Condit v. Dady

56 Ill. App. 545, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 782
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 Ill. App. 545 (Condit v. Dady) 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
Condit v. Dady, 56 Ill. App. 545, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 782 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinions

He. Justice Harker

delivered the opinion oe the Court.

Appellant instituted a suit in the Circuit Court of Lake County against appellee to recover damages for breach of an alleged contract wherein appellee agreed to sell and convey to appellant 160 acres of land.

After the filing of the declaration appellee presented a bill in equity to enjoin the prosecution of the suit and have the contract declared void.

A temporary injunction restraining a prosecution of the suit at law was granted, and upon a hearing the Circuit Court rendered a decree making the injunction perpetual and setting aside the contract as null and void.

The evidence in the case is very voluminous. Huch of it is utterly irreconcilable. We have examined it carefully' and out of the great volume and many conflicts find the facts to be as follows:

In December, 1890, appellant began negotiations with appellee, an extensive farmer and land owner near Waukegan, Ill., for the 160 acres of land in question.

There were at the time rumors that a large manufacturing concern, The Washburn and Hoen Hfg. Co., contemplated the removal of its plant to Waukegan. The effect of these rumors was to excite matters pertaining to real estate, as the location of the plant would enhance the value of lands in the vicinity. Both parties were fully advised of these rumors. Several interviews were had between them, but no definite agreement was reached, appellant not being willing to pay the fifty dollars per acre asked by appellee. On the 14th of January, 1891, however, appellant having concluded to purchase, sought appellee at his house, and learning there that he had gone to Milwaukee went to that place; finding appellee there, negotiations were renewed which resulted in the execution of the following contract:

In consideration of the sum of one dollar, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, to me in hand paid by James M. Condit, I, Eobert Dady, agree to sell to James M. Condit, his heirs or assigns, 160 acres of land, located in section 32, Lake Co., Illinois, being the northwest quarter-section, known as the Jack Dugdale farm, at the sum of $50 per acre, on the following terms: $500 cash when I furnish an abstract showing a good and sufficient title; $3,000 on or before August 1, 1891; one-fourth of the balance on or before August 1, 1894; one-fourth on or before August 1, 1897; one-fourth on or before August 1, 1900; one-fourth on or before August 1, 1903, with interest on deferred payments at six per cent per annum, payable semiannually. Upon payment of the $3,000 on or before August 1, 1891, I agree to give a warranty deed to the above described property, taking a mortgage on same for deferred payment. But in case of failure on the part of J. M. Condit to make said payment of $3,000 I agree to accept $500 additional as liquidation of all damages to myself.

In consideration of which I, James M. Condit, agree to purchase the above described property on the terms above mentioned. And in case of failure to make payment of $3,000 on or before August 1, 1891,1 agree to pay to Eobert Dady, his heirs or assigns, $500 additional, in liquidation of damages.

E. Dady,

James M. Condit.

Milwaukee, January 14, ’91.

Appellee is an illiterate man and is unable to write except to sign his name. The contract was written by appellant but, as we believe, was correctly read over to appellee before signing, and was fully understood by him.

After it was signed it was, by agreement of the parties, put in a sealed envelope and mailed to Charles Whiting, an attorney at Waukegan, with the following instruction inclorsed on the outside of the envelope: “Hot to be opened until E. Dady and J. M. Condit call. Put in your safe.”

At the same time appellee dictated a letter which appellant wrote to appellee’s daughter apprising her that he had sold the land for $150 per acre, and directing her to take the abstract of title which he held to a Mr. Jones, an abstract maker, have it brought down to date and, when finished, deliver to appellant or Messrs. Whiting & Upton.

Appellee then departed on the business engaging him, 'buying stock, to Mansion, Wis., and appellant returned to Waukegan. On his arrival at Muston, appellee received a letter from his daughter, stating she had heard that several farmers in the neighborhood had sold their farms for $3C0 per acre and that the manufacturing plant was to be located at Waukegan. Appellee immediately returned and had his wife, who had taken the abstract to Jones to be carried down to date, procure its return.

A few days after the abstract was returned to Mrs. Dady appellant called at Jones’ office to learn if the abstract was ready for him, and, learning that Mrs. Dady had taken it away, ordered a new one for himself. Finding the title satisfactory, he wrote appellee that he was ready to carry out the agreement and requested a meeting at Whiting & Upton’s office for that purpose. Deceiving no reply, he in a few days went to appellee’s farm and made him a tender of the $500 cash payment, which was refused. On the 30th of July, 1891, he made a tender of $3,500, with notes and mortgage to secure deferred payments, drawn in accordance with the contract and demanded an execution of a deed.

Appellee refused the tender, refused to execute a deed, accused appellant of cheating him, and declined to have any thing further to do with the matter.

A suit for breach of the contract followed, and pending the same, about two years afterward, this suit to enjoin it was commenced.

Two grounds are set up in the bill on which complainant bases his right to relief: First, that the contract was ob-tamed by fraud; second, that the contract was never delivered.

It is claimed that appellant fraudulently obtained the contract by withholding information that the Washburn & Moen Mfg. Oo. had decided to locate at Waukegan when he was in good conscience bound to communicate it, by false representations in that matter, made in the interview at Milwaukee, and by drawing a different contract from the one agreed upon and misreading it.

At the time the contract was made appellee knew the location of the manufacturing plant at Waukegan had been talked of for months. He knew the effect which the location would have on the value of his lands.

Even if appellant possessed the information which the bill charges he had, it is doubtful whether appellee is in a position to ask the contract to be annulled because appellant failed to communicate such information. But we fail to discover any evidence in the case showing that appellant possessed the information.

He expressly denies that he had any further information than the rumors which were in circulation and known by the public generally. Indeed, the first reliable and certain information upon the subject came when a mortgage was sent to Waukegan for record on the 16th day of January, 1891, two days after the signing of the contract at Milwaukee.

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Related

Dady v. Condit
104 Ill. App. 507 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)
Dady v. Condit
45 N.E. 224 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ill. App. 545, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condit-v-dady-illappct-1894.