Continental Paper Grading Co. v. FISHER, ETC.

120 N.E.2d 577, 3 Ill. App. 2d 118
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 1954
DocketGen. 46,314
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 N.E.2d 577 (Continental Paper Grading Co. v. FISHER, ETC.) 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
Continental Paper Grading Co. v. FISHER, ETC., 120 N.E.2d 577, 3 Ill. App. 2d 118 (Ill. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

Continental Paper Grading Company, a corporation, filed a complaint against Howard T. Fisher & Associates, Inc. (hereinafter called the defendant) and Edwin H. Mittelbusher for a judgment declaring the rights of the parties under a written agreement made on April 9, 1948, and the determination of their rights thereunder involving the construction and application of the Illinois Architectural Act [Ill. Rev. Stats. 1953, ch. 10½, § 1 et seq.; Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 6.01 et seq.]. Defendant answered and filed a counterclaim for damages against plaintiff and Mittelbusher. They filed answers to the counterclaim and Mittelbusher filed a counterclaim against defendant. By subsequent amendment to the answer defendant alleged that the Illinois Architectural Act is unconstitutional. The trial of the issues between the corporations, without a jury, lasted six weeks. The trial judge gave a written opinion and directed that it be included in any report of proceedings. He analyzed the evidence, made findings of fact and held that the agreement constituted a violation of the Architectural Act and that none of the parties had any rights thereunder. The court made findings and judgments for the plaintiff and against the defendant on the complaint and for the counter-defendant and against the counterclaimant on Count 1 of its counterclaim. Defendant prosecuted a direct appeal to the Supreme Court on the theory that a constitutional question was involved. The court held that the record disclosed that any question in regard to the construction of the Constitution was waived by the defendant and transferred the cause. (1 Ill.2d 37.) Mittelbusher is not a party to the appeal.

At all pertinent times Mittelbusher and Fisher, president of defendant, were registered architects under the Act. The contract of April 7,1948 contemplated architectural services by the defendant in the construction of a building for plaintiff in Chicago. Mittelbusher was one of several registered architects associated with defendant in the practice of architecture. On June 18, 1948 Mittelbusher resigned as vice president of defendant and severed his connection with it. Thereafter Mittelbusher and defendant performed various services for plaintiff in carrying out the April contract. Defendant submitted several bills for architectural services to plaintiff, some of which were paid. A contract dated June 18, 1948 between Mittelbusher and defendant and accepted on August 17, 1948, provided that Mittelbusher would continue to perform for defendant the remaining architectural services required to be performed by defendant for the plaintiff under the April 1948 contract. Under the August 1948 contract Mittelbusher agreed to render all services in substantially the same manner as theretofore but subject to defendant’s direction and approval, and that he, Mittelbusher, would act as an independent contractor and associate architect. The contract of August 1948 also stated: “In rendering your [Mittelbusher] said future services to our corporation [defendant], you agree to take the major responsibility for directing the remaining work required of our corporation relative to the completion of said projects [plaintiff’s project and others].” The August 1948 contract also provided that Mittelbusher would not compete with defendant for approximately six months from August 17, 1948, by rendering any architectural services directly to any of defendant’s clients other than those on an attached list, and he also agreed not to seek, accept or perforin any work or render any service directly to plaintiff described in the April 1948 contract until the expiration of a six months’ period following substantial completion of the project covered by that agreement and until full payment had been made therefor to defendant, or until the expiration of one year from completion.

Plaintiff maintains that since the testimony and plans are not preserved in the record on appeal we are obliged to presume that the evidence was sufficient to justify the finding and judgment that the transaction was in violation of the Illinois Architectural Act. We are called upon to pass on issues of law determinable from the record before us. Supreme Court Rule 36 contemplates that in some cases taking up the entire record by appellant is unnecessary! Where the record on appeal contains sufficient facts to try the questions of law raised by the appeal, the record is sufficient. Brown v. Schintz, 202 Ill. 509; City of Staunton v. Bond, 281 Ill. 568; Lawn View Building Corp. v. Weinstock, 288 Ill. App. 320; Daubach v. Drake Hotel Co., 243 Ill. App. 298; Carlyle v. Bartels, 245 Ill. App. 153.

The trial court held and plaintiff maintains that the April agreement is in violation of the Architectural Act and therefore illegal and void. The court’s view was that since Howard T. Fisher was the chief executive officer of defendant and the evidence established that the parties contemplated that Mittelbusher was to have the sole responsibility for the performance of the architectural services to be done by defendant, and the services were performed exclusively by Mittelbusher and not under the personal supervision and direction of Howard T. Fisher, defendant’s chief executive officer, the contract contemplated the performance of the architectural services by the defendant in an illegal manner and against public policy and was therefore void and that no rights or obligations were created thereunder, leaving the parties as the court found them, with no rights or obligations by either against the other in the contract or for recovery for the work done or moneys paid under the contract, and declaring that to the extent it was executory it had no effect. Plaintiff asserts that after the resignation on June 18, 1948 of Mittelbusher as an officer of defendant, it became impossible for defendant to utilize the plans theretofore prepared by Mittelbusher without being in express violation of the statute, although he continued to perform Ms architectural services for plaintiff thereafter without any official capacity with defendant and without any supervision by defendant’s cMef executive officer. Plaintiff states that section 3 of the Illinois Architectural Act [Ill. Rev. Stats. 1953, eh. 10½, § 3; Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 6.03] makes it lawful for corporations to prepare only plans and drawings for buildings and structures to be constructed or whose construction is to be supervised by it, if its chief executive officer is a registered architect, and the plans for such building or structure were prepared by him or under Ms supervision and bear his official seal, and the “supervision of the building is actually supervised by such officer.” The trial court found that it was contemplated in the agreement and by the acts of the parties that someone other than the chief executive officer of defendant was to perform his personal statutory duties, and that the April contract was illegal and void.

Plaintiff’s theory had originally been that it had been contemplated that the architectural services contracted for were to be performed by Mittelbusher himself and no others, he being the only person connected with defendant who was known to plaintiff’s officers. Plaintiff says that the evidence is clear that the plans and drawings were prepared by Mittelbusher and submitted to plaintiff prior to June 18, 1948. On June 18, 1948 Mittelbusher resigned as an employee of defendant and thereafter practiced architecture independently in his own separate office.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E.2d 577, 3 Ill. App. 2d 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-paper-grading-co-v-fisher-etc-illappct-1954.