Bentley v. Ross

95 N.E. 182, 250 Ill. 182
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 N.E. 182 (Bentley v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bentley v. Ross, 95 N.E. 182, 250 Ill. 182 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

This suit was. originally begun in the circuit court of Cook county by the filing of a bill for an injunction by John Bentley, the defendant in error, against the city of Chicago and certain of its officers, and William J. Ross and J. J. Ross, as partners, doing business under the firm name of Ross & Ross, to restrain the city and its said officers from paying, and Ross & Ross from collecting or receiving, any money in settlement of a certain suit then pending in said circuit court wherein William J. Ross and J. J. Ross, partners as aforesaid, were plaintiffs and the city of Chicago was defendant. A temporary injunction was issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and thereafter the bill was amended so as to include a prayer for an accounting and for a decree requiring the city of Chicago to pay to Bentley the amount found to be due him upon such accounting. Subsequently an amended and supplemental bill was filed, which substantially sets forth the facts claimed by Bentley to have been established upon the hearing of the cause. This amended and supplemental bill alleged that in May, 1897, the firm of Ross & Ross, being then engaged in the construction of a certain water tunnel under a contract with the city of Chicago, employed Bentley as superintendent of the work and agreed to pay him for his services a monthly salary of $150, and to give him, in addition thereto, one-third of the net profits derived from the construction of the water tunnel under the contract with the city; that Bentley continued as such superintendent under that agreement until some time in January, 1898, when the city declared a forfeiture of the contract and took possession of the water tunnel; that thereafter Ross & Ross brought an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Cook county against the city to recover the amount claimed to be due them under the contract for work, labor and services rendered and materials furnished in the construction 'of the water tunnel, which suit was placed on the'court docket as No. 180,302; that when the original bill - was filed herein a verdict had been rendered in that suit against the city and in favor of Ross & Ross for $35,000 and a motion for a new trial was pending, but the parties to the suit had then agreed upon a settlement thereof; that after-wards, in accordance with the terms of such settlement, the motion for a new trial was withdrawn and judgment was rendered upon the verdict against the city and in favor of Ross & Ross for $35,000; that under the terms of his employment as superintendent Bentley had a one-third interest in the claim which was the subject matter of the suit docketed as No. 180,302, but that the agreement under which his interest was acquired had not, up to November 11, 1901, been reduced to writing; that during the forepart of November, 1901, and while the trial of said cause was in progress, Bentley became dissatisfied because the evidence of his interest in said claim and suit rested only in parol, and requested Ross & Ross to assign or transfer to him, in writing, his interest in the claim involved in the suit then on trial, and that thereupon Ross & Ross executed and delivered to him the following written assignment:

“This memorandum of agreement, made this nth day of November, A. D. 1901, between William J. Ross and J. J. Ross, composing the firm of Ross & Ross, contractors, of the city of Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, and John Bentley of the same place, witnesseth:
“Whereas, said Ross & Ross are the owners and holders of a claim against the city of Chicago for damages under a contract between said Ross & Ross and said city for the construction of the Sixty-eighth street water tunnel, which said claim now in suit pending in the circuit court of Cook county, wherein said Ross & Ross are plaintiffs and the said city of Chicago is defendant, being case General No. 180,301.
“Now, therefore, the said Ross & Ross, for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar and other good and valuable consideration by them, the said Ross & Ross, received of and from the said Bentley, have assigned, transferred and set over, and do hereby assign, transfer and set over, to said Bentley one-third of their said claim in said suit and one-third of any final judgment which may be entered in their favor in said suit and one-third of any settlement or compromise of said claim, meaning and intending hereby that after payment of ‘all court costs, attorney’s and stenographer’s fees and expert witness’ fees, also printing of briefs and other necessary expenses and obligations, deducting the same from the amount of the final judgment in said suit or settlement thereof, one-third of the balance remaining shall belong to and be the property of said Bentley, and he may receive and recover the same by suit or otherwise.
“Witness the hands and seals of the parties the day and year first above written. Ross & Ross;
By W. J. Ross.
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day of November (Seal)1901. Ellsworth J. Walton, Notary Public.”

The bill further alleged that when this assignment was made there was also pending in said circuit court a suit in t-rover, the docket number of which was 180,301, wherein Ross & Ross sought to recover from the city the value of certain machinery, tools and materials which it was claimed the city had converted to its use when it took possession of the water tunnel, and in which a judgment for $5000 -against the city was thereafter rendered by agreement of the parties; that Bentley had no interest in this claim’ or suit; that the scrivener by whom the above assignment was drawn, through inadvertence or mistake, inserted in said instrument the number of the trover suit against the city, whereas it was intended by the parties to the assignment that it should relate to the suit in assumpsit; that Ross & Ross are insolvent and financially irresponsible; that they have refused to give Bentley an order on the city comptroller for the amount due him under said assignment and now fraudulently pretend that' Bentley has no interest in the judgment for $35,000, but that his interest, if any, under the said assignment is in the judgment for $5000 which was rendered in the trover suit. The prayer of the amended and supplemental bill is, that the said error or mistake in the assignment be corrected and the instrument reformed so as to truly describe the suit intended by the parties to be therein described; that an accounting be had of the amount due Bentley under the assignment as reformed and corrected; that the city of Chicago be ordered and directed to pay Bentley the amount found due him upon such accounting, and for general relief.

Upon the hearing before the master it developed that J. J. Ross, who was formerly a member of the firm of Ross & Ross, had been dead for a number of years, but that William J. Ross, the surviving partner, had continued to transact business under the firm name, and that the contracts and suits between the city of Chicago and Ross & Ross were really contracts and suits between the city and William J. Ross. .The contention of William J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.E. 182, 250 Ill. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bentley-v-ross-ill-1911.