Johnson v. Crouch

156 N.E. 754, 325 Ill. 559
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1927
DocketNo. 17442. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 754 (Johnson v. Crouch) 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
Johnson v. Crouch, 156 N.E. 754, 325 Ill. 559 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Ida O. Crouch and Charles P. Crouch, her husband, entered into a contract dated January 29, 1912, for the sale and conveyance to Godfrey Johnson of a part of lot 20 of Marble & Converse’s subdivision in the village of Fox Lake, in Lake county. The price, $3600, it was agreed, should be paid as follows: $375 in cash, $725 in monthly installments, fourteen of $50 each and a final one of $25, and the balance of $2500 by the assumption of an existing mortgage for that sum, with the interest thereon. The contract provided (a) that, upon payment of the purchase price, conveyance of a merchantable title to the property should be made by general warranty deed, subject to current taxes, installments of special assessments maturing thereafter, and a lease expiring February 1, 1913, with an option in the tenant to extend it for two years; (b) that the purchaser furnish an abstract and specify his objections to the title in writing, and if the objections should not be cured within a reasonable time, that the purchaser, at his election, upon notice, might terminate the contract or take the title as it stood, and that in default of such notice of election to perform, within the time limited, he should be deemed to have abandoned his claim upon the premises; (c) that upon the purchaser’s failure to perform the contract promptly as specified it should become void, and that tizne was of the essence of the contract; (d) that if the purchaser failed to perform, or elected not to perform the contract as specified, he should be released from further liability upon it, and the vendors were authorized to retain the payments theretofore made in satisfaction of their damages; (e) that in case of non-performance by the purchaser the vendors might terminate the contract by giving him sixty days’ notice in writing of such termination; and (/) that the notices required to be given should be construed to mean notices in writing signed by or on behalf of the party giving the notice and might be served either upon the other party or his agent.

Godfrey Johnson on November 29, 1920, filed his bill in the circuit court of Lake county against Ida O. Ure, (formerly Crouch,) Charles P. Crouch, Converse Marble, Minnie Rosenberger and Andrew Rosenberger for the specific performance of the foregoing contract and the confirmation of the title to the property in him. He alleged in the bill that he was in possession of the property, that he had completely performed the contract on his part, and that conveyances of the property had been made to the defendants, successively, with knowledge of his l'ights. The defendants by their answer denied that the complainant had possession of the property, that he had performed the contract, or that the successive grantees under Ida O. Crouch took title with notice of the contract or of the complainant’s possession. They averred that the contract had been forfeited on or about May 10, 1914, and that Minnie Rosenberger by mesne conveyances had acquired and owned the legal title to and the equitable interest in the property free from any claims of the complainant, and they denied that the complainant was entitled to the relief demanded. Minnie Rosenberger filed a cross-bill on April 5, 1921, to which the complainant interposed a demurrer. Subsequently, on May 10, 1922, pursuant to leave granted, the defendants filed an amended and supplemental answer, which, in addition to the averments of the original answer, averred the complainant’s default in the payment of taxes after the year 1912, payment of these taxes by the defendants, and laches on the complainant’s part in the prosecution of his suit. A replication to the answer was filed. The cause on the bill and answer was referred to a special master in chancery to take and report the evidence with his conclusions thereon. The master reported that the complainant had paid in excess of the purchase price and recommended a decree in his favor. After the report had been filed, Minnie Rosenberger, one of the defendants, died intestate, her death was suggested of record, and Andrew Rosenberger and Willis J. Simms, her only heirs, were substituted in her stead. The findings of the master, with a single exception, were approved, and a decree was rendered on December 11, 1925, enjoining the defendants from asserting any claim, right or title to the property, directing a conveyance thereof to the complainant, sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill and dismissing the cross-bill “for want of equity and want of prosecution.” From that decree Andrew .Rosenberger and Willis J. Simms prosecute this appeal.

The parcel of land described in the contract was acquired by Ida O. Crouch on March 20, 1909. She was divorced from her husband, Charles P. Crouch, some time prior to March 12, 1914. On that day she conveyed the property to her former husband, the deed was recorded two days later, and he held the title until October 21, 1915, when by a quit-claim deed he re-conveyed it to her as Ida O. Ure, she in the meantime having become the wife of A. C. Ure. This deed was not recorded until October 10, 1919. Mrs. Ure and her husband on October 16, 1919, by a quit-claim deed conveyed the property to Converse Marble, and this deed was recorded on October 22, 1919. Marble and his wife conveyed the property to Minnie and Andrew Rosenberger by deed dated August 17, 1920, and recorded October 4, 1920. By a quit-claim deed dated February 21 and recorded February 23, 1921, Rosenberger and his wife conveyed the property to Minnie Rosenberger.

On March 10, 1914, a written notice in the form of a letter signed by William T. Nelson, a lawyer, was addressed to the appellee at 447 North Clark street, Chicago, stating that he had made default in the performance of the contract, and that unless he performed the contract on his part Ida O. Crouch and Charles P. Crouch, the vendors, would, in accordance with its provisions, forfeit and terminate it upon the expiration of sixty days. Appellee’s Chicago address was 443 North Clark street. On May 3, 1914, a letter demanding immediate possession of the property, signed by Charles P. Crouch, was addressed to appellee at Fox Lake. On May 10, 1914, another notice, in the form of a letter signed by Ida O. and Charles P. Crouch, by William T. Nelson, their attorney, was addressed to appellee at 447 North Clark street, stating that because of his default in performance, and pursuant to the notice sent him on March 10, the contract was forfeited and terminated. This demand and these notices were sent to appellee by registered mail.

The mortgage mentioned in the contract of sale was foreclosed and the property was sold at a master’s sale on October 6, 1919, to John W. Hart and Converse Marble and a certificate of sale was issued to them. Ida O. Ure (formerly Crouch) was not a party to the foreclosure suit. On August 17, 1920, Hart assigned his interest in the certificate to Marble, who, in turn, on the same day transferred the certificate to Minnie and Andrew Rosenberger. Appellee redeemed the property from the master’s sale by the payment of $3138.56 on October 2, 1920, and received a certificate of redemption, which he recorded.

The first contention of appellants is that appellee failed to show performance of the contract on his part. Appellee entered into possession of the property under a prior contract and made three payments on account of that contract, — an initial one of $100 and later two in the year 1911, one of $50 and the other of $25.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 754, 325 Ill. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-crouch-ill-1927.