Cooke v. School Commissioner

6 Ill. 537
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ill. 537 (Cooke v. School Commissioner) 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
Cooke v. School Commissioner, 6 Ill. 537 (Ill. 1844).

Opinion

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Young, J.

This was an action of petition and summons, commenced by the School Commissioner of Jersey county, for the use of the inhabitants of township seven (7) north, of range twelve (12) west, of the third principal meridian, against Joseph Cooke, Thomas M. Hamilton, and Charles W. Carroll, at the April term 1844, of the Jersey Circuit Court, on two several bonds for the payment of money, given by the appellants to Joseph Crabb, School Commissioner, &c., for the sum of one hundred, six dollars and sixty six cents each, dated the 17th day of July, 1841, and payable respectively in one and two years after date, with twelve per cent, interest from due until paid.

To this action, the defendants below filed two special pleas, to the first of which there was a demurrer and joinder, and the demurrer sustained by the Court. The second plea was in substance, that the bonds sued upon were executed to the plaintiff below, in consideration of the sale of forty acres of land to the defendants below, being part of section sixteen (16), in township seven (7) north, of range twelve (12) west, of the third principal meridian, designated on the map of said section by the appellee, and trustees of said township, as number fifteen (15); that when the appellants purchased said land, the appellee represented, that on said forty acres of land so sold, and also upon another forty acres in said section number sixteen (16), and which was designated by the appellee and said trustees as number eleven (11), there were mill sites; that the appellee designated, marked and located mill sites on each of said pieces of land, and represented to the appellants, that there were good mill sites upon each of said pieces of land, and that the value thereof was greatly increased thereby. The appellants then aver, that the representations of the appellee as to said mill sites were false and fraudulent; that at the time the appellee made said representations, and induced the appellants to purchase the forty acres of land, designated as number fifteen (15) on the map, he well knew there was no mill site on said lot, and that said lot was of little value for any other purpose; that said fraudulent representations were made to induce the appellants to purchase said land, and to sign the bonds therefor; that they purchased said forty acres of land at the price of eight dollars per acre, in consequence of such representations for the purpose of erecting a mill thereon; that said defendants would not have purchased said land at any price whatever, if they had not been induced to believe from the representations of the appellee, and designations on the plat, by which the appellee sold said land to the appellants, that there was a good mill site thereon; that said land at the time it was sold to them, on the 17th day of July, 1841, was not worth the sum of fifty dollars; that the appellants purchased said land, without making any examination of the same, and without having any knowledge of the alleged value, or peculiar advantages thereof, except from the representations of the appellee; and that through said fraudulent representations, the appellee induced the appellants to execute the bonds in the petition mentioned, &c.

To this plea the appellee, by his counsel, filed a replication admitting that the bonds sued upon were given in consideration of the forty acres of land mentioned in the said second plea, but denying that either he or the said trustees made any such false and fraudulent representations in respect to said mill site, as are averred by the appellants, &c.; upon which last plea and replication issue was joined to the country, and the cause submitted to a jury for trial, who found a verdict for the appellants. A motion was then made for a new trial, and sustained by the Court.

At the September term of the Court, 1844, leave was given to the appellee to withdraw his replication to the appellants’ second plea, and to file a demurrer thereto, to which there was a joinder by the appellants; whereupon the Court gave judgment in favor of the demurrer, and the appellants failing to answer further, it was also adjudged that the appellee recover of the appellants two hundred, thirteen dollars and thirty two cents debt, and forty two dollars and sixty six cents damages, and costs of suit. From this judgment the appellants appealed to this Court.

The only error assigned is, that the Circuit Court erred in sustaining the appellee’s demurrer to the second plea of the appellants. The demurrer admits the facts as set forth in the plea, and the question is, whether they constitute a good defence to the action.

It is provided by the several Acts relative to the sale of school lands, that whenever three fourths of the legal voters of the township shall petition the school commissioner to sell the school lands in the township, the trustees shall proceed, previous to the lands being offered for sale, to value each half quarter, or other smaller subdivision, and shall make out a map of the said school lands, with the several tracts marked and numbered thereon, with a certified statement of the valuation per acre of each particular tract, and the number of acres contained therein, assuming six hundred and forty acres for the contents of the section; which map and valuation shall be filed with the commissioner appointed for selling the land, who shall record the same in a book to be kept by him for that purpose. When the school commissioner shall receive the map and valuation made by the trustees, he shall proceed to sell the same in tracts, as designated on the map filed by the trustees; and no tract shall be sold unless the bid shall amount to the valuation thereof as certified by the trustees, &c. The commissioner is further required to advertise the land for sale, by giving at least forty days’ notice of the time and place of selling the same, by posting up notices in six of the most public places in the county, and also by publication in some newspaper nearest to the land; and to sell said lands at public vendue, at the seat of justice of the county in which the land shall lie, and during the sitting of the Circuit Court, &c.

The appellants aver by their second plea, that they were induced by the false and fraudulent representations of the appellee, to purchase the forty acres of land mentioned in that plea, under the above recited provisions of the law; and insist that such misrepresentations, in regard to the supposed mill site upon the land, is a good bar to the action. They contend that the inhabitants of the township are responsible for the false representations of the school commissioner as their agent; that the facts, if true, as stated in their plea, will vitiate the contract; and that consequently no recovery can be had upon the bonds which were executed by them, in payment for the land.

The doctrine, that a power to make representations is implied from the nature of a general agency, seems to have grown out of mercantile transactions, where there are many strong reasons for holding the principal liable for the frauds of his agent. But all powers must be construed with a view to the design and object of them, and the means most proper and usual for carrying their design and object into effect.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ill. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-school-commissioner-ill-1844.