United Order of American Brick Layers & Stone Masons v. Fitzgerald

59 Ill. App. 362, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 158
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 24, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Ill. App. 362 (United Order of American Brick Layers & Stone Masons v. Fitzgerald) 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
United Order of American Brick Layers & Stone Masons v. Fitzgerald, 59 Ill. App. 362, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 158 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Shepabd

delivebed the opinion of the Coubt.

The appellant is a corporation organized under the statutes of Illinois relating to corporations not for pecuniary profit, and is the owner of a building in Chicago, known as Bricklayers’ Hall, situated at the corner of Monroe and Peoria streets.

The ground or street floor of the building is divided into stores, and two hallways that lead, respectively, from Monroe and Peoria streets to stairways extending to offices and halls in the upper stories. The principal hallway is the one opening from Monroe street, and on one side of that hallway, and opening into it by a doorway, is a store numbered 241 Monroe street.

Another store, known as the corner store, was originally designed for and had always been leased and used for a drinking saloon, and the appellee, with a partner, had been its lessee and occupant for a period of about five years at a monthly rental of $140, and had the exclusive privilege of selling liquor within the building.

The lease of the corner store to the appellee and his partner expired by its terms October 31, 1893, and appellant had advertised for bids for a lease of the store for another term with like exclusive liquor-selling privileges.

The store, Ho. 241 Monroe street, had been vacant for some time prior to July 1, 1893, and about that date negotiations by one William J. Cochrane with Michael Mangan, one of appellant’s trustees, for a lease of it were begun. Those negotiations resulted in a written lease, dated July 1, 1893, wherein it was recited that appellant, as party of the first part, demised to said Cochrane, as party of the second part, the said store for a term of five years at a monthly rental of $30.

Said lease was signed and sealed as follows:

“ Hugh J. Ward, Pres., .................

Mike Mangan, Trustee, ° Corporate Seal :

L. P. “ . of the Appellant.

r, tp u l Corporation. : “

eilert, .................

W. J. Cochrane. [Seal.] ”

On the back of said lease was indorsed an assignment to the appellee, by said W. J. Cochrane, dated July 12, 1893.

On October 25, 1893, the appellee filed his bill for an injunction against the appellant and certain of its agents.

The bill alleged the execution by appellant of said lease to Cochrane, and its assignment by Cochrane to appellee, and that since the date of said assignment, he, the appellee, had been in possession and occupancy of the demised premises; that there are two entrance doors to said premises, one of which opens upon Monroe street and the other to a hallway that leads out to Monroe street and to the stairway that leads to the halls in the upper part of said building, both of which entrances, it is alleged, have been in use by the appellee and are necessary for the accommodation of his business; that the appellant threatens to permanently close up the entrance from the hallway and to forfeit said lease; and the prayer of the bill is, that from executing said threats, and from doing anything contrary to the terms of the lease, the appellant be perpetually enjoined.

The bill was answered by the appellant, who also filed its cross-bill.

The relief sought by the cross-bill was a cancellation *of the said lease to Cochrane, and an injunction against the appellee from occupying said premises Mo. 241.

The cross-bill shows that the appellant is a corporation or association, organized under the statute governing voluntary associations not for pecuniary purposes, its officers consisting of a president-collector, vice-presidents of various nationalities, financial and recording secretaries, treasurer, and three trustees, whose duties are defined by by-laws; the powers and duties of those several officers are set forth in the by-laws; that neither by resolution, by-law or otherwise is power or authority given to any of its officers to rent the real estate of the union, but such power has been at all times expressly exercised by the union in meeting assembled, or by specially designated officers pursuant to a vote of the union; that the pretended lease in question never was acted upon or granted by the union or made or executed pursuant to any authorization by the union; that when the building of which these premises are a part, was erected, a store on the corner, and called the corner store, was set apart and fitted up for saloon purposes, and liquor was not permitted to be sold in any other part of the building; that when the building was completed, this corner saloon was rented by said Fitzgerald and a partner for five years at $140 per month; this lease granted the exclusive sale of liquor in the entire building to them and continued in force until October 31, 1893, and he with his partner remained in business there until this bill was filed; that said lease to him and his partner of the corner store was voted upon and granted by the union in meeting assembled, signed by its president and trustees pursuant to a resolution of the union; that at all times when any of the stores were rented, it was first passed upon by the union, and when granted, signed pursuant to a like vote; that appellee, whose partnership at the corner store ended on October 31,1893, well knowing that no other than the corner store could be rented for saloon purposes, entered into a conspiracy with Michael Mangan, who acted as chairman of the board of trustees, and Hugh Ward, the president-collector, two of the outgoing officers of the union, to procure a lease of this store, Ho. 241 West Monroe street, which was located next to the main entrance to the hall, above which is located the offices of the union, its own meeting hall and a number of halls rented out to various societies and organizations; that he accordingly procured a friend of his, the said Wm. J. Cochrane, to make application to Mangan, the trustee, for a lease of this store, ostensibly for a real estate office; that Mangan presented the lease in the usual form to his co-trustees without erasure, and at Mangan’s request they signed it, he, Mangan, having signed it, and Ward, the president, also signed it; that after it was thus signed the clause prohibiting subletting was stricken out, and also the use for which it was to be rented; that Cochrane ostensibly opened up a real estate office, occupied the store, and himself paid the rent until this suit was commenced, when Fitzgerald commenced to fit it up as a saloon; that the rental value for saloon purposes is not less- than $100 per month; that bids had been advertised for, for the corner saloon, and were to be received October 27,1893, for' renting for saloon purposes with the same exclusive privilege contained in the former lease of Fitzgerald and his partner, which had been in force since the erection of the building, and for which purpose a larger rental could be obtained than for any other, but which is prevented by the occupancy of Mo. 241 by appellee as a saloon.

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59 Ill. App. 362, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-order-of-american-brick-layers-stone-masons-v-fitzgerald-illappct-1895.