Bartlett v. Lauff

271 Ill. App. 551, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 392
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 18, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 Ill. App. 551 (Bartlett v. Lauff) 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
Bartlett v. Lauff, 271 Ill. App. 551, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 392 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in assumpsit by defendant in error C. A. Bartlett against plaintiff in error P. Gr. Lauff. The declaration consists of the consolidated common counts and a special count, Lauff pleaded nonassumpsit and statute of frauds requiring a promise to answer for the debt of another to be in writing. Bartlett recovered a judgment from which Lauff prosecutes error.

Bartlett owned a real estate and insurance agency. In 1923,-he sold the “business,” including,certain office furniture, to James H. Mann. The contract of sale contained the following provision: ‘ ‘ The said Charles A. Bartlett hereby retains a vendor’s lien on the said within described business and property for the sum of $3,000 balance due on purchase price of same according to the terms and conditions of six certain promissory notes of even date herewith. ’ ’

Possession of the furniture was delivered up with the transfer of the agency.

In 1924, James H. Mann took Cecil Mann in the business, and in a supplemental contract between the plaintiff and the two Mann Brothers there was included a provision similar to that above quoted, purporting to preserve to the plaintiff the above mentioned vendor’s lien.

On October 30, 1930, a balance of $2,000, still owing to the plaintiff on the purchase price, the Mann Brothers, being heavily involved with insurance companies and others, were making a sale of the agency to the defendant Lauff. Bartlett’s version of a conversation between himself and the defendant Lauff on that day at the Mann office is as follows: “Mr. Lauff said to me that he had purchased the agency of Mann Brothers and that he would pay me the $2,000 owing on the original purchase of Mann Brothers from me.” Again, “and he said he had a cashier’s check in his pocket with which to pay me as soon as the papers were ready to make the transfer.” Lauff denied making a statement that he would pay plaintiff the unpaid balance, and his version was corroborated by Mrs. James H: Mann, the only other witness to the conversation.

On October 31, 1930, the day after the disputed conversation, Bartlett went to the office of an attorney where a number of persons, including Lauff, were discussing the sale of the Mann agency to Lauff. He testified that he said there to Lauff: “We were to meet here at Mann Brothers at 9:30 this morning and I was to get my money. ’ ’ Lauff and four other witnesses say that Bartlett, at the time stated, asserted a claim for lien on the business of the Mann agency. Some of these witnesses deny that Bartlett then said any promise had been made to him by Lauff.

After leaving the office where this incident occurred, Bartlett, with an attorney, delivered a written notice and demand for possession of the property of the Mann agency to Mann Brothers.

Later on the same day, Lauff completed the purchase of the business and property of the Mann agency.

James H. Mann testified that Bartlett, in January, 1932, asked him for payment' of interest on the notes given him by Mann Brothers. Bartlett said he did not remember doing so.

Counsel contend for Bartlett, in support of the judgment, that the conversation between Bartlett and Lauff, in the Mann office, on October 30, 1930, constituted a contract under which Lauff was to pay Bartlett $2,000; that the statute of frauds requiring any promise to answer for the debt of another to be in writing to support an action is no bar to Bartlett’s suit, because the promise of Lauff, being made to further an object or advantage of Lauff is an original promise upon a sufficient consideration.

These positions require an examination of the language used, and the surrounding circumstances and action of the parties, to discover whether the essential elements of such a contract were present.

If any contract was made, it was complete in the Mann office on October 30, 1930. The testimony of Bartlett, if accepted, establishes that Lauff knew Bartlett asserted a lien, and that Lauff in terms promised to pay him $2,000. This alone is not enough. It is not enough that parties, circumstances, and possible considerations are present at the same time and place, to make a contract. There must be a common definite meeting of intent of two parties, in selecting or accepting from the elements of contract present, those items essential to a complete contract, as their contract.

Assuming that Bartlett’s claim to a right of lien on tangible and intangible property, delivered by him to another, had sufficient color and substance that his waiver of that claim would constitute a consideration for a contract promise by Lauff, what then was Bartlett to do as his part of the contract? Was he to fore-go his claim for lien? Was he to surrender the notes and contract of the Mann Brothers ? Was he to transfer to Lauff the indebtedness of Mann Brothers to him? Was he to do any other thing, or give any other thing, as his part of the supposed agreement?

A feeling of certainty even, in the mind of the observer, that a party in position to contract would surely agree to terms present in the situation disclosed, does not evoke a contract from a plausible situation for contract. The agreement must actually be made by the parties to the alleged contract. It must be shown that those parties selected and concurred in the terms of contract, or no contract exists. There is here no evidence that Bartlett promised, offered, or accepted, in any such way that a contract between him and Lauff is disclosed by the evidence.

The testimony as to the transaction offered on his behalf as the making of a contract is only that Bartlett told Lauff that Bartlett had a lien on the Mann agency for $2,000; that Lauff said he had a draft for $2,000, and would pay it to Bartlett.

Nothing more can be made of Bartlett’s statement to Lauff, under those circumstances, than a notice to Lauff of Bartlett’s claim for lien. Lauff’s reply that he would give Bartlett $2,000 is a mere declaration of intention. If Lauff carried out his declared intention, any lien claim of Bartlett would be extinguished-. If Lauff did not carry out such expressed intention, the lien of Bartlett would still be effective to the extent it had merit as a claim for lien, and Lauff would have notice of the claim.

For the same lack of expression in the language which is alleged to constitute a contract, there is no consideration. Consideration is not injected into a contract by the fact that one or many considerations are available. An agreed consideration must be selected from the possible considerations present, and laid by the parties in its place in the contract, by words or by contract, or there is no consideration in that contract.

Neither language nor action selected a consideration between Bartlett and Lauff on the occasion here under review, which a court can say was the consideration Lauff was to receive.

The principle controlling this discussion is elementary in the law of contract.

“The chief requirement is that the promise shall be sufficiently certain in its terms to enable the court to understand what the promisor undertakes.” Willis-ton, Contracts, sec. 24, par. 29.

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Bluebook (online)
271 Ill. App. 551, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-lauff-illappct-1933.