Alexander v. Emmett

68 Ill. App. 261, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 472
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 9, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 68 Ill. App. 261 (Alexander v. Emmett) 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
Alexander v. Emmett, 68 Ill. App. 261, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 472 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lacey

delivered the opinion op the Court.

This was an action on the case brought by the appellants, Frances K. Alexander, Aaron A. Wolfersperger, Herman Sturtz and L. Edwin Brookfield, originally against Walter S. Dray and John V. Emmett, in the Circuit Court of Whiteside County, July 9, 1891.

Summons was served on appellee Emmett July 9, 1891, and on Walter S. Dray July 13, 1891, the first in Whiteside county and the second served in Cook county, Illinois.

All the appellants and appellee Emmet, were residents of Sterling, Whiteside county. Appellee Walter S. Dray was a resident of Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, as also the present party, the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, executor of the said Dray, deceased.

The action is in case of fraud and deception charged, on the part of Walter S. Dray, in the sale of one-third of twenty acres of land situated in Chicago, claimed to have been perpetrated by said Dray upon the appellants, assisted by John Y. Emmett, one of the appellees, and also a joint purchaser from Dray, with the appellants, of the said land.

After several terms of court a jury was waived and the cause was tried by the court without a jury. The case was heard by the court March 1, 1894, before the death of Dray. The latter died August 28, 1894.

The death of Dray was suggested, and that he had died testate, and that the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank had been appointed executor; and it was asked that the said bank be substituted as defendant, which was done by the court. This was November 13, 1894.

Thereupon, oh the same day, the plaintiffs filed a new count against the estate of Dray alone. On the 14th of November, 1894, summons was issued for Dray’s executor and it was served November 23, 1894.

On May 27, 1895, the court found the issues for the defendants. Motion for a new trial was made by the appellants and overruled by the court and judgment entered against them for costs.

From that judgment an appeal was taken to this court.

John W. Alexander was the husband of Frances Alexander, and did all the negotiation for his wife, in the purchase of the land hereafter mentioned, from Dray and Frances Alexander; the appellant knows nothing about the transaction except what she learned from her husband and others.

It appears from the evidence in the case that on the 16th> and 17th days of May, 1890, in the office of Walter S. Dray, in Chicago, a trade was agreed upon between a portion of the appellants and the appellees Emmett and Walter S. Dray, for the purchase, by the former from the latter, of a one-third interest of twenty acres of land situate on 79th street, in the city of Chigago, for $26,666.64, or $4,000 per acre—$9,000 to be paid in cash and the balance in one, two and three years. On the 20th of May, 1890, the appellant Wolfersperger appeared in Dray’s office, in the city of Chicago, representing himself and all the other purchasers, and consummated the sale" and took Dray’s contract, paid the earnest money, gave a portion of the purchasers’ notes, and arranged for giving the balance of the notes and purchase money to Dray.

The notes were afterward given, notes subsequently paid in full, and a deed taken from Dray and Dray’s grantor.

The purchasers from Dray, the next spring after the purchase of the land, disposed of it and sold it at $4,750 per acre, an advance of $750 per acre.

The charge which is relied upon in the declaration for recovery in all the counts except the last, is, that Walter S. Dray, and John Y. Emmett, who was pretending to act with the appellants but was abetting Dray to deceive them, made various representations, by Dray, to the effect that he had a friend who had a third of this land and that he would take a third himself; another, that he had a friend who would take a third; another, that he had two-thirds, which was more than he could carry and wanted some one to take a third; and that for the exclusive privilege of selling the land he would get it for them for just what it cost him; others, that in consideration of this privilege he would let them have the land for what it cost him, which he said was $4,000 per acre, when in fact it only cost him $3,000 ¿per acre. He said there was “ big money ” in the land and that he “ could sell it for them for $5,000 per acre before snow flies.” The amended count in the declaration was against Dray’s executor alone. At this time Dray was not the owner of the land.

On the 10th day of the same month, April, Dray, four -days after the making of the representations, obtained a third interest in it by assignment from Bauer, assignee of a •contract to him from one Heether, original owner of the "land, and that the appellants would not have purchased the land of Dray save for the false representations, and had they known that the land only cost $3,000 an acre, and that rfchey did not know that the land only cost $3,000 per acre ¡until about a year after the contract was signed by Wolfer¡sperger and Dray, and shortly before the commencement of ithe action.

The gist of the action is fraud and deceit; that Dray and 'Emmett conspired together to deceive them, and that, relyiing upon their representations, they pm chased the land.

'The question as to whether Dray made the representations claimed was hotly contested on the trial, the appellants depending entirely on their own testimony to support rthe allegations of the declaration. The defendants made .absolute .and .emphatic denial that Walter S. Dray ever made the representations claimed, or undertook to purchase the land for the purchasers for what he could get it for, or sell it to them for what he had paid for it. They were supported in this contention by the testimony of Walter S. Dray and appellee Emmett, and Homer Dray and one Grarnett, who wrote the contract between Dray and Wolfersperger, and corroborated by the surrounding circumstances of the case.

It appears from the evidence that Emmett, Alexander, Sturtz, Brookfield, Dray, and his nephew Homer Dray, were present together in Dray’s office on the 16th of May, 1890, and Wolfersperger also claims to have been there, and states what he claims to have been the conversation; that, among other things, Dray agreed to sell them the land for what it cost him; but we think the evidence pretty clearly shows that Wolfersperger was not there at all on that occasion. His memory in regard to a number of instances which he testifies to, and dates, seems to be badly at fault. He was undoubtedly at home in Whiteside county on the 16th of May, 1890, and also on the 17th of the same month. He also testified that on the 16th Dray took him out and showed him the land, but finally admitted it was not on the 16th, but on the 6th of the same month. Brookfield also made a like mistake.

So that upon the whole testimony we think the court below was fully justified in finding that Wolfersperger was not in Chicago on May 16th and 17th, 1890, and in disregarding his testimony as to what was said or done there on that day.

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68 Ill. App. 261, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-emmett-illappct-1896.