Keyes v. Binkert

57 Ill. App. 47, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 216
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 11, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 57 Ill. App. 47 (Keyes v. Binkert) 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
Keyes v. Binkert, 57 Ill. App. 47, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 216 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration here was in one count, for failure of appellees to deliver a deed according to a contract therein set forth in haeo verba, as follows:

Office of Binkert & Cruttenden, 214 North Sixth Street.
Quincy, III., October 16, 1891.
Beceived of Edward Keyes twenty-five dollars ($25), as part payment toward the purchase of the following described real estate: The north one hundred and eight (108) feet of the east half of block eighteen (18), of Alstyne’s addition to the city of Quincy, situated in the county of Adams and State of Illinois, which is hereby bargained and sold to the said Edward Keyes for the sum of eight hundred and sixty-four ($864)' dollars; eight hundred and thirty-nine ($839) dollars more to be paid on the delivery of a good and sufficient warranty deed of conveyance for the same within ten days from this date, or as much sooner as the deed is ready for delivery after he has had the title examined and found good. Should the title to the property not prove good, then this $25 to be refunded. But should the said Edward Keyes fail to perform this contract on his part, promptly at the time and in the manner above specified (time being the essence of this contract), then the above twenty-five ($25) dollars shall be forfeited by him as liquidated damages and above contract shall be and become null and void.
Binkebt & Cruttenden, (Seal.)
Edward Keyes. (Seal.)

It avers that the “ plaintiff did on the 21st day of October 1891, find the title to said premises to be good, and on the same date, at the office of said defendants, tender unto said defendants the further sum of $839; ” that he “ then and there demanded of said defendants a good and sufficient deed of warranty for said real estate; ” that “ the defendants have refused to deliver ” such deed to him, and that “ the time for conveying said real estate to him has long since elapsed.”

Yet he has always been ready to accept, and is willing to accept a good and sufficient warranty deed of conveyance for said real estate and to pay for the same at the price aforesaid, to wit, $839, at the office of Binkert & Cruttenden aforesaid. But the defendants did not nor would, within the time specified in said agreement, after the making of said promise, or at any time afterward, deliver unto plaintiff a good and sufficient warranty deed of conveyance for the premises described in said agreement, but refused so to do.”

Defendants pleaded non assumpsit and four special pleas, of which the first was stricken out and the second and fourth were held insufficient on demurrer.

The third ivas as follows: “Actio non., because they say that after the supposed tender of $839 by said plaintiff to said defendants, and the demand by him of deed of warranty from them for the premises in said declaration described, as alleged in said declaration, and on the 22d day of October, A. D. 1891, the said defendants, with their wives, executed and acknowledged a deed of general warranty to said plaintiff for the property described in the agreement set out in 'said declaration, and within ten days from the date of said contract, and before this, suit Avas brought, notified said plaintiff that they were ready and Avilling to deliver said deed to him upon the payment of said sum of $839, and requested him to pay said sum of money so tendered and receive said deed, but said plaintiff refused to accept said deed and said that he would not accept said deed, and has not since that time paid or offered to pay said sum of $839, nor has he offered to accept or accepted said deed, although said defendants have been at all times ready and willing to deliver said deed upon the payment to them of said . sum of $839, and are now ready and willing', and hereby offer and tender to said plaintiff said deed, and bring the same into court to.. b.e delivered to said plaintiff upon the payment by him to said defendants of said sum of $839; and this they are ready to Amrify; wherefore they pray judgment,” etc.

To this plea plaintiff replied that “ the said defendants did not in manner and form as set out in said plea tender a good and sufficient deed of warranty, and of this he puts himself upon the country,” etc.

A jury having been waived, the issues so joined were tried by the court and found for the defendants, a new trial denied and judgment entered upon the finding, from which this appeal was taken.

Plaintiff proved the execution of the agreement set out in the declaration, and tender of $839 by him to defendant Binkert on October 21st, of whom he then demanded a deed, which Binkert refused to give and said they could not give.

He then offered in evidence a paper called a transcript or abstract of title to the north 108 feet of the east half of block 18, in Alstyne’s addition to the city of Quincy, which had been identified by the recorder of deeds of Adams county as having been made by him from the records that morning, and which he testified was correct and true, for the purpose of showing, as was stated by counsel, that the title to the property in question was in Edward Prince throughout the month of October, 1891.

This paper is not shown in the abstract of the record, but we copy from the transcript its heading and commencement :

“ Abstract of east half of block IS, Alstyne’s addition to Quincy. July 12, 1879, date of instrument. July 29, 1879, date of record. D. A. Ohapp et al. to Edward Prince. Book 91, page 606. Lots 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 10, 11, 12 and 13 in block 18, Alstyne’s Add. War. Deed. Consideration, $3,693.25.
September 16, 1889, date of instrument; September 17, 1889, date of record. Edward Prince to German Ins. & Sav. Inst. Book 42, page 119. Mortgage above described lots, consideration $7,500. This mortgage is released on margin October 7, 1889, book 42, page 119.”

Then follow similar memoranda of deeds and mortgages, ten in all, from Prince and his grantees, the last of which is of a warranty deed of March 22, 1894, from him to A. Cullen, all purporting to convey portions of said block 18.

On objection by defendants, the paper so offered was excluded by the court, and plaintiff then rested his case.

Defendant Binkert then testified that almost immediately after the contract, which was made during his absence by his son, was executed, he called on plaintiff and told him there was a mistake of $2 a foot in the price therein stated, making a difference of $216; that they could not make a deed for that price; that he would do whatever was right in the matter and offered to return him the $25, if he would give up the contract. They had some talk about a stable on the premises for which he was to pay extra, and no definite conclusion was then reached. When plaintiff made the tender and demanded the deed, witness again told him they could not make it—that Col. Prince would not sell the property for $8 a foot.

He further testified that afterward, on the same day, he and his co-defendant, with their wives, executed the deed then shown him,

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ill. App. 47, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-v-binkert-illappct-1895.