Mack v. McIntosh

54 N.E. 1019, 181 Ill. 633
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 1019 (Mack v. McIntosh) 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
Mack v. McIntosh, 54 N.E. 1019, 181 Ill. 633 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—We do not deem it necessary to enter into any detailed discussion of the terms of the contract, made between McIntosh and Packer. They appear to have been associated together in the ownership of the premises in question, and in the erection thereon of an apartment building or building of flats, known as the “Alexandra” flats. After the contract for the sale of the premises by McIntosh to Packer was entered into, and, on May '23, 1890, Dowdle & McWhirter, a firm composed of John Dowdle and James McWhirter, filed a mechanic’s lien notice in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Cook county for $4601.07, claimed to be due to them, as stone contractors. Dowdle & McWhirter had furnished the stone, used in the erection of the building upon the premises. The mechanic’s lien, notice of which was thus filed on May 23, 1890, was not minuted upon the abstract of title, which had been furnished to Packer’s attorney, but had come to his knowledge before his examination of the .abstract was finished, and, in his opinion in regard to the title, he referred to this lien as an existing encumbrance upon the property, and made it the basis of an objection to the title.

The proof tends to show, that the building upon the premises was completed in April or May, 1889, and that, on September 17,1889, a settlement had been had_between McIntosh on the one side, and Dowdle & McWhirter on the other, by the terms of which Dowdle & McWhirter waived their right to a lien upon the building, and accepted a note in payment of the balance due them. On May 26, 1890, when the deed was tendered by McIntosh to Packer, a written waiver of lien, signed by Dowdle & McWhirter on September 17, 1889, and other papers, tending" to show that nothing was due to Dowdle & Mc-Whirter, were exhibited and tendered by McIntosh to Packer. We stop not to consider, whether or not, by the terms of the "contract of sale between McIntosh and Packer, McIntosh was bound to furnish an abstract, showing upon its face a release of this alleged mechanic’s lien. Such consideration is unnecessary in view of what is stated hereafter.

We are satisfied from the evidence, that this notice of a mechanic’s lien was filed by Dowdle & McWhirter at the instigation of Packer himself.. The name of the building of flats, “Alexandra,” had not been carved, as was originally intended, over the entrance thereto. On May 8, 1890, the very day on which the contract of sale was signed, Packer induced McIntosh to sign S. written order to Dowdle & McWhirter, directing them to carve the letters, “Alexandra,” over the entrance to the building. This written order stated, that Dowdle & McWhirter had agreed to put on these létters, but had failed to do so, and that they had been settled with and paid therefor already. The theory, upon which the mechanic’s lien notice was filed, appears to have, been that, by the cutting of these letters, which took place between May 8 and May 23, 1890, the performance of the contract for the stone work would be extended up to the latter date. Packer was present with Dowdle & McWhirter during a part of the time when they were carving these letters in the stone. Admissions made by Packer, and other circumstances developed by the testimony, prove that the whole transaction in regard to the filing of the mechanic’s lien was brought about by Packer for the purpose of putting a cloud upon the title, so as to embarrass McIntosh in carrying out the sale of the property.

In view of the manner, in which the lien was thus'put upon the property, Packer was not, of course, warranted in urging the presence of such lien upon the records as an objection to the title. For the same reason, he can not come into a court of equity to ask for a specific performance of the contract of sale. The contract, made on May 6 or May 8, 1890, was assigned to the plaintiff in error on April 30, 1891. If Packer, the purchaser, is not entitled to a specific performance of the contract, the plaintiff in error, his assignee, is in no better position. (Rose v. Swann, 56 Ill. 37). The present bill for specific performance was not filed by the plaintiff in error until May 27, 1892, more than a year after the contract was assigned to her. Where an objection to,a title is urged in bad faith, neither the purchaser, nor his assignee, can be excused for the delay occasioned in the performance of the contract. (Hoyt v. Tuxbury, 70 Ill. 331). The conclusion is irresistible that, at the time Packer urged his objection to the title, based upon the existence of this lien, he knew of its real character. A bill for the specific performance of a contract is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the court, and relief will not be granted as a matter of course. (Maltby v. Thews, 171 Ill. 264). To entitle a party to relief in a court of equity, he must come with clean hands, and with a cause that appeals to equity for relief. (Tamm v. Lavalle, 92 Ill. 263).

We are of the opinion, for the reasons above stated, that plaintiff in error was not entitled to a specific performance of the contract. To allow her to have it would be to allow her to take advantage of her own wrong-, or of that of her assignor.

Second—It is urged, however, by the plaintiff in error that, even if the specific performance of the contract be not granted, yet that she should have a decree for the amount of the earnest money, to-wit, the sum of $3000.00, and interest thereon, as compensation, and that the decree for such amount should be made a lien upon the premises. This contention cannot be sustained under the facts of this case, but plaintiff in error must be left to her remedy at law, if she has any. We express no opinion upon the question, whether or not McIntosh had a right to rescind and forfeit the contract, and retain the earnest money. We simply hold that, in this proceeding, the plaintiff in error is not entitled to a decree for the amount of the earnest money, which shall be a lien upon the property, for the reasons hereinafter stated. On July 23, 1890, after Packer had refused to carry out the contract, and after McIntosh had tendered a deed of the premises and served notice of forfeiture, McIntosh sold the premises to the defendant in error, Francis O. Matthiessen, for the sum of $70,000.00, and executed to him a deed therefor, which was recorded on the day of its date. Counsel for plaintiff in error make no claim in their brief, that Matthiessen" did not purchase the property in good faith and for a valuable consideration. They claim, however, that Matthiessen had notice, or, under the law, was chargeable with notice of the contract made between McIntosh and Packer, and that, therefore, he holds the property subject to the same equities in favor of Packer or his assignee, as would exist in case the title still remained in McIntosh. This certainly would not be so, if Matthiessen had no notice, or is not chargeable with notice, of the contract between McIntosh and Packer.

The allegations of the bill, and the testimony in the case, show that the plaintiff in error knew, before she filed the present bill, that McIntosh, the vendor in the contract, had parted with the title to the land.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 1019, 181 Ill. 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mack-v-mcintosh-ill-1899.