King v. Radeke

51 N.E. 698, 175 Ill. 72
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 698 (King v. Radeke) 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
King v. Radeke, 51 N.E. 698, 175 Ill. 72 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellants are co-partners under the name and style of North Kankakee Improvement Association, a firm organized for the purpose of buying and platting land and selling town lots. They acquired several hundred acres of land, which they divided into blocks and lots, some of which were sold and a larg'e number remain unsold. The association was formed in 1892, and in 1895 the partnership entered into a contract with the David Bradley Manufacturing Company, by which it agreed to donate the sum of §100,000 to said manufacturing company if it would locate its plant on a part of the land of said association. Of this sum §50,000 was to be paid by the citizens of Kankakee who expected to derive a benefit from the location of the manufacturing plant within the limits of the city. A number of citizens entered into an agreement, by which they were to advance to the David Bradley Manufacturing Company §50,000. This agreement on the part of the citizens was made with the North Kankakee Improvement Association at the request of the latter, who, in consideration of the agreement of the citizens to subscribe and pay the said sum of §50,000, contracted with the citizens, jointly and severally, by an agreement under seal, as follows:

“That the parties of the first part, in the name of the said North Kankakee Improvement Association, and also individually, covenant and agree that if the ‘parties of the second part shall first make the payment and perform the covenants hereinafter mentioned on their respective parts to be made and performed, the said parties of the first part will perform the covenants on their part herein-agreed by them to be done and performed. The parties of the second part agree to and with the parties of the first part that they will pay to J. Herman Hardebeck, trustee of the North Kankakee Improvement Association, for the use of the said association, §50,000, to be paid as follows: One-fourth March 5,1895; one-fourth May 1,1895; one-fourth June 1,1895; one-fourth July 1,1895: Providing, no person signing as second party shall pay other than as follows: The parties of the second part hereunto subscribing their names do not in this agreement promise jointly, but severally, and each of the parties of the second part promises hereby to pay only that amount which is the quotient of the sum of §50,000 divided by the number of names signed hereunto as parties of the second part: Provided, however, this agreement will be of no binding force whatever on the parties of the second part unless fifty names of responsible parties shall be hereunto subscribed as parties of the second part: And provided further, that this contract is signed upon the express agreement that the parties of the first part shall secure the location of the David Bradley Manufacturing Works at North Kankakee, and if said plant and works be not secured and located then this obligation shall be void and all moneys paid hereunder shall be refunded by parties of the first part to parties of the second part, said location to be secured within the next sixty days, time to be of the essence hereof. The parties of the first part jointly and severally agree that all sales of lots hereinafter made by the North Kankakee Improvement Association, or any of its agents, the amount which shall be received in cash therefor or which shall be received from time to time on the deferred payments shall be applied to the re-payment of the said sum of $50,000,.and interest from the time of its payment, or any portion thereof, until the same is fully re-paid to the parties of the second part. And the parties of the first part covenant and agree that the North Kankakee Improvement Association shall re-pay to the parties of the second part said sum of $50,000, and shall apply to the payment of -said sum of $50,000 all the moneys arising from the sale of lots in North Kankakee from the present date until such time as the said sum of $50,000 is fully paid, with the interest thereon, as aforesaid. It is further covenanted and agreed by the parties hereto that the persons who shall sign this agreement as parties of the second part shall designate a committee of not less than one or more than three, which committee shall be designated in writing, whose duty it shall be to receive and apply the payments from time to time made by the party of the first part to the parties of the second part, and to settle and adjust all accounts with said North Kankakee Improvement Association.”

This contract was entered into by the association with the expectation that the location of the plant of the manufacturing company would facilitate the sale of the lots of the association, and with this object in view it undertook to re-pay the persons who advanced to the association the money which they contracted to pay. The fifty subscribers to this agreement who advanced the $50,000, which was to be paid $1000 by each, stipulated their payments should be made, one-fourth on March 5, 1895, one-fourth on May 1, 1895, one-fourth on June 1, 1895, and one-fourth on July 1, 1895. Those parties who signed the agreement May 1, 1895, paid $500, and the association advanced to the Bradley Manufacturing Company $25,000, the residue which was to have been paid by the citizens who each subscribed $1000.

The appellants filed this bill in equity to settle and dissolve this partnership, and in the bill it is averred that the appellees each paid $500 of their subscription and defaulted as to the residue. The bill alleg'es the indebtedness of the corporation is about $80,000, a large part of which resulted from the donation made b.y the association to the manufacturing company; that owing to the depreciation in value of the real estate, combined with the amount donated, the insolvency of the association resulted, and it asked to have the partnership affairs wound up and the partnership dissolved. The bill sets forth that appellees each paid $500 of their subscription, but owing to their default in paying the residue the association had to advance the sum, and the theory of the bill is, that by reason of their default in paying the sum of $1000 each, all rig'hts or interests acquired by virtue of the contract, the clauses .of which are above set forth, are barred, and no right of action exists against the association, or the individual members thereof; for any sum paid on the subscription, and alleges that the appellees threaten to bring a suit at law to recover the amount paid by them, and prays a cancellation of the contract and a deci-ee barring the right of recovery. Appellees answered and filed a cross-bill, severally claiming the right to recover the money so paid by them under the agreement. Issues having been formed on the original and cross-bills, the cause was referred to a master, who made his report. On hearing, a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the cross-bill, and the lands were ordered to be sold, and from the proceeds thereof appellees were to be paid, severally, the respective amounts advanced by them to appellants under the agreement. A. personal decree against appellants was also entered. Prom that decree an appeal was prosecuted to the Appellate Court for the Second District, where it was affirmed, and this appeal is prosecuted.-

The question presented on this appeal must be determined from the construction to be given to the agreement of the parties under the contract above quoted. By the contract of subscription the date of payment was fixed, but time was not made the essence of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 698, 175 Ill. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-radeke-ill-1898.