Birks v. Gillett

13 Ill. App. 369
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 Ill. App. 369 (Birks v. Gillett) 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
Birks v. Gillett, 13 Ill. App. 369 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

McCulloch, P. J.

This was a suit in assumpsit brought by appellant against appellee, to recover a sum of money alleged to have become due under the following circumstances: Appellee was the owner of certain lands which appellant was desirous of purchasing. But one quarter section of it was subject to a life estate in one Jemima Gillett, as dowress of a former owner. Before appellant would make the purchase, it became necessary to acquire this life estate for his use, so that he could have the immediate possession of the whole. The evidence tends to show that appellee told appellant to go and see if he could purchase from Mrs. Gillett her interest in the land promising at the same time if he succeeded, he (appellee) would pay four hundred dollars therefor during her life. Appellant went to see her, but she refused to take any less sum than five hundred dollars per annum. Upon his reporting this fact to appellee, the latter replied he would not give more than four hundred. Appellant then told appellee that he would pay the other one hundred dollars himself, to which ap" pellee assented. Appellant thereupon procured a life lease from Mrs. Gillett for her dower interest in the land upon the condition that appellant should pay her five hundred dollars per year, and also pay all taxes upon the land, with a clause of forfeiture in case of non-payment.

Appellee then made a deed to appellant for all the land in question, which deed contained covenants of general warranty as to all the lands except that portion covered by the life estate of Mrs. Gillett, but it was to operate only as a quit claim as to. that.

The consideration to be paid by appellant was to be $11,-850, which was embraced in two promissory notes, so called, one for $7,850, which has been paid, and about which there-is no controversy, the other one for $4,000, which has also been paid.

It is claimed that at the time of the execution of these notes- and of the deed for the land, it was further agreed that appellee was to pay appellant the sum of $400 per year, toward the payment of what was coming to Mrs. Gillett annually for her dower interest in the land. To accomplish this purpose it was, as is alleged, agreed that the note for $4,000 should be made so that appellant need not pay the money during, the life-time of the dowress, but should have the use of it without interest in lieu of the cash payment of $400 per annum Accordingly the note was made in the following form: “ On or before December 25th, 1885,1 promise to pay to John D. Gillett or order, four thousand dollars, with ten per cent, interest from the death of Jemima Gillett, and the note not to be due until the death of said Jemima Gillett, widow of John Gillett. This Dec. 25, 1875.”

By the terms of this note, the money was not to become due until ten years after its date, and not then if Jemima Gillett should then be alive. But from the date of her death, if that event should take place within the ten years, the note was to draw interest at ten per cent, per annum. But by its terms appellant had the privilege of paying it off at any time after, it was made. The only other paper made, between appellant and appellee, was a mortgage made by appellant to appellee to secure the payment of these two notes, which mortgage has been released upon the record. ¡Now if these papers, to wit, the deed, the two notes and the mortgage, are to be taken as the only evidence of the contract between the parties, it lias been fully executed, and appellant has no right of recovery against appellee.

But appellant testified on the trial that at the time the notes were made appellee promised to pay him four hundred dollars a year after he had paid the note off, if he paid it; that the note was made in the manner in "which it was made, to avoid payment backward and forward of the rent or dower money; that appellee wanted it written in the note “ten years after date;” and then the witness proceeds as follows: “That then I put it in, on or before, and he says you can pay on it when yon please if the note is drawn in that way, then, as soon as you pay it off, I will pay the four hundred dollars a year. That was the reason the notes were made payable on or before a given date.”

After the appellant had introduced this evidence and the papers aforesaid, defendant moved the court to exclude all the evidence from the jury; which motion the court sustained. Then followed a verdict for appellee and a motion for a new trial, which the court overruled and rendered judgment upon the verdict. To all of these rulings exceptions were taken in apt time by appellant, who now assigns them as grounds of reversal by this court.

It is needless to say that the papers introduced in evidence must speak for themselves, or, if their terms were at all ambiguous, we might be assisted in giving them the proper interpretation by the acts of the parties while executing the contract. It is contended the note in question does not bear the construction we have given it above, but that appellant had no right to pay it off before the death of J"em ima Gillett. Our construction of the note is not only that which appears to us to be the most reasonable, but it is also that upon which both parties thereto acted, appellant by paying the money and appellee by receiving it, before the death of Mrs. Gillett.

It is also contended that appellant has failed to show a compliance, on his part, with the terms of the contract to which he testified, in that he only procured a lease of the life estate, when, in fact, he was to purchase it. As this was only a preliminary arrangement to the final consummation of the bargain, it is enough to say that after appellant had procured the lease, appellee went on and completed the transaction by making a deed for the land, and accepting appellant’s notes for the consideration. If any contract was made between appellant and appellee in relation to the payment of the four hundred dollars per annum, after he should have paid off the notes, such contract was undoubtedly made about the time the notes were given. Knowing, as he must have done, that appellant.had procured only a lease for the dower interest instead of a deed, he can not well insist that appellant has not done as he agreed to do. But this seems to be an immaterial point, as the real consideration for appellee’s promise, if any such was made, was his inability to make a perfect title to the land, by reason of the incumbrance of this life estate, against which.he did not warrant. It was of little consequence to him whether appellant got a.deed or only a lease of the life estate, inasmuch as he had not warranted against it, but in lieu of a perfect title thereto, he had agreed to pay appellant four hundred dollars per year, so long as the dowress lived.

As counsel for appellee do not insist upon the Statute of Frauds, in defense of their client’s interests, it is wholly unnecessary for us to discuss that question at length. The deed from appellee to appellant was a good contract of conveyance, and our statute dispenses with the necessity of setting forth in the writing what the consideration was, but that may be proved by parol. R. S. Ch. 59, Sec. 3. It is true that if the consideration was something which the statute would in any event require to be in writing, as when lands are exchanged by deed, then the consideration must be expressed in writing.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ill. App. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birks-v-gillett-illappct-1883.