Foley v. Hedenberg

208 Ill. App. 163, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 801
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 31, 1917
DocketGen. No. 22,376
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 208 Ill. App. 163 (Foley v. Hedenberg) 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
Foley v. Hedenberg, 208 Ill. App. 163, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 801 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of the first class commenced in the Municipal Court of Chicago by the plaintiffs (appellants) to recover a portion of certain commissions which the defendant had been paid for the sale of a piece of real estate. The case was tried by the trial judge without a jury and, at the close of all the evidence, judgment for costs was entered.in favor.of the defendant and against the plaintiffs.

On July 23, 1913, a written contract of sale of a certain northeast quarter section of real estate was entered into by one Peter Foley and Malvina B. Armour. The contract was signed by Peter Foley and “Malvina B. Armour, by James'W. Hedenberg, her agent.” It recites, among other things, that the purchaser had paid $2,500 as earnest money to be applied on the purchase when consummated. It was also provided in the contract that Peter Foley was given the privilege to purchase the southwest quarter of the same section, “said privilege to expire December 31, 1914.” It was further provided in the said contract that “the said earnest money should be held by James W. Hedenberg for the mutual benefit of the parties concerned,” and upon the consummation of the sale “to apply the same, first, to the payment of any expenses incurred for the vendor by his agent in said matter, and second, to the payment to vendor’s broker .of all commission * * * for his services in procuring this contract, rendering the overplus to the vendor.” On August 27, 1913, a letter was written, signed “Belle Ogden Armour, by James W. Hedenberg, her agent” to Peter Foley, which contains the following: “Referring to our contract of July 23, 1913, covering the northeast quarter of Section 34 * * * and the understanding in that contract that you or your assigns should also have the refusal to purchase the southwest quarter of said section * * *. You or your assigns are to have this privilege until the 31st day of December, 1914, at $500 per acre, plus 6% per annum from the date of your contract, July 23, 1913, to the date on which you or your assigns exercise this privilege. * * * It is also understood that if on request this option should be extended * * * it will not release you or your assigns from paying the current taxes for 1914.” Subsequently the option was extended to March 1, 1915. The sale of the northeast quarter was consummated on September 13, 1913, and the plaintiffs received, altogether, as compensation for their services, from the defendant, two-thirds of 5 per cent, of the selling price, the defendant retaining one-third. In making a settlement of the purchase price, each of the plaintiffs was given, by the defendant, a credit of $1,000 on the purchase price and $343 in cash.' After that option was exercised and the deed passed, each of the plaintiffs was part owner of the northeast quarter.

In the instant case, it is claimed by the plaintiffs that they are entitled to commissions for the sale of the southwest quarter—an amount practically equivalent to that which was paid them1 by the defendant for the sale of the northeast quarter; that the defendant orally agreed with them to pay "them, if the option was carried out and a purchaser obtained by them for the southwest quarter, two-thirds of 5 per cent, of the commission he, the defendant, was to get from his principal. The defendant admitted, in his testimony, that, as" to the commission to be paid in case the southwest quarter section was sold, he had said he would give them each one-third of that commission if the southwest quarter was sold to the same party as the northeast quarter. From other testimony of the defendant, however, it may be inferred that it made no difference to the defendant to whom the southwest "quarter was sold, and" that, therefore, his statement, that he said he would pay the commission if sold to the same party as the northeast quarter, is not credible, but an effort at evasion. James T. Foley testified that, at the time of the settlement of the commission for the sale of the northeast quarter, when a question came up about the option on the southwest quarter, the defendant said that they (meaning plaintiffs) “will not receive any commission on that until the option has been used or exercised”; also, that on a subsequent occasion, in the latter part of 1914 he had a talk with the defendant, in the course of which the latter said that his (meaning the plaintiff’s, Foley’s) interest would be protected. The plaintiff Foley further testified that in March, 1915, after the sale of the southwest quarter was consummated, he went to see the defendant and the latter said that at one time he thought they, the plaintiffs, were entitled to and had earned their commissions but he had changed his mind. The testimony of the plaintiff Johnson was to the effect that on November 12, 1914, in the presence of both plaintiffs and defendant, when asked by Johnson about the commission as to the southwest quarter, whether he was going to pay part of the commission as promised at the time the first deal was made, the defendant said, “Yes, the same as on the previous deal of the northeast quarter.” Johnson further testified that, in a conversation prior to November 12, 1914, with the defendant, the latter, with reference to payment of a commission to the plaintiffs on the sale of the southwest quarter, said: “It must be understood that you get no commission at this time on the southwest quarter, it being an option, but if the land is sold by virtue of this option, you will receive two-thirds of 5 per cent, on the purchase price.” The plaintiffs obtained a purchaser and negotiated a sale' of the southwest quarter, pursuant to the terms of the option. The original option of the southwest quarter given to Peter Foley (for the convenience of the plaintiffs) had been assigned, by him, to one Thompson and, by the latter, to Frederick H. Bartlett, and the deal was consummated by a deed passing from the grantor, Armour, to one William P. Haughton (of Bartlett’s office), the option then being extinguished by merger in the completed sale. Upon the completion of the sale of the southwest quarter, the defendant retained, out of the purchase price, his commission of 5 per. cent., which amounted to $4,345.33; that is, out of the check received from Bartlett as part of the purchase price, the defendant retained his commission of 5 per cent, and transmitted the balance to Armour & Company, on behalf of his principal. The plaintiffs then demanded two-thirds of the $4,345.33, and upon his1 refusal brought this suit.

It is the legal contention of appellee that the plaintiffs “by secretly dealing in the subject-matter of the agency without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, making a profit of an amount far in excess of the amount of their claim for commissions, destroyed entirely their right to claim commissions.”

The price fixed for the southwest quarter section, by the contract of July 23, 1913, as it is set forth in the letter of the defendant of August 27, 1913, was $500 per acre, together with certain interest and” taxes. When, however, the option was sold through the plaintiffs to the purchaser, Bartlett, and the deed passed to Haughton, of Bartlett’s firm, the latter was charged, in addition to $500 per acre, interest and taxes, the following extra consideration: (1) 100 by 125 feet of vacant real estate on Prairie Avenue, Chicago, about 90 feet south of 37th Street; (2) 50 by 125 feet of vacant real estate on 29th Place, 75 feet east of Calumet Avenue, and $1,500 in cash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 Ill. App. 163, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-hedenberg-illappct-1917.