Goodridge v. Wood

133 Ill. App. 483, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 294
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,249
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 Ill. App. 483 (Goodridge v. Wood) 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
Goodridge v. Wood, 133 Ill. App. 483, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 294 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of $525.75 in favor of the appellee, who was plaintiff below, against the appellants, who were defendants below.

The action was in assumpsit for money deposited by the plaintiff with the defendants under the conditions of the following receipt:

“Chicago, April 21, 1905.

Received of Dr. Nathan N. E. Wood Five Hundred ($500) Dollars to apply on contract of even date herewith for the purchase of Nos. 628 and 630 LaSalle Avenue, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois.

It is understood that said deposit and said contract shall be held by us for the mutual benefit of the parties thereto after the same shall be signed by the seller.

It is further understood and agreed that we are this day to forward said contract to the seller of said property for their approval and signature, and that in the event of their not approving the same, the said contract shall be cancelled and thereupon "become null and void, and should no other contract be made to take its place, then the said Five Hundred ($500) Dollars shall be refunded to the said Nathan N. E. Wood.

Goodridge, French & Co.”

The judgment was on the verdict of a jury, and was for the $500 and interest. A motion for a new trial was denied and this appeal resulted.

There is very little conflict in the evidence: It is on the legal effect of the facts proven, that the parties differ. These facts are that appellants, who were in the real estate agency business under the name of Goodridge, French & Co., represented the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of ¡¡Newark, Hew Jersey, in offering for sale certain house property in Chicago, known as 628 and 630 La Salle avenue. The plaintiff Wood, after a personal interview with one of the partners, made them a written proposition for purchase, the essential part of which was as follows:

“I make you the following offer, which I authorize you to submit to your clients, the owners: This offer, however, to be withdrawn unless accepted on or before April 25, 1905, to-wit: I will purchase the property at $20,000, if I can have it on the following terms, viz.: Payment to be $5,000 cash, to be paid on delivery of deed with guarantee policy issued by the Chicago Title & Trust Co., guaranteeing the title clear and perfect, or a merchantable abstract showing good and perfect title confirmed by opinion of a reliable Chicago attorney satisfactory to me. Deferred payments of $15,000,” etc.

There were other conditions inserted in the offer, but as the whole offer was superseded by the contract hereinafter described, it is not necessary to state them..

The defendants then invited Wood to call at their office, and the payment of the $500 and the giving of the receipt heretofore set forth occurred. This was on April 21, 1905. Contemporaneously a form of contract of purchase and sale was submitted by the defendants to appellee and signed by him. This was the contract referred to in the receipt.

The contract specified that the salé was subject to existing leases and certain taxes, etc., recited the payment of $500 by the purchaser “as earnest money, to be applied on such purchase when consummated,” and then provided for the payment of the balance of the $20,000 purchase money in installments, to be secured by notes and a trust deed for certain form. There followed other conditions usual in such contracts, concerning' the delivery and examination of an abstract of title, and subsequent action on the title if found defective. The instrument contained also this clause:

“Should said purchaser fail to perform this contract on his part at the time and in the manner herein specified, the earnest money paid as above shall, at the option of the vendor, be forfeited as liquidated damages, and this contract shall thereupon become and be null and void.”

Further it provided:

“This contract and the said earnest money shall be held by Goodridge, French & Company for the mutual benefit of the parties concerned, and after the consummation of the sale they shall be at liberty to retain the cancelled contract permanently; and it shall be the duty of said Goodridge, French & Company, in case said earnest money be forfeited as herein provided, 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 of vendor’s broker of a commission of 2% per cent on the selling price herein mentioned, for his services in procuring this contract, rendering the overplus to the vendor.”

Eight days thereafter, April 29, 1905, Goodridge, French & Co. informed Wood by letter that an abstract of title to the property was ready for delivery to him for examination, and Wood came to the office and took the abstract, and inquired whether Goodridge, French & Co. had>heard from the owners of the property in regard to their acceptance of the proposed contract. Albert Goodridge informed him that they had not.

Wood testified that at some time between April 29 and May 6 he had another interview with Albert Goodridge; that Goodridge then said they had heard from their clients and the proposed contract was not satisfactory to them, but that they proposed to have their attorney in Mew Jersey draw up a contract, which they would forward in a few days, and that he, Wood, had replied that there was nothing to do but to wait and see what they proposed.

Albert Goodridge, on the other hand, does not seem to remember such an interview as this, but Wood and Good-ridge seem practically to agree on the substance of an interview which Wood says was on Hay 8, and Goodridge by inference places on the day following.

May 6, 1905, Goodridge, French & Co., wrote to Wood: “We have this morning received contracts from our company and would thank you to call at our office if convenient Monday morning.” As May 6 was Saturday and May 8 Monday, it would seem probable that Wood's recollection was correct in placing the conversation about the contracts on that date.

The abstract which Wood had received from Goodridge, French & Go. was returned to them on May 9, as appears by the receipt of Goodridge, French & Go. in evidence. It was when that abstract was returned, undoubtedly, that the objections to the title raised by the lawyer whom Wood had employed to examine it were handed to Mr. Goodridge, for Goodridge says that he at once took the opinion and the abstract together to the lawyer for the insurance company. Goodridge also says that the conversation about the contracts which they had received from the insurance company was at the time that Wood brought in the objections. But it does not seem at all material to us whether the said conversation was on May 8 or May 9. Whenever it occurred, Wood says that he was then handed a contract different in form from the one which he had signed on April 21; that he was told by the appellants that it was the proposed new contract which had been drawn up and forwarded from their clients in Mew Jersey; that he read it and returned it with the statement that the terms of it were not satisfactory to him, and that he would not sign it.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 483, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodridge-v-wood-illappct-1907.