Hartje ex rel. Middleton v. Keeler

133 Ill. App. 461, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 291
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,161
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 Ill. App. 461 (Hartje ex rel. Middleton v. Keeler) 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
Hartje ex rel. Middleton v. Keeler, 133 Ill. App. 461, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 291 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nil capiat and for costs rendered in the Circuit Court of Cook county on March 24, 1906, in favor of the defendant in error, who was also defendant below, and against the plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below. It. followed the verdict of a jury in an action of assumpsit. There were many pleadings filed in the cause, but the issues finally made up may be thus described :

The plaintiff declared upon the breach of a written contract made December 19, 1892, between Charles P. Keeler of the one part and Bernard Strauss, Joseph H. Middleton and Walter Hartje of the other, alleging that on November 22, 1893, subsequent to the making of the contract, a co-partnership which existed between the parties of the second part when it was made was dissolved, Strauss withdrawing and assigning his interest in the contract sued on to the remaining members of the firm, with the consent and ratification of the party of the first part; that later on, September 15, 1894, Middleton and Hartje dissolved partnership; that Middleton succeeded to all interest in the business, and Hartje assigned all his interest in the contract to Middleton; that on July 30, 1902, Middleton departed this life, and afterward Mary Middleton was appointed administratrix of his estate; that Strauss, Middleton & Hartje and their assigns and Middleton and said administratrix had respectively always been ready, willing and able to carry out the contract, but that defendant had refused to do so.

The contract in question is set out in full in the declaration. It begins by reciting that Keeler is engaged in the business of buying arid selling coal in Chicago, and incidentally thereto, transporting and delivering said coal between various points in the city, and for that purpose had acquired certain horses, harnesses, blacksmith and saddler’s tools, wagons, and other chattels connected with the teaming business, and that said Keeler had agreed with Strauss, Middleton & Hartje to sell them his business of transporting and delivering coal and said personal property enumerated. It then expresses the conveyance to said Strauss, Middleton & Hartje, for $6,000 in cash and $4,000 in notes, of said business and property, and proceeds to provide that said Keeler “Doth agree to and with said second party that for and during the period of ten years next ensuing after the 19th day of December, 1892, he will and doth hereby employ said second party to transport and agrees to deliver to said second party for transportation from such points in said city of Chicago as he shall hereafter from time to time designate and give said second party notice in writing of to such other points in said city as said first party shall hereafter, from time to time, designate and give said second party notice in writing of as much coal as can by said second party, their servants and employees, by the use of ten two-horse teams of horses and wagons of two one-horse teams of horses and wagons, or carts, be transported during said period of ten years between said points so to be designated, and will pay to said second party for transporting said coal between said points the sum of thirty-five cents for each ton of coal as shall be steam coal, the sum of fifty cents for each ton of coal thereof as shall be domestic coal, and the sum of fifteen cents for each ton of said coal which shall be by said second party transported from railway trains of cars in said city to the yards of said first party in said city, and to pay the same by paying to said second party on Saturday of each week that shall be during said period of ten years all sums which said second party shall have earned hereunder during such week.”

The contract then describes the notes given for the $4,000, and provides that the said Strauss, Middleton and Hartje “do hereby agree to transport as much coal as said first party shall in writing notify and require said second party to transport, and shall deliver to said second party for transportation from such points in said city of Chicago as shall by said first party in and by written notices or orders delivered to said second party be designated or appointed to such other points in said city as shall in like manner be designated and appointed, and will at all times during said period of ten years furnish, provide and keep on hand and in their service sufficient teams, wagons, carts and employees to enable them to receive, transport and deliver as aforesaid all the • said coal with customary and business-like promptness and despatch. But said second party shall not, by means of anything herein contained, be required or be bound to transport any ton of said coal any greater distance than four miles, unless the said first party shall pay to said second party therefor the sum of .... cents per mile for transporting each ton of coal transported at any one haul any distance exceeding said distance of four miles.”

Then follow the following stipulations:

“The said second party further agree to employ and keep engaged in and about their said business only such sober, industrious and discreet drivers and other employees as shall not be reasonably objected to by said first party, and agree that on receipt of notice in writing given and delivered by said first party to said second party that any designated employee is objectionable to said first party for good reasons by him in such notice specified and particularly set forth, they, said second party, will discharge such employee and-as soon thereafter as can reasonably be done replace such employee with some competent employee who shall be free from all reasonable objection.

“In the event of the dissolution of the firm of Strauss, Middleton & Hartje, this contract shall be considered as an asset of said firm and might be assigned.

“The said Keeler shall not be obliged to keep the horses and wagons above mentioned employed in the event of a strike or thing that he cannot control.

“The said first party shall pay for hauling contract hard coal the sum of forty cents per ton.

“In the event of the death of said first party before the end of the period hereinbefore mentioned, to-wit: ten years, said contract shall terminate and be at an end.

“All wagons used in the transporting of coal as aforesaid shall bear the name of said first party.

“The said first party in connection with the foregoing hereby sells and assigns to said second party the leasehold of the premises used by said first party as a barn in the rear of 538 and 540 Wabash avenue.”

The breach of the contract assigned in the declaration was that on or about September 15, 1894, the defendant neglected and refused and thereafter continued to neglect and refuse, without any reasonable cause, to deliver to said Middleton for transportation, etc., as much coal as could by the use of ten two-horse teams and two one-horse teams be hauled and transported. It is alleged that from September 15, 1894, to May 1, 1896, there was only delivered for transportation, etc., so much coal as could be transported by five two-horse teams; from May 1, 1896, to May 1, 1900, only so much as could be transported and delivered by the use of two two-horse teams; from May 1, 1900, to August 1, 1901, only so much as could be transported by one one-horse team; and from August 1, 1901, none at all.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 461, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartje-ex-rel-middleton-v-keeler-illappct-1907.