Dady v. Condit

45 N.E. 224, 163 Ill. 511
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 224 (Dady v. Condit) 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
Dady v. Condit, 45 N.E. 224, 163 Ill. 511 (Ill. 1896).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

On the 14th of January, 1891, the parties to this litigation entered into 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, Robert Dady, agree to sell to James M. Condit, his heirs or assigns, 160 acres of land located in section 32, Lake county, Illinois, being the north-west quarter section, known as the Jack Dugdale farm, at the sum of $150 per acre, on the following terms: $500 cash when I furnish an abstract showing a good and sufficient title, $3000 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 semi-annually. Upon payment of the $3000 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 payments. But in case of failure on the part of J. M. Condit to make said payment of $30001 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 $3000 on or before August 1, 1891, I agree to pay to Robert Dady, his heirs or assigns, $500 additional in liquidation of damages.
Milwaukee, January 14. 1891.
R. Dady
James M. Condit.”

Subsequently Dady refused to perform the agreement and Condit brought his action for damages. Thereupon Dady filed this bill to enjoin the action at law and to set aside the alleged agreement for fraud and because it was never delivered. The circuit court found in favor of the complainant and decreed accordingly. The Appellate Court for the Second District reversed that decree without remanding the cause, and appellant, Dady, prosecutes this appeal.

On the former submission of the cause we affirmed the judgment of the Appellate Court, adopting its opinion, which is reported in 56 Ill. App. 545. Subsequently a rehearing was granted on the petition of appellant, and the cause again taken under advisement. Appellee having replied to the petition for rehearing, we have re-examined the evidence in the light of arguments and reach the same conclusion announced in our former opinion. We still concur in the reasoning and conclusion announced in the opinion of Harker, J., above referred to, but in order to avoid repetition will briefly state, in our own language, those views.

The relief prayed in the bill is based upon two theories therein alleged: First, that the agreement was procured through fraud on the part of Condit, by making false representations and concealing certain facts; and second, that the contract was never consummated by delivery thereof. It appears from the evidence that prior to and at the time of the execution of this agreement there was a rumor in Waukegan and vicinity that the Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Company might locate its plant-at that place, and the result of that rumor was to produce activity in the sale of, or rather in the obtaining of options upon, real estate in that locality. Conversations between these parties in the months of November and December prior to the making of the contract bad been had but no definite agreement reached. A day or two prior to January 14 Dady went to Milwaukee for the purpose of purchasing cattle. On the morning of that day Condit called at his house, near Waukegan, as he says for the purpose of further negotiating with him about the land described in the contract. Learning his whereabouts he immediately went to Milwaukee, where the contract was entered into. Dady claims, and the allegations of his bill as to fraud are based upon this claim, that upon his inquiry Condit informed him that there was no stir in real estate in the vicinity of Waukegan and that the manufacturing company had not decided to locate there, and further, that Condit, knowing that the manufacturing company had determined to come to Waukegan, and that he would be materially influenced by that fact in the price fixed upon the property, concealed the information from him.

■ It seems to us clear, beyond controversy, that on the testimony of the complainant himself the question of fraud is eliminated from this case. He testifies, over and over again, that it was the understanding and agreement between himself and Condit that this contract was only to become effective, or, as he sometimes says, only to be made, upon his returning to Waukegan and ascertaining whether Condit’s statements were true,—that is, whether there was any stir in real estate and whether or not the manufacturing company had decided to locate in Waukegan. Nothing is better settled than that in order to entitle a party to rescind or set aside a contract for fraud, he must not only prove the fraud, but also that he relied upon the fraudulent representations and acted thereon. (Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 73, et seq.; Douglass v. Littler, 58 Ill. 312; Tuck v. Downing, 76 id. 71.) Therefore, even though the false representations and concealments averred in the bill were made, (which is denied by the defendant,) still, by his own positive proof that he did not rely upon those statements and did not act upon them in making the contract,—in other words, that he did not believe the statements to the extent of acting upon them,—complainant wholly failed to make out a case of fraud, and while in the petition for rehearing that branch of the case is insisted upon with earnestness, it was not so contended upon the former submission.

The decree of the circuit court, then, if it can be maintained at all, must be upon the allegation that the contract was never delivered. This theory of the bill is not, as we understand, one of mere non-delivery, in the sense that the delivery of a deed is essential to its validity, but that by agreement of parties the contract was only to take effect upon both parties ordering Whitney, to whom it was delivered, to surrender it to Condit. After the contract was signed by the parties at Milwaukee they agree that the question came up as to what should be done with it, and it was finally put into an envelope and directed to Whitney at Waukegan, with the endorsement on the envelope: “Not to be opened until R. Dady and J. M. Condit call.—Put in your safe.” Dady’s testimony is to the effect that it was thus placed in the custody of Whitney that he (Dady) might, on his return to Waukegan, ascertain whether Condit had told him the truth in regard to real estate transactions and the location of the factory at Waukegan, and that the agreement was to take effect only upon his obtaining such satisfactory information and consenting to the surrender of the agreement. Condit, on the other hand, testifies to the effect that the contract was consummated by the signing of the instrument in writing, and nothing remained to be done to perfect it, it being placed in the hands of Whitney merely as a custodian. The formal delivery of the paper was in no legal sense essential to its binding effect on the parties. It was a mere mutual agreement. It was no more necessary that Dady should deliver it to Condit than that Condit should deliver it to Dady.

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Related

Meland v. Youngberg
145 N.W. 167 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1914)
Dady v. Condit
87 Ill. App. 250 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 224, 163 Ill. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dady-v-condit-ill-1896.