Kerfoot v. Steele

113 Ill. 610, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 733
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 113 Ill. 610 (Kerfoot v. Steele) 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
Kerfoot v. Steele, 113 Ill. 610, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 733 (Ill. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a suit by S. H. Kerfoot & Co., real estate brokers, against Steele, Wedeles & Co., to recover commissions for services • rendered in respect • to a real estate transaction. There was judgment in favor of the defendants, in the circuit court, which was affirmed hy the Appellate Court for the First District, and the plaintiffs appeal to this court.

It appears that Steele, Wedeles & Co. were tenants of a store in the building on' the south-west corner of South Water and LaSalle streets, in the city of Chicago, whose lease would expire May 1, 1885, and there were tenants of two other stores in the building, whose leases would expire May 1,1883; that Steele, Wedeles & Co. were desirous of purchasing the whole of that property, and employed S. H. Kerfoot & Co. to act for them, under the following memorandum of agreement: ■

“Chicago, February 8, 1883.
“Messrs. S. H. Kerfoot & Co.:
“Dear Sirs—We hereby authorize you, as our agents, to purchase for us, from the Couch estate, for the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, ($150,000,) the premises known as lot one (1), in block nineteen (19), in the original town of Chicago, fronting eighty (80) feet north on South Water street, and one hundred and fifty (150) feet east on La Salle street, on such terms of payment as may be required by said Couch estate. And in consideration of’your services in connection with said purchase, we hereby agree to pay you, as commissions, the sum of thirty five hundred dollars ($3500), said commissions to be paid to you whether said property be bought by or for us, directly or indirectly, in our names or another, or by any one in our interest, whether through you or any one representing said estate, either at public or private sale, or otherwise,—said purchase to be made in the name of Frederic Consor.
Steele, Wedeles & Co. ”
“We hereby accept the agency established by the above authority and agreement, upon the terms therein set forth.
Febr’y 8, 1883. S. H. Kerfoot & Co.”

For some reason, Steele, Wedeles & Co. did not wish their name to appear in the transaction, and the name of Mr. Consor was used, as above. Thereupon, the plaintiffs, on February 12, 1883, obtained a contract in writing for the sale and conveyance of said premises for $150,000, purporting to be signed by Caroline E. Couch, Caroline E. Johnson, and Elizabeth G. Couch, by William H. Wood, their attorney in fact, and by Howard Potter, by Henry B. Mason, his attorney in fact, parties of the first part, and by Frederic Consor, party of the second part.

The makers of this agreement, of the first part, could not and did not convey the title. As to one-fourth of the interest purported to be contracted for by Caroline E. Johnson, it was only a life estate in her, her minor children owning the remainder in fee. It was found, by advice of counsel, that title could be obtained only through the foreclosure of a mortgage, which was then being foreclosed in the United States court, and which had been executed by Wood, trustee under the will of Couch, to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, and passed the fee according to the provisions of the will. It was through foreclosure of this mortgage that the defendants finally obtained title.- The $3500, stipulated commissions, was paid. This suit was brought to recover $4700 for services rendered after obtaining the agreement for sale of February 12, 1883, they being claimed to be additional and extra services not covered by the $3500 commission.

The cause was tried in the circuit court, by the court, without a jury, and four written propositions were submitted to the court by the plaintiffs, to be held as law in the decision of the case. The court refused- to holds the propositions as law. The first proposition was, substantially, that the plaintiffs were entitled to have from the defendants the $3500 stipulated for, as soon as plaintiffs had obtained the signing of the agreement dated February 12, 1883. The substance of the other propositions was, that all services rendered by the plaintiffs for the defendants after the obtaining of the signing of said agreement of February 12, were additional services, not covered by the commission of $3500, and that for such subsequent services plaintiffs were entitled to recover what they were reasonably worth.

Counsel for plaintiffs contend that the latter had earned their stipulated commission of $3500 when they had secured the contract of sale of February 12 to be signed, and that all services rendered by plaintiffs after that time were extra and additional, and to be paid for what they are reasonably worth. Defendants’ position is, that the $3500 was earned when the title was finally vested in them by the deed of foreclosure of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company mortgage, and that all the services rendered by plaintiffs were in connection with such purchase, and which they had agreed to render by their written agreement.

Plaintiff’s counsel plant themselves on the rule that a written contract for the purchase of an estate; binding both vendor and purchaser, is a sale, within the meaning of an agreement to pay a commission to a broker upon a sale of the estate, although a deed had not been executed and delivered, and say the brokers here obtained a written contract for a sale, and so the purchase had been effected,—that all services in connection with the purchase then came to an end, and that any subsequent services were not in connection with the purchase, but rendered after the purchase had been made. The rule relied upon we .do not think can be applied so as to make the contract of sale which was here obtained, to be considered as a completion of the purchase, and an ending of the brokers’ services in connection with the purchase, within the meaning of their agreement, for commissions. The purchase of the property was to be from the Couch estate. The written contract which was obtained, of February 12, did not purport to be, and was not, an agreement of sale by the Couch estate. It was not an enforceable contract for the title which was in the Couch estate. As to the one-fourth interest which was in the Couch estate, wherein Caroline E. Johnson had only a life estate, the remainder in fee being held by her minor children, such estate in remainder was not at all represented in the contract, and could not be bound thereby.

Again, the contract of February 12 did not purport to make an absolute sale of the premises. It was subject to conditions, as follows: “Provided, the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company assent to such a conveyance: And provided, the said party of the first part can, with reasonable diligence and expense, make title to the said lot, piece or parcel of land within ninety days from the execution of this contract, satisfactorily to the said party of the second part. * * * Possession and ownership of said land are to pass to the said party of the second part at the time of the delivery of the deed of conveyance, after title has been examined and approved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 Ill. 610, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerfoot-v-steele-ill-1885.