Clark v. Jackson

78 N.E. 6, 222 Ill. 13
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 6 (Clark v. Jackson) 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
Clark v. Jackson, 78 N.E. 6, 222 Ill. 13 (Ill. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

On March 5, 1903, the appellant, Leonard J. Clark, and the appellee Jefferson Jackson, entered into a contract in writing and under seal, whereby Jackson agreed to convey to Clark a certain apartment building in Chicago, Illinois, and Clark agreed to give Jackson his promissory notes for $70,000, payable in the manner stated in the contract and secured by a mortgage on the apartment building, and to transfer or cause to be transferred to Jackson 4820 shares of the capital stock of the Attica Lithia Springs Company, a corporation of Attica, Indiana, said corporation to be, at the time of the transfer, the owner in fee simple of the property known as the Attica Lithia Springs Hotel, located at Attica, Indiana, including about seven acres of ground, with the improvements thereon, subject only to an encumbrance of $10,000 which Jackson was to-assume or guarantee, and Clark further agreed to convey to Jackson all furniture, fixtures and other personal property in and pertaining to said hotel. The contract expressly provided that all deeds were to be passed and the negotiation to be closed within ten days from the date of the contract, unless more time should be required by reason of defects of title, in which case thirty days from the date of the contract should be allowed for closing the transaction; that time was of the essence, and that “it is hereby further mutually agreed and understood by and between the parties hereto, and as part of the consideration of this agreement, that each party hereto is to provide for the use of the other, within ten days from the date hereof, proper abstracts of title to the property hereby agreed by them to be conveyed or caused to be conveyed, showing good and sufficient title to the same in the grantor herein mentioned.”

The contract also provides that Clark shall furnish Jackson satisfactory evidence of the title to the Attica Lithia Springs Hotel property, and that all the interest on the note of the Attica Lithia Springs Company for $10,000, which is the encumbrance above referred to, shall be paid in full by Clark to the date of the contract, thus leaving Jackson to assume the payment of the principal, only.

It seems that Clark had been conducting the hotel in question, and that upon the execution of the contract he surrendered possession thereof to Jackson and took possession of the Chicago property.

Clark furnished Jackson an abstract of the title to the Attica Lithia Springs Hotel realty, but the same was rejected as failing to show such title as the contract required. After some attempts on the part of Clark to remedy the defect, which were deemed abortive by Jackson’s attorney, Clark, on April 3, 1903, undertook to make a tender of performance, and a few days afterwards, on April 8, filed a bill for specific performance against Jackson and his wife in the circuit court of Cook county. After Mrs. Jackson had answered the bill denying that the contract was binding upon her for the reason that she did not sign it, the complainant dismissed the bill as to her. Jackson answered the bill putting in issue the matters discussed in this opinion, and filed a cross-bill praying for an accóunting as to the rental value of the Chicago property so far as- occupied by Clark, and asking for a decree against Clark for that property and that he be directed to vacate the premises. Clark answered the cross-bill and replications were filed. The cause was thereupon referred to the master in chancery, who reported that a decree of specific performance should be granted; but the chancellor sustained exceptions to.the master’s report as to the two points herein discussed and dismissed the original bill for want of equity, at the same time granting the relief prayed for in the cross-bill, and Clark appealed.

The chancellor based the decree upon two propositions: That the abstract furnished by Clark to Jackson was not a sufficient compliance with the terms of the contract, and that there was no sufficient offer to pay the interest on the said encumbrance of $10,000, or tender of any definite or certain arrangement for the satisfaction thereof. While it is true that it is the decree which is brought under review by this appeal, and not the reasons upon which the same was based by the chancellor, yet it is proper to consider these reasons first, since they are most important questions, either of them, if decided adversely to Clark, necessitating the dismissal of his bill of complaint.

First—The abstract of title to the Attica Lithia Springs Hotel property furnished Jackson by Clark in March, 1903, pursuant to the requirements of the contract, showed title in John Carnagey prior to February 18, 1850, and showed a quit-claim deed of that date for lands including the premises in question, running to John Carnagey, Jr., as grantee, from a number of grantors, bearing the names of Barkley, Stewart, Evans, Higbee and Carnagey, respectively. Henry SShedd, Jackson’s attorney, examined the abstract, and specified numerous objections thereto, among them, that it did not appear that the grantors in the deed to John Carnagey, Jr., were the only heirs-at-law of John Carnagey, the grantee in the preceding deed. On March 24 Charles R. Milford, of Attica, Clark’s attorney, wrote to H. W. Sisson, who represented the firm of H. O. Stone & Co., of Chicago, through whom Clark was endeavoring to perfect arrangements to enable him to comply with the contract, and stated, concerning the break in the title in question, that he could not show this matter satisfactorily; that he believed he could clear it up in part, but perhaps not entirely to the satisfaction of the attorneys; that a suit to quiet title might be necessary; that he had a man hunting up a person whom he thought to be a Carnagey heir, and that he might be able, if he found the man, to fix this matter to the satisfaction of Jackson’s attorneys, and that he was very much surprised to find the title in this condition. Afterwards an affidavit of Homer Sewell, made on March 25, was offered as connecting the two conveyances by showing heirship, but the affidavit expressly disavowed personal knowledge of the facts by the affiant and the same was rejected by Jackson’s attorney. After-wards another affidavit was presented, made by Gilbert Carnagey, a man seventy-five years of age, who signed his name with a cross and claimed he was one of the heirs of John Carnagey, and who stated in his affidavit that certain grantors in the deed to John Carnagey, Jr., were the sole and only heirs-at-law of John Carnagey, deceased. This affidavit, which was presented on April 3, was also rejected as insufficient. There was some conversation concerning a bill to quiet title and the extension of the time for the performance of the contract in order that the title might be quieted, Jackson’s attorney saying that he had no authority in the premises but would speak to Jackson on the subject. Afterwards, and on the same day, Clark made a tender of certain papers intended to show an offer to perform the contract on his part. The time for the performance of the contract expired on April 4 and the bill of complaint in this cause was filed on April 8.

There can be no doubt that the abstract furnished by Clark to Jackson, as first presented, without any proof that the persons who conveyed as the heirs of John Carnagey were in fact his only heirs, did not show satisfactory title to the Attica Lithia Springs Hotel property.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 6, 222 Ill. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-jackson-ill-1906.