Hamlon v. Sullivant

11 Ill. App. 423, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 90
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 24, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ill. App. 423 (Hamlon v. Sullivant) 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
Hamlon v. Sullivant, 11 Ill. App. 423, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 90 (Ill. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.

On the nineteenth day of February, 1879, an indenture was entered into between appellee, of the first part, and appellant, of the second part, substantially to the effect that appellee had demised, leased, and to farm, let to appellant all the plow-land on the north half of section nineteen in township twenty-four north, range nine, east of third P. M., 240 acres, more or less; to have and to hold the same, to appellant, from the first day of March, 1879, for and during and until the first day of January, 1881. Appellant on his part covenanted with appellee to pay her, as rent for said premises, $400, payable, one half, or $200, on the first day of August, 1879, and one half, $200, on the fifteenth day of December, 1879. He also covenanted to pay all taxes assessed on said land for the two years 1879 and 1880, and deliver the tax receipts to appellee by June first of each year, and to pay ten per cent, interest on the $200 from the first of July, 1879, to first of August, 1879.

The lease was written by appellee and was signed and sealed in duplicate by both of the contracting parties.

Some time after the execution of said lease appellee demanded in writing from said appellant payment of rent of said premises for the year 1880, and appellant refused to pay rent for said year.

Appellee then filed her bill of complaint in chancery, charging that she made a contract with appellant for the leasing of said lands described in said lease, from March 1, 1879, to January 1, 1881, appellant to pay her for the same the sum of $400 for each year: $200 on August 1, 1879, and June 1, 1880, and $200 on the 15th of December of each of said years, and the taxes, and deliver tax receipts by June 1st of each year, and to pay ten per cent, interest on the $200 due August 1, 1879, from July 1st until August 1st, and that appellant and’ appellee were to sign a lease for said premises. The bill further charges that a lease was executed by the parties, embodying the contract as entered into between appellant and appellee, except that the $400 rental for the year 1880 was by mistake omitted and was not inserted in said lease. The prayer of the bill is that the said lease may be corrected and reformed so that it may express in writing the real and true intent and agreement of the parties thereto, and that said $400 rental for the year 1880 of said premises, $200 payable on the 1st day of June, 1880, and $200 on the 15th of December, 1880, may be decreed to be a part of said lease, and that complainant may have thereunder her usual and proper remedy for the collection thereof.

Appellant in his answer, not under oath, oath being waived, denies that he was to pay a cash rent of four hundred dollars for each of said years, and denies that there was any mistake made in the stipulations and conditions in the lease of said lands, and denies that there were any other stipulations dr conditions in the agreement for the leasing of said lands for said term other or different from the provisions and agreements set forth in said lease, and denies that he was to pay any rents for said lands other or different from the terms of said lease, and charges the fact to be that the lease contains the true agreement as to the leasing of said lands for said term, and that no mistake was made in the terms,gprovisions and conditions of said lease.

The cause was referred to the master to take testimony and report, and on the hearing the court below found that there was a mistake made in the execution of said lease on the part of both said appellant and appellee; that the contract of leasing is truly described in the bill of complaint, and that the rent for said premises according to the contract as made and understood by said parties was four hundred dollars per year and the taxes, as set forth in said bill of complaint, and it was decreed by the court that the said contract of leasing be reformed and corrected so that the said lease shall read “ four hundred dollars per year.”

To reverse this decree appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The law governing such cases is very plain and is not disputed by the parties.

The mistake must be the mistake of both parties; in other words, it must be mutual.

The instrument sought to be reformed must have been so written .as not to state correctly the contract as entered into and understood by the contracting parties.

“ Beatification can only be had where both parties have executed an instrument under a common mistake, and have done what neither of them intended. A mistake on one side may be ground for rescinding, but not for correcting or rectifying an agreement.” Emery v. Mohler, 69 Ill. 222; Sutherland et al. v. Sutherland et al. 69 Ill. 482, and authorities cited.

The only question presented by the record, then, is one of fact, whether in writing the lease a mistake was made, whereby a contract was set out different from the one actually entered into by the parties.

It seems from the evidence that the north half of section 19 is wet and at least sixty acres of it can not be farmed to advantage unless seeded down to meadow and pasture, and the plow-land is surrounded by sloughs, which run through it in different places. About eighty acres of the ET. W. quarter is slough. There is not much difference between the N". E. and ¡N. W. quarters. The land was heavily mortgaged, the debt maturing January 1, 1881.

About the 16th of December, 1878, the first interview between the parties about the renting of the land took place. Appellant and a man by name of ICrumri saw Mrs. Sullivant. They proposed to give one third of the crops. She asked if they would take it for interest and taxes if she would get the interest cut down to eight per cent. They did not want to pay money rent at all, but the one third. Appellant said that if he paid cash, he would have to have it at a very low rent. Mrs. Sullivant asked Hamlon if she would write and get the interest reduced to eight per cent, if he would take it for five or ten years. He replied if he could get it that way, so that he could seed down the lowland, he would take it for five years, and pay interest at eight per cent, and taxes, but for no less time, as it would not pay to seed it down. She said she would write and tell them if they would not reduce intei’est to eight per cent, so he could have it for a term of years, she would let it go back and be sold under the mortgage, as she had no other way of supporting it, and she would let him know in three or four weeks. Ho contract was entered into between the parties at this interview, and early in February, 1879, she sent her son, Michael L. Sullivant, to tell appellant he could not have the land for five years.

Ho other interview was had between appellant and Mrs. Sullivant about the land or with reference to renting it, until after the meeting between Hamlon and young Sullivant, when the latter delivered his mother’s message to appellant.

The contract of renting and the terras upon which’ the land was rented, and the duration of the lease, were fixed, if they were fixed at any time, at this meeting between Hamlon and young Sullivant.

This meeting was two or three weeks before the lease was made, and the son thus testifies for appellee as to what took place:

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ill. App. 423, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamlon-v-sullivant-illappct-1882.