Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Beem

2 Ill. App. 390
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Ill. App. 390 (Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Beem) 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
Illinois Land & Loan Co. v. Beem, 2 Ill. App. 390 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

On the twentieth day of January, 1870, Percy W. Bonner, who was then a minor between nineteen and twenty years of age, conveyed to the Illinois Land and Loan Company all his right, title and interest in and to a certain lot of land in the city of Chicago; and at the time of making such conveyance, and as the real consideration therefor, received back from said company a contract by which said company, among other things, agreed to pay him twenty-five dollars per month up to May 1st, 1871, the date when he' should attain his majority? and the sum of $83.33 per month during the remainder of his life. Said contract further provided that in case of the decease of said Bonner before the first day of June, 1871, said company should pay “ on reasonable request ” certain specified sums of money, amounting in all to $5,000, as donations or bequests from said Bonner to certain persons therein named. Among the persons thus named was Mrs. D. King, wife of Harrison D. King, of Chicago, to whom it was provided that $500 of said money should be paid; In the latter part of July, 1870, Bonner died. This suit was afterwards brought by Mrs. King to recover of the Illinois Land and Loan Company said sum of $500, appointed by said contract to be paid as a donation or •bequest to her. During the pendency of the suit, Mrs. King died, and the appellees, her administrators, were substituted as plaintiffs. A trial was thereupon had in the court below, resulting in a judgment in favor of appellees against appellant for $740 and costs.

It is insisted by appellant that the evidence fails to show any sufficient demand or request for the payment of the money in question prior to the commencement of the suit.

It seems to have been conceded in the court below, and it is not questioned here, that under the provisions of this contract, before appellant was liable to suit, payment of the money must have been requested, and a reasonable time given for compliance with the request. Such undoubtedly is the legal effect of the language of the contract. The agreement was to pay on reasonable request, which was equivalent to an agreement, to pay within a reasonable time after request. The debt, then, could not mature until demand or request was made, and a reasonble time for compliance had elapsed.

"We think the evidence wholly fails to establish such demand or request as was contemplated by the agreement. The only-evidence tending to show a request, was that of Harrison D, King, the husband of the original plaintiff, who testifies that five or six days after the death of Bonner, his wife and he went to the office of Mr. Scoville, who at the time was an attorney for appellant, and that Mrs. King told Mr. Scoville that she cam e to see about getting the $500 mentioned in the agreement; that Mr. Scoville told her they could not do anything about it until they had found out who the heirs were, and settled with them first; that he wanted her to help him find out who they were, and that she gave him the names of some of them. Mr. Scoville testifies that he does not remember the interview distinctly, but presumes it was substantially as stated by Mr. King. He further testifies that in 1870, he was the attorney for appellant in some matters but not in all; that the contract in question was in the handwriting of W. K. Beed, who, as it appears, was appellant’s cashier and general manager, except.the last clause, which was in the handwriting of the witness; that witness made out the original draft of the contract and was attorney for the company in that connection. He was then asked whether he remembered Mr. and Mrs. King’s coming to him as Mr. King testified, and if so, what he, the witness, claims was the reason the company did not pay her the $500. In answer, after stating that he did not remember distinctly about the interview, etc., as already mentioned, he says: “ The reason the company did not pay her was, it claimed that the only heirs at law of Percy W. Bonner repudiated or disaffirmed said contract within three years after liis death, and that the company consequently got no benefit of the contract, or of the deed of conveyance mentioned therein.”

It is manifest that a demand for the money, in order to avail appellees, should have been made upon some officer or agent of appellant having authority to act for it in relation to the subject matter of the demand, by paying over the money or refusing to make such payment. Hr. Scoville, the only person of whom a request for the money was made, was merely an attorney for appellant in some of its matters. Had he been the general attorney of the company, authorized to represent it in all its law business, we do not think the payment of this money to Mrs. King, or a refusal to pay it would have been within the purview of his authority. He could not, as the attorney of the company, have control of its funds, and so would neither have the means of making payment, nor the power of determining on behalf of his client, whether payment should be made or not. It should be observed that at the time of his interview with Mrs. King, no suit was pending involving her right to this money, nor does it appear that the matter had in any other •way been placed in his hands for adjustment.

But the evidence leaves it entirely uncertain as to how far even the relation of attorney and client existed between Mr. Scoville and the company. He was its attorney in some matters, but not in all. Precisely what matters were within the purview of his employment, does not appear. He made, it is true, the original draft of the contract, “ and was attorney for the company in that connection.” This, however, seems only to imply that he was employed by the company in matters connected with the drafting of the contract, which would by no means necessarily include the adjusting of rights or conducting litigations subsequently growing out of it.

Hor does it appear from the evidence, that Mr. Scoville assumed to determine for his client whether this money should be paid over "to Mrs. King or not. He merely told her that they could do nothing about it until they had ascertained who the heirs of the decedent were, and had settled with them, and desired Mrs. King to assist him in the inquiry, which she accordingly did. All this was quite as consistent with an ultimate intention on the part of the company to pay her the money as the reverse.

It is, however, insisted by appellees that the evidence tends to show a waiver on the part of appellant of the demand or request provided for in the contract. Such waiver is sought to be inferred from the testimony given by Hr. Scoville in relation to the reason why the company did not pay Hrs. King the $500 in question. We are unable to give to this testimony the effect here claimed for it. It is not pretended that such reason was stated or disclosed to Hrs. King at the time she called on the witness to see about getting her money. In point of fact such disclosure could not have been then made, as the reason stated by the witness depended upon events which did not transpire until long afterwards. The interview, between Hrs. King and the witness took place five or six days after Bonner’s death. The repudiation or disaffirmance of the contract by the heirs of Bonner, which the witness assigns as the reason why the company did not pay the money, did not take place till many months thereafter. ¡Nor is there any pretense that such disaffirmance, even after it took place, was assigned by the company to Hrs. King, or in any other way declared by it as its reason for nonpayment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shroyer v. Pittenger
67 N.E. 475 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1903)
McAnaw v. Tiffin
45 S.W. 656 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1898)
Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Lamb
81 Mo. 221 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. App. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-land-loan-co-v-beem-illappct-1878.