Jones v. Parker

177 Ill. App. 155, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1162
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 29, 1913
DocketGen. No. 16,940
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Ill. App. 155 (Jones v. Parker) 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
Jones v. Parker, 177 Ill. App. 155, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1162 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Superior Court reforming a written instrument because of a mutual mistake of fact and granting certain other relief.

The bill is filed by Frank H. Jones, as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Williams & MacRitchie, bankrupts, against Lewis W. Parker and Livingston T. Dickason, surviving partners of the firm of W. E. Dorwin & Co., and alleges, in substance, that on Nov. 28, 1908, W. E. Dorwin & Co., requested the complainant to execute to them a lease of certain property belonging to said bankrupts, consisting of ten flat cars, an unloader, a railroad plow, pumping outfit, blacksmith shop and tools located near LaFayette, Louisiana; that complainant verbally agreed with said firm to execute a lease therefor for the term of four weeks at a daily rental of $35 per day for six days in each week, and procured authority from the United States District Court to execute such lease on said terms; that thereafter a draft of said lease was prepared in accordance with said agreement and order and submitted to said Parker for approval and execution; that shortly thereafter said Parker notified complainant and his attorney, David Jetzinger, that said rent was more than the firm was able to pay, and that he did not consider it necessary to include the ten flat cars in the lease, and requested complainant to name a rental for the property other than said flat cars; that complainant fixed a rental of $22 per day for such other property and the same was satisfactory to said Parker; that Parker then requested complainant to prepare a draft of the lease in accordance with said new agreement; that thereupon said Jetzinger handed the draft of the first lease to his stenographer and requested her to rewrite the same, omitting the ten flat cars and •changing the rental from $210 per week to $132 per week, and when the lease, as thus redrafted, had been prepared to send the same to Parker at his office in Chicago; that said stenographer neglected to omit the ten flat cars from said redraft of said lease, but did change the rental therein as directed, and sent said lease to said Parker; that thereafter said Parker informed complainant and Jetzinger that the firm had. concluded it wanted the ten flat cars, and that he would be willing to execute the first draft of the lease which had been drawn; that said Parker thereupon produced a draft of a lease, including said ten flat cars, for execution by complainant, which draft complainant and Jetzinger supposed was the original draft, and the parties thereupon executed the same; that said lease so executed was not the original draft, but was the second draft which included the ten flat cars and stated the rental at $132 per week; that said Parker then well knew he was fraudulently presenting to complainant the second draft of said lease, which ought to have omitted said ten flat cars, for the purpose of inducing complainant to execute a lease on the entire property for the rental of only a portion thereof; that complainant executed said lease so presented to him under a pure mistake, believing the same to have been the first lease that was drafted and that the rental reserved therein was $210 per week, and that said Dickason and Parker likewise either executed said instrument through the same mistake, or that they executed and presented the same for complainant’s signature fraudulently and with the intent to gain an unconscionable advantage over complainant by virtue Of the mistake which had been made by said stenographer, as before stated, etc. The bill prays that the court investigate the facts and circumstances relating to the execution of said lease, and ascertain and decree that the same was executed by the parties thereto under a mutual mistake in the belief that they were executing the lease which had been theretofore drafted, providing for a rental of $210 per week; or that the court may ascertain that complainant executed said lease under a mistake of fact induced by fraud and misrepresentation on the part of the defendants; that the court may ascertain, in any event, that the true intent and meaning of said lease was that the rental should be stated at $210 per week; that the court may order said lease reformed in accordance with its true intent and meaning and upon the reformation of said lease the defendants be decreed to pay the unpaid rental thereunder, as thus reformed, etc., concluding with the usual prayer for general relief.

A general demurrer to the bill was overruled and thereupon the defendants answered the same. The gist of the answer is “that no misrepresentation, ex-imes s or implied, as to the contents of said contract was ever made by defendant Parker to complainant, nor was complainant induced to sign by any fraud practiced by defendant Parker, but that if complainant was ignorant of the contents his ignorance is in no degree due to fraudulent practice on the part of the , defendants.” After replication filed the cause was referred to a master to take the proofs and report the same with his conclusions.

The salient facts disclosed by the evidence and as found by'the master are that the preliminary negotiations regarding the lease in question were had between Parker, acting for the firm of W. E. Dorwin & Co., and Jetzinger, acting for complainant as the receiver and trustee, and the estate of the bankrupts; that such negotiations resulted in a tentative agreement, subject to approval by the trustee and the principal creditors of the bankrupts, whereby Dorwin & Company were to pay a rental of $22 per day for all .the property involved and Jetzinger prepared a written lease on that basis and delivered a copy of the same to Parker; that three days following Jetzinger notified Parker" that' the proposed rental was too small and the lease would not be executed, whereupon Parker, after communicating with the other members of his firm, definitely agreed with the complainant to accept a lease of all the property at a rental of $35 per day for six days each week; that the tentative agreement, as heretofore drafted, was then surrendered by Parker to Jetzinger and the latter prepared a lease which was intended to embody the final agreement, two copies of which were given to Parker, who sent them to Dickason to be signed by him individually ; that Dickason signed both copies and Parker then signed his own name and also the firm name and took them to complainant who signed both copies, retaining one and returning the other to Parker; that the rental stated in the lease as finally executed was $132 per week, but neither Parker nor the complainant noticed that the sum of $132 per week for six days was less than a rental of $35 per day for six days, and both executed the leases in the belief that the rental stated therein was the rental of $35 per day agreed upon by them, which would be $210 per week; that the error in the lease in regard to the weekly rental was doubtless caused by the stenographer employed by Jetzinger in incorporating parts of the tentative draft into' the final draft, and in failing to change the amount of the rental in conformity with the final agreement. The master further found that none of the allegations of the bill of complaint in regard to fraud and deception on the part of the defendants had been proved.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. App. 155, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-parker-illappct-1913.