Glover v. Layton

145 Ill. 92
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 Ill. 92 (Glover v. Layton) 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
Glover v. Layton, 145 Ill. 92 (Ill. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice, Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by Otis B. Glover and Charles H. Lawrence against Beuben P. Layton, John A. Harwell and Horace H. Norton, praying for a decree declaring that defendant Harwell held the title to certain land in trust for the complainants, and ordering its reconveyance to them, and for other relief. Defendants Layton and Harwell appeared and answered, and the cause being heard on pleadings and proofs, a decree was entered dismissing the bill at the complainants’ costs for want of equity. Hrom that decree the complainants have appealed to this court.

The facts appearing by the record are in substance as follows: On the 20th day of July, 1886, Lawrence was the owner of a tract of land containing nineteen acres, situate near the village of Washington Heights, Cook county, which he was desirous of selling. Glover seems to have had some interest in the land, but the nature and extent of his interest is not material. Layton was then a real estate broker residing at Washington Heights and was familiar with the values of real estate and with real estate transactions in that neighborhood. He and Lawrence were well acquainted and on friendly terms.

Shortly prior to the date above mentioned, Lawrence told Layton that he would sell his nineteen acre tract for $300 per acre, and Layton afterward reported that he had found a purchaser at that price, the terms of sale to be, $200 payable when the papers were signed, $1,225 on the delivery of the deed, and the residue in three annual installments, secured by the notes of the purchaser and a deed of trust upon the premises conveyed. These terms were accepted by Lawrence, and it was agreed between him and Layton that the latter should receive $200 as his commissions for making the sale. The name of the purchaser was given by Layton as Horace H. Norton, and Lawrence, as he claims, asked Layton who Norton was, to which Lay-ton replied that he knew nothing about him except that he was engaged in the railroad business, although he was in fact an employe of the American Express Company, and was a relative of Layton.

A contract of purchase and sale between Lawrence and Norton was thereupon duly signed, dated July 20, 1886, and in due time, the title having been examined and approved, Lawrence cenveyed the land to Norton, and received the cash payments, and the notes and deed of trust securing the residue of the purchase money. During the whole transaction there was no personal meeting between Lawrence and Norton, Layton having taken the notes and deed of trust which Lawrence had prepared to Norton and obtained his execution of the same, and he himself delivered them to Lawrence, together with the money for the cash payments, in exchange for the deed.

The real purchaser of the land was not Norton but Farwell. Layton, as it seems, did not go to Norton to sell the land but to Farwell, and proposed to him to buy it. Far-well claimed that he did not have the necessary funds to pay the entire purchase money in cash, and that being in the mercantile business, he did not wish to have his notes for purchase money outstanding. He accordingly consented to buy the property, if it could be so arranged as to enable him to furnish the money for the cash payments, and then take the title to the land subject to a mortgage executed by some other party for the deferred payments. Layton thereupon made arrangements with Norton to take the title in his name, and after executing the notes and deed of trust for such payments, to convey the land to Farwell. This arrangement was carried out, Farwell furnishing the money for the cash payments, and the conveyance was made by Lawrence to Norton, and he, after executing to Lawrence the notes and deed of trust, deeded the land to Farwell. This latter deed expressed a consideration equal to $450 per acre, but the actual consideration paid by Farwell was only $300 per acre, a larger nominal consideration being inserted in the deed for the sole purpose of influencing the market price of the land when Far-well should wish to dispose of it.

Farwell, as it seems, bought the land as a speculation, and the evidence shows that, within a few weeks after the purchase was consummated, he entered into an agreement with Layton, in substance, that Layton should take charge of the land for him and sell it, and that in case of sale, Farwell should first be paid the full amount of his investment and eight per cent interest thereon, and that the profits, over and above the investment and interest should be divided equally between him and Layton, the one-half of such profits to be received by Layton in full of his services. and commissions for taking charge of and selling the property. At the time the decree was entered, Farwell, as the evidence tends to show, had paid all the purchase money notes executed by Norton, but that no sale of the land had been made by him or Layton.

The theory upon which the bill is framed seems to be, that Layton, though employed and acting as the agent of Lawrence, and that too upon an express contract as to his compensation for his services, was really purchasing the land in part for his own benefit, and that Farwell was not only cognizant of that fact, but actively aided him therein. It is sufficient to say that the evidence fails to support this contention. The fact that the deed from Norton to Far-well recited a much larger consideration than that for which Lawrence agreed to sell the land, is fully explained by the evidence, it being shown, beyond controversy, that the actual consideration paid by Farwell was only $300 per acre.

But the ground set up by Lawrence in his bill upon which his claim to relief is mainly based is, that Farwell bought the land in controversy in pursuance of an agreement between him and Layton, by which Farwell was to advance all the money necessary to pay for the land, and was to hold the title in trust for himself and Layton, and to account to Layton for one-half of the profits that might be realized from the transaction, Layton in the meantime to pay Far-well interest on one-half of the purchase money.

It can scarcely be doubted that, if the case thus made by the bill were sustained by the proof, Lawrence would be entitled to relief. An agent, while in the employ of his principal, can not act for himself in respect to the same matter, nor will he be permitted to make a profit for his own benefit out of the business which his principal employs him to transact, and if he makes profits, he can not hold them, but must account for them to his principal.

Futhermore, if in the purchase of the land in question, Farwell, knowing as the evidence shows he did, that Layton was Lawrence’s agent, entered into an arrangement with him to buy the land ostensibly for himself, but really for the joint benefit of himself and Layton, the transaction was such a fraud upon Lawrence as would enable him, on being apprised of it, to rescind the sale and reclaim the land.

But the evidence fails to sustain the allegations of the bill in this respect. There is no evidence tending to show that, in negotiating the sale of the land, Layton reserved any profits to himself, beyond the agreed commission, or that there was any arrangement by which he acquired or was to have any interest in the land or the profits which should be realized upon its sale by Farwell.

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Bluebook (online)
145 Ill. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-layton-ill-1893.