Buttitta v. Lawrence

260 Ill. App. 94, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1156
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1931
DocketGen. No. 8,350
StatusPublished

This text of 260 Ill. App. 94 (Buttitta v. Lawrence) 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
Buttitta v. Lawrence, 260 Ill. App. 94, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1156 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees, James and Dominick Buttitta as plaintiffs, brought suit against the appellants, Lawrence and White, in an action for fraud and deceit.

The first two counts of the declaration substantially charge that the plaintiffs, the Buttitta brothers, employed the defendant C. F. White to sell or exchange a property on Stoughton Street in Urbana, Illinois, for them; that the defendant White entered into a conspiracy with the defendant G. W. Lawrence to defraud the plaintiffs, and that pursuant thereto the defendants offered to exchange or trade with the plaintiffs for their Stoughton Street property, a vacant lot belonging to the defendant Lawrence, known in the record as the Poplar Street lot, and $1,992.53 worth of notes; that the defendants, Lawrence and White, to induce the plaintiffs to make such exchange, falsely and fraudulently represented and stated to the plaintiffs that the said notes were good and collectible and the makers thereof solvent and responsible; that such statements were false and were known to the defendants to be false, and oh the faith of such statements the plaintiffs, relying thereon, deeded their property to Doris G. Lawrence, a daughter of the defendant Lawrence, and as part of the conspiracy and to lull any suspicions of the plaintiffs, the defendant Lawrence told the plaintiffs he would indorse the notes so that he would be liable upon them; that after Lawrence got the deed to the Stoughton. Street property he gave the notes to the defendant "White to give to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs did not get the notes or see them until after Lawrence had placed his deed of record; that the plaintiffs, being unable to read the notes or to understand their legal effect, thereafter took them to an attorney and then learned for the first time that $586.55 of said notes were outlawed or barred by the statute of limitations, that the remainder of the said notes were worthless and uncollectible, because of the insolvency of the makers, and that all of the notes were worthless and were indorsed without recourse by the defendant Lawrence; that immediately upon learning these facts they went back to the defendant Lawrence and offered to return to him the notes and deed to the Poplar Street lot. Lawrence refused to do this, and the suit was then brought for the loss occasioned by the fraudulent misrepresentations in regard to the value of the notes.

The only plea was a plea of general issue. The case went to the jury upon the issues raised by the first and second counts of the declaration and the plea of not guilty thereto.

The testimony shows that the plaintiffs did not come to this country until after they were 18 years old. They could not read or write English, except to sign their names. They had worked hard since coming to Urbana in 1920 and were engaged in the shoe repairing business in Champaign. They owned their home at 607 West Stoughton Street, Urbana, which is involved in this deal, had bought a lot in the Chamber of Commerce Addition in Champaign and had each bought a lot on which they were building separate houses at the time of this transaction. They had also purchased about four other properties, but had never sold or traded for any property.

The defendant C. F. White was a real estate dealer who had had many other transactions with the defendant Gr. W. Lawrence, who was engaged in the furniture business, selling furniture on instalment payments in the City of Urbana, Illinois.

It is undisputed that the plaintiffs were to trade their Stoughton Street homestead on which the Prudential Insurance Company was placing a $5,000 mortgage at the time of this transaction, subject to said mortgage, for the vacant lot on Poplar Street belonging to Lawrence, and approximately $2,000 worth of notes. The only disputed question of fact in the case was whether Lawrence and White conspired together, and, pursuant to this conspiracy, made fraudulent misrepresentations in regard to these notes.

There was no evidence offered by the defendants in regard to the solvency of any of the makers of the notes, or in regard to the value of the notes, although those facts were placed directly in issue by the pleadings and were facts peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendants, from their long possession of the notes. It is the contention of the plaintiffs that the evidence is ovewhelming and practically undisputed that the notes were worthless.

The facts, as shown by the record, are as follows: James Buttitta testified in substance that some time in July the defendant White was in his office on other business and asked him if he could sell their Stoughton Street property for them. Within a day or two of this time he came back and James Buttitta testifies he said: “I believe I got somebody will trade for the house, with a lot on Poplar Street and $2,000 of good notes.” Jim asked, “What kind of note is it?” and White replied: “It is judgment note and good note, and the lot is worth $2,000 in a good location, in a good place.” White then asked him to look at the lot and told him it was the lot of the defendant Lawrence. They went to talk to Mr. Lawrence about it the next day and again quoting from the record James Buttitta testified: “When we saw Mr. Lawrence I told Mr. Lawrence what the kind of notes it was. He said what kind of notes he wanted to trade is some notes, $2,000 worth of notes, was a bunch of notes, and I told him, what kind of note it is? He said, ‘Boy, it is a good note, that is a customer’s note.’ Jim asked, ‘Can’t you let me see them, look at it?’ He answered, ‘Well, boys, I can’t do it. I don’t want to show the customers I have sold his notes. I can’t do that.’ ” All this occurred prior to August 3, 1927. On that date the plaintiffs testified that White came to James Buttitta alone at the shop with two pieces of paper. White handed the two pieces of paper to Jim to sign, and he told him, “before he signed it if he wanted to know what it was. ’ ’ Jim testified that White read it to him, but he read so fast that he couldn’t understand it, and he asked White to explain it to him and White said: “That is the agreement between you and Mr. Lawrence, you want $9,000 for your house, and Mr. Lawrence is to trade you for lot worth $2,000 and $2,000 worth of notes, and the cost of real estate commission, amounting to $330.” White did not explain to him all the provisions in the written contract. He said nothing about the notes being turned over without recourse. They then went to see Dominick Buttitta, who was laying the brick on his own home on Washington Street. Both Jim and Dominick Buttitta testified that Dominick asked White what the contract was, and that White told him it meant they were trading their property for a lot and $2,000 worth of notes, and that the real estate commission was $330; that White told them that the notes were good, guaranteed notes; that the people had been paying right along and that the notes were absolutely good.

On Cross-examination Dominick Buttitta testified that he asked Mr. White to read the paper to him and then asked Mr. White to tell him what the paper meant; that he didn’t understand the reading and asked him. to explain the paper, and that what White told him “is not compared with that paper at all.”

The matter stood in abeyance at this time because Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
260 Ill. App. 94, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buttitta-v-lawrence-illappct-1931.