Harding v. Olson

52 N.E. 482, 177 Ill. 298
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 482 (Harding v. Olson) 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
Harding v. Olson, 52 N.E. 482, 177 Ill. 298 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District, affirming a decree entered in the circuit court of Cook county canceling a contract between the appellant and the appellee, by which appellant obligated himself to convey certain real estate in Cook county to appellee, and decreeing appellant should pay to appellee the amount of certain payments made by appellee on the contract, and interest thereon from the date of such payment. The contract was entered into January 3, 1890, and provided for the payment of $125 in cash, $75 in sixty days thereafter and full payment on or before January 3,1896, and entitled appellee to title in fee simple, clear of all incumbrance, upon full payment. It appeared appellee had, before the filing of the bill, performed the obligations of the contract upon his part, and became entitled, under its provisions, to receive a warranty deed from appellant conveying to him the title to the said premises in fee simple, free and clear from all incumbrances.

The objection appellee had an adequate remedy at law was presented to the court for the first time after appellant had answered the bill upon its merits without making such objection or defense in the answer or otherwise, and after both parties had produced their testimony before the master and each had examined his own witnesses and cross-examined the witnesses of his adversary, and after the master’s report and findings upon such testimony had been made up and filed of record in the court. The objection came too late. The relief asked was not so far foreign to equity jurisdiction as that it could not be given in chancery. The appellant had submitted his cause as made by the pleadings to the jurisdiction of the court in equity, and could not be permitted to insist, on the hearing of the report of the master, appellee should be remitted to another forum for his remedy. Kaufman v. Wiener, 169 Ill. 596; Clemmer v. Drovers’ Nat. Bank, 157 id. 206.

The rule a party asking the cancellation of a contract must offer to put the other party in statu quo did not impose upon appellee the duty of executing and tendering to appellant a deed of any kind to the premises, or tendering a return of the contract prior to the filing of his bill. Appellee had not the title to or possession of the premises, hence there was no occasion he should tender reconveyance to appellant, nor was he bound to surrender his contract except in exchange for a deed of conveyance from appellant.

The complaint appellant was only allowed five days after appellee complied with the contract in which to secure conveyance of absolute unincumbered title, and that five days was not a reasonable time in which to enable appellant to comply with his obligation, does not arise under the facts of the case. It appeared appellee had the option to make final payment on or before January 3, 1896, and that he notified the appellant on the 2d day of August, 1895, he was ready and desired to pay the balance due on the purchase price of the premises and requested appellant to execute a deed of conveyance therefor, and that the title to the premises did not then rest in appellant and was not free and clear of incumbrance. Appellee waited from that time to October 21 of the same year, —a period of eighty days,—to allow appellant to perfect the title, and then made a formal tender of the amount required by the contract to be paid, and demanded compliance on the part of appellant within five days. Appellant did not comply, and appellee waited a further period of forty-two days before filing the bill. The time really granted the appellant by the appellee was not the period of five days, but the term of four months which intervened between August 2 and the filing of the bill on December 3.

It is urged the chancellor erred in awarding rescission of the contract and decreeing appellant should re-pay to appellee payments made by the latter thereunder and interest thereon, and instead should have decreed appellee should accept specific performance of the contract. When the contract was entered into the title to the property did not rest in the appellant but in one George F. Harding, Jr., his son, who afterwards conveyed the premises to the Fireman’s Insurance Company. The insurance company conveyed to the Chicago Real Estate, Loan and Trust Company, but the deed was not placed of record nor did the grantee take possession of the property. Judgments at law were entered in the circuit court of Cook county, -wherein the land was situated, against the insurance company, and such judgments became liens upon the premises, and two of such judgments remained unsatisfied and liens upon the premises at the time appellee tendered payment in full of his obligations under the contract and became entitled to a conveyance according to the terms of the contract. These judgments were liens, or rendered the title defective, in August, 1895, and also when appellee filed his bill herein. Good title free of incumbrance was bargained for. The appellee was not required to receive a defective title, or one which was so clouded with adverse liens as to materially affect the marketable quality of the property and expose him to the hazard of litigation, but was entitled to demand and receive title free from reasonable doubt. Brown v. Cannon, 5 Gilm. 174; Hoyt v. Tuxbury, 70 Ill. 331; Close v. Stuyvesant, 132 id. 607; Mead v. Altgeld, 136 id. 298; Lancaster v. Roberts, 144 id. 213.

The master, under the order referring the case for proofs, began the hearing of testimony on the 10th day of February, 1896, and filed his report January 11, 1897. While the case was so pending before the master the appellant procured the release or satisfaction of said judgments, and on the 11th day of December, ,1896, tendered a warranty deed, executed by the Chicago Real Estate, Loan and Trust Company, to the appellee for the premises, and also a warranty deed executed by the appellant and his wife to appellee for the said premises. These deeds were tendered before the master during the course of the presentation of appellant’s testimony, and about eleven months after the case had been referred to the master, and one year, one month and twenty days after appellee had fulfilled his contract and became entitled to a deed to the premises. Prior to the filing of the bill appellee had granted all time which any rule of law or equity required he should allow, in which to enable appellant to specifically perform his contract. The right of the appellee to recede from the contract and demand the appellant should refund the moneys received thereon was complete, as we read the evidence, when the bill was filed. The contract expressly provided the failure of the appellee to “make 'either of the payments, or any part thereof, or to perform any of the covenants on his part made and hereby entered into,” should authorize the appellant to declare the contract forfeited, and that all payments made by the appellee on the contract should be forfeited to and retained by the appellant in liquidation of the damages sustained by him by reason of the failure of the appellee to fulfill his undertaking, and the contract further provided that the time fixed for any payment to be made should be deemed as of the essence of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 482, 177 Ill. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-olson-ill-1898.