. Logically, she argues, this provision implies that article XI’s creation of the Board’s right to sue under certain circumstances should be seen as a grant of power expanding the association’s rights rather than as a limitation on the right of unit owners themselves to do so.

Schlade counters with the position he espoused successfully before the circuit court: article XI transfers to the Board the exclusive right to sue for any breach of the Bylaws. Parties have the power to limit their rights to seek legal remedies, he maintains, which the unit owners did here. The waiver provision is no help to Uehara either, Schlade continues, because it does not address claims like this one, which is based on a breach of the Bylaws. In Schlade’s view, whether the waiver provision would apply to a claim for breach of duty from a source other than the Bylaws is a question not before this court. Accordingly, he maintains, the rule of contract construction that specific terms govern over general terms is controlling here. Lastly, he claims that the waiver provision rests on section 9.1 of the Condominium Property Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 30, par. 309.1), which concerns claims made under statutorily required insurance, and that, additionally, the waiver provision is an agreement to relinquish the right to pursue claims against other owners for damage to personal property to the extent that the loss is insured, which implies that an owner like Uehara who allows her insurance coverage to lapse may not invoke the waiver provision here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
603 N.E.2d 646, 236 Ill. App. 3d 252, 177 Ill. Dec. 576, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uehara-v-schlade-illappct-1992.