Lyon v. Taylor ex rel. Worcester

49 Ill. App. 639, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 113
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 Ill. App. 639 (Lyon v. Taylor ex rel. Worcester) 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
Lyon v. Taylor ex rel. Worcester, 49 Ill. App. 639, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 113 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of the Coukt,

Lacey, J.

This suit is an action of assumpsit based upon a promissory note given by appellant to appellee, in the sum of $500, due in one year after date, with six per cent interest from date, not negotiable, dated January 1, 1891. The real date of the note, however, was May 9, 1891. Indorsed on the back of the note is payment for thirty dollars interest, and sixty dollars principal.

At the trial in the court below, Howard S. Taylor, the payee named in the note, moved to dismiss the suit. Thereupon leave was granted by the court to H. Worcester, to whom it had been indorsed for collection, .to file a bond to indemnify the said Taylor, which was filed December 12, 1892, whereupon the court overruled the motion of said Taylor to dismiss the action. On the same day the appellant filed two additional special pleas, in addition to the general issue already filed, to which special pleas the court sustained a demurrer. Appellant abided his plea.

The jury was waived by agreement of the parties and the cause tried by the court.

A point is made by counsel for appellant, that the court erred in overruling the motion of Taylor to dismiss the suit, apparently under the mistaken idea that the suit was being prosecuted in the name of the usee, H. Worcester, arguing that the legal title did not pass to the usee.

We need not further comment upon this point than to say, that this suit is being prosecuted in the name of Taylor, the payee of the note, and not that of Worcester, to whom it was indorsed for collection; therefore, the authorities cited are not applicable. The court, therefore, decided correctly if the reason assigned by counsel for grounds for dismissal are the only ones that can be urged.

It is also urged that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to appellant’s special pleas. We do not deem it necessary to go into a consideration as to whether those pleas were good or not, for the reason that the whole question was litigated under the general issue and all the evidence that could have Leen introduced under the special pleas was admitted in evidence under the general issue, and the case fully considered on the facts by the court. Cooke v. Preble et al., 80 Ill. 382. We shall therefore consider the case on its merits according to the evidence preserved in the record.

The defense consists in an allegation of fraud, that the usee, Worcester, and two others, is alleged to have perpetrated upon the appellant in certain land transactions in and about laying out certain town lots in the township of Thornton, county of Cook, and Harvey addition syndicate, or more particularly the purchase of forty acres of land on which the addition was laid out.

It appears from the evidence in this case that some time in October or November, Hannibal Worcester, the usee, a banker at Momence, Kankakee County, Illinois, J, Pernbrook Bishop, a real estate operator in Chicago, and George hi. Bennett, of Grant Park, Kankakee County, Illinois, conceived a scheme of forming a syndicate for the purpose of purchasing and subdividing for sale, a tract of land at South Harvey, Cook County, Illinois, consisting of eighty acres of land, a part of which is the land out of which transactions hereinafter mentioned arose and the note in question grew.

In the latter part of October, 1890, the parties named above commenced negotiations for the purchase of eighty acres of land, and on the 5th of November they had acquired by contract the west forty acres of the land near Harvey, and also had some kind of a contract or option purchase for the east forty, the record not disclosing the exact nature of it. The contract was made between Eugene Cary, the owner of the land, and H. A. Haynes, who had no interest in it and who was a lawyer in Bishop’s office, and engaged in the latter’s business; who made the contract in his own name, but really for the benefit of the three parties. He was to pay $26,000 for the east forty, and the contract was written up and placed by both parties in the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank on November 5, 1890.

Worcester and his party placed a certified check of $1,500 with the contract in the bank to be held as some kind of security for the fulfillment of the contract of purchase, the exact nature of which is not disclosed by the evidencé, except that the $1,500 was not to be a present payment. As soon as these contracts were secured, Bishop, "Worcester and Bennett started out to form a syndicate to whom they might sell this property for the purpose of laying it out into lots and selling it, Bishop, it appears, being an expert in such matters, having been engaged in that kind of business before. The proposition was to sell the land to a syndicate in shares at the rate of $1,200 an acre or $1,000 a share. It would take ninety-six shares at $1,000 each to cover the eighty acres. They proceeded on that basis for a while, but succeeded in getting only seventy-two shares subscribed, and not having succeeded in getting shares enough subscribed they suggested that they would hold the balance of stock themselves. Some of the stockholders objected because they did not want the land incumbered. The first scheme was therefore abandoned, and they organized the syndicate proper on the east forty acres of the land, and the organization of the syndicate on that forty was perfected about November 24, 1890, and all the shares were retired except forty-eight. The deed was obtained from Cary to one Howard S. Taylor, on the 4th of March, 1891, with the intention of his becoming the trustee of the syndicate, which he did by resolution of the shareholders on the 13th of April, 1891. The terms of the subscription to the syndicate were that each subscriber should pay down $500 in cash, and the balance on credit, and it appears from the evidence that at the time Taylor took the deed from Cary, this money was used by the three syndicate makers and Taylor, to pay off all the cash payments of purchase price up to that time of the forty acres of land, $16,000, without applying the certified check of $1,5.00 on the purchase money, or if it was applied, Bishop, "Worcester and Bennett were reimbursed that sum. There was something over $23,000 paid in by the shareholders in the syndicate, and the difference between that and the $16,000 paid on the land was expended in various ways or kept by the three syndicate formers, not fully shown by the evidence. Taylor, at the time of receiving the deed from Cary, executed his note for §10,000 to the latter, together with a mortgage on the east forty to secure it.

On April 20, 1891, Worcester and Bishop made a trade by which Bishop turned over to Worcester all of his equity in $21,000 of deferred payments, which the contract declared was owing from a certain syndicate which had purchased the east half of the above described eighty acres, and which said deferred payments, as the contract recited, were payable to the trustee of the syndicate. Bishop, the party of the first part named in the contract, was to assume the payment of all commissions due L. O. Gilliland, earned in acting as broker for the purchase of said property, and was to be allowed to retain $1,171.63, then in his possession.

Worcester agreed to and gave a quit claim deed to the west half of the eighty to Bishop. This eliminated Bishop’s interest from the syndicate in question and Worcester’s interest in Bishop’s half of the eighty.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ill. App. 639, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-taylor-ex-rel-worcester-illappct-1893.