Cherry v. Carthage College

62 Ill. 337
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Ill. 337 (Cherry v. Carthage College) 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
Cherry v. Carthage College, 62 Ill. 337 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action brought upon a subscription to the capital stock of Carthage College.

The book of subscription in evidence, showed an agreement for subscription to the capital stock of the college of the number of shares, of $100 each, set after the subscriber’s name, to which appears the appellant’s subscription, in the following form:

“ John W. Cherry, three shares, including two lots, or cash in lieu thereof, at the option of said Cherry.”

We find it necessary to address ourselves to one only of the several questions raised, and that is, whether Cherry has complied with the alternative part of his subscription—to give two lots, as was contemplated in the making of the subscription.

Previous to the subscription, one George AY. Carlton had executed to the locating committee of the college, his instrument in writing, under his hand and seal, whereby he agreed, in consideration of the location of the college where it now stands, to lay off a certain addition to the town of Carthage, and further agreed as follows: “ I further agree to give said college, or to the joint stock company about to be formed for building said college, one-eighth of the lots when laid off, to be selected as follows, to-wit: said Carlton to have choice of the first seven lots wherever he may choose them, and the college company to have choice of the next two lots wherever they may select them, and so on through the whole number of said lots.

“ This agreement is upon the express condition that the said college is permanently located as above stated. The college lots, when laid off, to be appraised and to be considered as subscription of so much stock to the ¿joint stock company, to be equally divided between me and John AY. Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton; and if said Carlton, John AY. Cherry, and Oliver P. Carlton desire to do so, they are to have the privilege of taking the said college, lots at their appraised value.”

This agreement bears date January 8, 1870.

It was in evidence that a committee had been appointed to locate the site of the college, and had selected the ground of the present site, but refused to locate the college upon it unless one-eighth of the lots in Carlton’s proj ected addition were subscribed; and that Geo. AY. Carlton, who owned the land, refused to give the lots demanded of him; whereupon Cherry went to him and made an offer to give him two hundred dollars per acre for an undivided half interest in the land proposed to be laid off into lots, including the streets and alleys and the lots to be given to the college; and Oliver P. Carlton, who was present, expressing a willingness to take a third interest upon the same terms, George AY. Carlton then said that if Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton would purchase and take, each, a third interest, he would accept the terms proposed by the college. A verbal agreement was then made between George AY. Carlton, Cherry, and Oliver P. Carlton, that the former should lay off the land into town lots and give the college every eighth lot; that the two latter Avere to have, each, one-third interest in the land; and pay George W. Carlton therefor at the rate of two hundred dollars per acre for the Avhole piece, including streets, alleys, and the lots going to the college; they were severally to pay one-third of the expense of laying off the lots, one-third of the purchase money Avlien they divided the lots, and the remainder out of the first purchase money arising from' the sale of their share of the lots. Oliver P. Carlton paid something toward the expense of laying off the lots, and nothing more, and, finding himself unable to pay for it, gave up his interest in the land.

Cherry never paid any thing toward the land, and, a short time before February 25, 1871, Carlton repudiated the verbal contract of sale to him.

The addition Avas laid off into forty-eight lots, so that the college became entitled to six. June 4, 1870, the six college lots Avere selected, and Avere appraised August 6, 1870, the appraisement of any two of them exceeding $300; and on the 25th day of February, 1871, they were all sold by the college, either tAvo.of them selling for more than $300.

After the college lots had been selected, the remaining ones Avere divided between George W. Carlton, John W. Cherry, and Oliver P. Carlton, they all being present and acting together in the division, and each one’s name being marked on the lots taken by him, on the plat. George W. Carlton testified that he never Avould have executed the agreement of January 8,1870, or have given the amount of lots named therein, but for the verbal contract made between himself, Cherry, and Oliver P. Carlton; that, by such contract, he Avas, in fact, giving but one-third of the lots named.

It appears, then, in the light of all the attending circumstances, that the agreement of January 8, 1870, of George W. Carlton, to give, Avhat turned out to be six lots, to the college, Avas, in fact, an agreement by him and Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton to give, each, two lots to the college; that the agreement was made in the name of George W. Carlton, as the legal title was in him, but that he should be regarded as the real owner of only one-third of the land and the lots agreed to be given; and that Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton were, each, the owner of one-third thereof, under a verbal contract of purchase; and that, in substance, Carlton’s agreement was to give two lots for himself, as belonging to him, and, as trustee for Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton, to give two lots for each of them, as belonging to them.

Before Cherry made his subscription the addition had been laid off into forty-eight lots, and so it became known that the number of lots to be given for him, under the agreement of January 8, 1870, was two. When, then, he made the subscription in question of two lots, we are of opinion he referred to the two lots he had contracted for, and which had been agreed to be given for him in the name of George W. Carlton by the agreement of January 8, 1870, and that he did not intend to subscribe two lots in addition thereto, and that the subscription was in view of this clause in that agreement:

“The college lots when laid off to be appraised and to be considered as subscription of so much stock to the joint stock company, to be equally divided between me and John W. Cherry and Oliver P. Carlton.”

A further evidence that the subscription was made with reference to the agreement, is the similarity of the option reserved in them. In the agreement it reads: “ If said Carlton, John W. Cherry, and Oliver P. Carlton desire to do so, they are to have the privilege of taking said college lots at their appraised value.” In the subscription it is: “ three shares, including two lots, or cash in lieu thereof, at the option of said Cherry.” And such must be taken to have been the understanding of the appellee, or of those acting in its behalf. The agreement of January 8, 1870, was executed to a locating committee of the college; H. W. "Draper, its treasurer, and who had been connected with the college from the beginning, drew up the agreement, and he had heard from Cherry that he was going to buy, or that he had bought, of Carlton an interest in the land. The college has got all the six lots. We think that is all they are entitled to, from both George W.

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62 Ill. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherry-v-carthage-college-ill-1872.