Ebert v. Arends

60 N.E. 211, 190 Ill. 221
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 60 N.E. 211 (Ebert v. Arends) 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
Ebert v. Arends, 60 N.E. 211, 190 Ill. 221 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, the vendee in the contract the specific performance of which is here sought to be enforced, paid $300.00 in cash upon September 25,1899, the day of the execution of the contract. The next payment of $3980.00 with interest was to be made on March 1, 1900, but the contract does not name the place at which such payment was to be made. This controversy arises out of a disagreement between appellant and appellee, the parties to the contract, as to the place where the payment of $3980.00 was to be made. The appellant claims that the appellee was to pay him on March 1, 1900, at Roberts where he lived, while the appellee claims that the payment was to be made on that day at Melvin where appellee lived.

The proof shows that, on February 27 or 28, 1900, the appellee was ready and prepared to make the payment due on March 1, 1900, at Melvin. A day or two before March 1,1900, appellee, who lived on a farm distant some three miles from Melvin, came into Melvin and left at the bank of Iehl & Co., bankers in that town, the sum of $3912.50 to make the payment in question. Appellant had agreed to pay the interest on the mortgage for $1500.00 up to March 1, 1900, but the interest was not due and payable by the terms of the mortgage until June 1,1900. The sum of $3912.50 was arrived at by deducting from $3980.00 the interest up to March 1, which appellant, by the terms of the contract, was required to pay. There is no serious question about the correctness of the amount, which was deposited in the bank at Melvin for the payment of the money due on March 1. The evidénce, however, tends to show that an arrangement was made with Iehl & Co. at Melvin, and a subsequent arrangement was also made with John P. Smith, a banker living at Roberts, to whom the money was subsequently transferred from Melvin, by which any amount necessary in excess of the $3912.50 should be advanced to make up the $3980.00 and interest.

The proof tends to show, that appellee looked for appellant and expected him to come from Roberts to Melvin on March 1 to receive the money, but appellant did not come. Upon March 2,1900, between two and three o’clock in the afternoon, John Colteaux, at the request of George O. Arends, telephoned to Roberts to find out why appellant did not come to Melvin to receive the money. One Zahn, the partner and brother-in-law of appellant, answered through the telephone that appellant had gone out of town. The appellant did not come to Melvin on March 2. The money was in the bank of Iehl & Co. on that day, and ready for delivery to appellant, if he had come. At eight o’clock on the morning of March 8,1900, which was Saturday, appellee and Iehl, the banker, went with the money to Roberts, and went to the store of appellant in Roberts to close up the transaction. They were there told by Zahn that appellant had gone into the . country, or to Paxton, and they waited until the last train had passed Roberts, on which appellant could have arrived on his return from Paxton, and, as he did not come upon that train, appellee and Iehl then left for Melvin. While appellee and Iehl were in Roberts, they left the money at J. P. .Smith’s bank, and wrote a letter to appellant, telling him that they had been in Roberts on that day, March 3, to close up the sale, and that, not finding him, they had deposited the money with banker J. P. Smith, the balance due, to-wit: $3912.50 to be paid upon the delivery of the deed in accordance with the contract. This written notice, which was thus mailed, was signed by the appellee. On Monday, March 5, the appellee and Iehl again went to Roberts for the purpose of paying the money and receiving the deed, and they then found appellant there, but he refused to talk to them, and said that they were too late. Iehl, in the presence of appellee, demanded from appellant the deed, but he refused to deliver it, saying: “I have been waiting here the 1st and 2d of March, and it is altogether too late; you can not have the land.”

Appellant had returned to Roberts on the afternoon of March 3 and on that day Smith went to his store and said to him: “Arends has deposited the money with me, and, as quick as you deliver the deed, you can draw the money;” but appellant said that it was too late, and that he could not do it. Subsequently, on March 16, 1900, Smith, the banker, tendered to appellant at his store in Roberts the full sum of $3980.00; but appellant refused to receive the same, saying: “That ought to have been - done on the 1st or 2d, and it is now about the middle of the month.” Afterwards, on March 23, 1900, the money was drawn from Smith’s bank in Roberts, and put into the bank of Iehl & Co., in Melvin, where it still remains.

We are satisfied from the foregoing review, and from other circumstances developed by the evidence not here referred to, that appellee was ready and able and tried to pay the money at Melvin on March 1 and, when appellant refused to come to Melvin to receive the money, made an honest effort to pay it to him at Roberts on March 3 and 5. If appellee was in default, he was in default in not tendering payment of the money at Roberts, instead of making' arrangements to pay it at Melvin. Undoubtedly, by the terms of the agreement time is made the essence of the contract, and the payment of the $3980.00 was required to be made on March 1. The question, then, arises whether the fact, that appellee was ready with the money and prepared to pay it at Melvin on March 1, entitles him to a specific performance of the agreement. Appellant claims that, upon the failure of appellee to make payment at Roberts on March 1, he forfeited the contract, and insists upon his right to retain the cash payment of $300.00 by reason of such forfeiture. The general rule is, that equity favors compensation, and not forfeiture. In equity the harsh remedy of forfeiture yields to the principle of compensation when fair dealing and good conscience seem to require it. (Andrews v. Sullivan, 2 Gilm. 327; Peck v. Brighton Co. 69 Ill. 200; Mix v. Beach, 46 id. 311; Watson v. White, 152 id. 364).

Appellant insists upon the rule announced by this court in Esmay v. Gorton, 18 Ill. 483, that, “where no place of payment is agreed on, the debtor must seek the creditor at his .domicil, or usual place of business, if he have either.” It is urged upon the part of appellant that, inasmuch as the contract specified no place of payment, it was the duty of appellee to seek appellant at his place of business in Roberts, and there offer to pay.the money. The case of Esmay v. Gorton, supra, refers, in support of the rule there announced, to the case of Bixby v. Whitney, 5 Me. 192, where it is said: “It seems well settled that, where no place is appointed for the delivery of the specific articles, the obligor must go before the day of payment to the obligee and know what place he will appoint to receive them.” Therefore, no place of payment being named, appellee had a right to go to appellant before the day of payment, and ascertain at what place he would receive the money, whether at Roberts or at Melvin. In ? cases where the place of payment is thus omitted in the written contract, it may be shown by testimony that a place of payment was agreed upon by parol between the parties. Indeed, the appellant in his answer in this case sets up that the place agreed upon was the bank of Christopher Anderson in Roberts. If such agreement was made, it must have been a verbal agreement as it is not embodied in the written contract.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E. 211, 190 Ill. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebert-v-arends-ill-1901.