DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 202
Citation Numbers: 61 Pa. Super. 299, 1915 Pa. Super. LEXIS 322
Judges: Head, Henderson, Oready, Orlady, Porter, Rice, Trexler
Filed Date: 10/11/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Opinion by
A judgment was entered against the defendant, by virtue of a confession of judgment clause contained in a lease of defined property. After occupying the premises for ten months the defendant, tenant, surrendered possession and presented her petition to open the judgment for reasons which were held to be sufficient, and an issue was framed between the use-plaintiffs, who purchased the premises from the original lessor, and this defendant. The question involved relates to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced, to establish false representations amounting to fraud-in inducing the execution of the lease.
The only assignment of error is the refusal. of the court to affirm the plaintiffs’ point submitted at the trial, viz: Under all the pleadings and the evidence the verdict should be for the plaintiffs.
Ordinarily, a lessee’s eyes are his bargain. He is bound to examine the premises he rents and secure himself by covenants to repair and rebuild, Davis v. Pierce, 52 Pa. Superior Ct., 615, but the controlling question here, was the defendant induced to execute the lease by reason of the representations made to her in regard to clearing away lumber and fences that were objected to by her, so that when the houses were completed, she would have the free use of a yard. To establish this- fact, it was explained by the court to the jury, that she must satisfy them by the fair weight of the evidence that the things she claimed as vital and controlling were true in fact. The jury adopted the defendants’ version of the
The judgment is affirmed.,