Hayes v. Disque

82 N.E.2d 350, 401 Ill. 479, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 441
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1948
Docket30808. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 82 N.E.2d 350 (Hayes v. Disque) 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
Hayes v. Disque, 82 N.E.2d 350, 401 Ill. 479, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 441 (Ill. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs, Lee and Gladys L. Hayes, filed their complaint against the defendant, Elizabeth M. Disque, in the circuit court of Christian County for specific performance of a contract to sell real estate. Defendant interposed an answer, plaintiffs replied, alleging new matter not material to the present inquiry, and defendant answered plaintiffs’ reply. Evidence was heard by the chancellor. From a decree entered granting plaintiffs the relief sought, defendant prosecutes this direct appeal, a freehold being necessarily involved.

From the pleadings and the evidence, it appears that, since 1940, defendant has owned a farm of 234 acres in Christian County. The tract, familiarly known as the Mundhenke farm, is located near the village of Palmer. Defendant has been a resident of California since 1900. Prior thereto, she lived in Christian County. The farm in question was owned by her parents. Defendant’s brother, Edward Mundhenke, a farmer, lives about a mile from the Mundhenke farm and had farmed the land before defendant bought it. Since 1940, he has managed the farm, except during the periods when his sister made visits to Illinois. Roger Williams, defendant’s tenant, both prior to and since 1940, has lived on the property. Mundhenke collected the proceeds of his sister’s share of the crops grown on the farm and sent the money to her in California. The crops were always sold to the Farmers Grain Company in Palmer. Although defendant was seventy-eight years of age at the' time of the challenged transaction, she was in good physical condition and mentally alert. She had acquired more than the average business experience while living in California. Our examination of her testimony discloses her to be a highly intelligent and capable woman. Plaintiff, Lee Hayes, lived in Taylorville but owned a farm near the Mundhenke farm. Neither he nor his wife, who is a niece of defendant, "had ever transacted any business for her or had any business transactions with her relative to the farm, or otherwise.

In the summer of 1947, Gladys Hayes inquired, in behalf of her husband, whether defendant’s farm was for sale and, if so, the price. Defendant replied, saying that she wanted $100 per acre. Mrs. Hayes answered, submit-' ting her husband’s counter-offer of $20,000 for the land. On September 26, 1947, defendant came to Illinois and, while here, stayed at the homes of plaintiffs and her brother. During the course of the ensuing negotiations, defendant, rejected the counteroffer of $20,000 and a mutually satisfactory price of $100 per acre, or an aggregate price of $23,400, was agreed upon, the initial payment to be $1000 and interest on the balance of the purchase price at the rate of four and one-half per cent. Defendant had been here about ten days when this tentative basis for an agreement was reached. A written agreement was executed on October xo, 1947. So far as relevant, the agreement provides for payment of $1000 in cash upon execution of the agreement, and the balance of $22,400 by notes secured by mortgage, one for $2400 payable on December 15, 1947, a second for $4000 payable one year after date, and a third note for $16,000, due October 10, 1.957, all notes to draw interest from date at the rate of four and one-half per cent per annum. The single portion of the agreement giving rise to this action is the following provision: “Buyers shall be entitled to receive all uncollected landlord’s share of the 1947 crops upon said premises and shall pay taxes for 1947 thereon due in 1948.” The purchasers were to be entitled to possession on March 1, 1948.

During the two weeks between her arrival and the day the agreement was signed, defendant discussed the sale of her farm and the terms of the transaction with several persons. ■ The second day, she drove in the vicinity of the farm with a farm manager named Tedrow, looked at and discussed with him his crop of soybeans and its prospects. Hayes took defendant to her brother’s farm in the mornings en route to his farm and brought her back in the evenings unless she stayed overnight at her brother’s farm. A first draft of an agreement was prepared about October 5 and defendant discussed its terms with Hayes. She also took the draft to her brother’s farm and he read and commented on it, “My brother said he wouldn’t sign it.” At the time, he was combining beans for other farmers in the vicinity and was at home in the evenings. On October 8, defendant, Hayes and Edward Mundhenke repaired to the office of 'the attorney who had drafted the agreement. He read aloud each paragraph. The principal matter considered was whether plaintiffs should pay the taxes and receive the growing crops and start paying interest on the balance of the principal immediately or, instead, whether defendant should pay the taxes, retain the growing crops and receive no interest until March 1, 1948. At this meeting on October 8, the agreement was altered to provide that defendant should pay the taxes and retain the crops and that interest upon the balance of the purchase price should not commence until March 1. Prior to the close of the meeting, however, an agreement was reached that plaintiffs would pay the taxes, receive the growing crops and pay interest on the balance of the sale price from October 10, 1947. The attorney was directed to revise the agreement and advise Hayes when it was ready. The revised agreement was received by Hayes on October 10 and executed by the parties at his home on the day named. Plaintiffs made the agreed down payment of $1,000 upon the purchase price to defendant at this time. She continued to stay at the homes of plaintiffs and her brother and the transaction was apparently quiescent until the attorney informed Hayes that he had approved the title and that the notes, mortgage and deed had been prepared and were at his office. Arrangements were made for the parties to execute these instruments at his office on October 25. In the meantime, the soybeans had been fully harvested and, when the appointed day arrived, defendant refused to go to the attorney’s office, declaring that she would not sign anything in view of the ascertained value of the soybean crop. A few days later, on October 28, defendant, her tenant and her brother went to the grain elevator where the 1947 crops had been delivered and she obtained a check for $2006.67, in partial payment of the landlord’s share of the crop of soybeans. The balance of the landlord’s share was $112.67 and the share of the corn crop $373.05, making the landlord’s share of both crops $2552.39. Upon learning of this action, Hayes advised the grain company of his rights under the agreement of October 10 and payment was stopped on the check. On November 25, 1947, plaintiffs called on defendant at her brother’s home and tendered to her the notes and mortgage and requested that she execute a deed to the real estate. This, she refused to do, and plaintiffs instituted this action against her on the same day.

By their complaint, plaintiffs alleged that they had performed all conditions precedent on their part and were ready, able and willing to perform the agreement but that defendant had refused to accept the promissory notes and mortgage tendered to her and, in turn, to deliver to them a warranty deed to the property.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E.2d 350, 401 Ill. 479, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-disque-ill-1948.