Mariner v. Gilchrist

280 Ill. 544
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1917
DocketNos. 11081-82
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 Ill. 544 (Mariner v. Gilchrist) 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
Mariner v. Gilchrist, 280 Ill. 544 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

.The proceedings in this cause grow out of a contract executed on January 2, 1889, by Granville S. Ingraham and A. J. Cooper creating a relation between them in the nature of a co-partnership, in which one hundred acres of land, of the value of $100,000, constituted the capital. The contract has been construed by this court and the respective rights of the parties thereto have been practically settled in three former decisions of this court, in two of which will be found the contract set out in full. Ingraham v. Mariner, 194 Ill. 269; Mariner v. Ingraham, 230 id. 130; Same v. Same, 255 id. 108.

The circuit court of Cook county by its decree of April 15, 1902, found that it was the intention of Ingraham and Cooper by said contract to enter into a joint enterprise, in the nature of a partnership, in regard to said land; that Ingraham’s interest therein should be $70,000, and Cooper’s interest therein, upon the payment of $30,000 to be loaned to said Ingraham on said land, should be $30,000; that the land should be carried at joint expense until the parties should agree upon the proper time to sell the same; that Cooper was to keep the interest on the loan for $30,000 paid, under penalty of forfeiting his interest; that the principal of the loan should be carried until the sale of the land should be made, when it should be paid out of Cooper’s share of the proceeds; that in case of a sale of said land for a profit, after the distribution of the profits Ingraham should be paid $70,000, with interest at six per cent per annum to date of sale, and all taxes and expenses paid by him, with six per cent interest to date of sale'; ■ that there should be paid to the holder of the note for $30,000, now owned and held by the executors of Ephraim Mariner and J. Platt Underwood by reason of an assignment by said Cooper to Mariner and Underwood, the sum of $30,000, and interest thereon to date of sale, and from the maturity of the last installment of interest before the sale, together with all taxes and expenses paid by said Mariner and Underwood, assignees, and six per cent interest thereon to date of sale, and that in case of a loss the same should be borne pro rata, according to the amount contributed by each of the parties to the contract or their assignees. The decree further ordered that the premises be sold at public auction for one-third cash and the balance in one, two and three years, etc., and that the sale be postponed until the further order of the court. The decree of the circuit court in the foregoing particulars is in accordance with the decrees and orders of this court. Ingraham v. Mariner, supra; Mariner v. Ingraham, 230 Ill. 130.

On March 22, 1905, the circuit court decreed that the sale of said land be made six months thereafter, and fixed special terms of the sale and of payment of the purchase money in case the premises were purchased by any of the parties in interest. Thereafter the master in chancery advertised and sold the land for $95,000 to the executors of Ingraham’s will, and they paid into court $30,000 and deposited in court a receipt for the remaining purchase money.

On May 24, 1909, the circuit court entered a decree reciting that there are no profits from the proceeds of sale of said land and that it was sold at a loss; that the cause be referred to the master in chancery to take an account between the executor and surviving trustee of Ingraham and Mariner, J. Platt Underwood and John M. Gartside, of the share which each of them is entitled .to receive out of the proceeds of the said sale and of the indebtedness due from either of said parties to the other with respect to the said contract concerning said land; that in taking said account the master is directed to proceed upon the basis that Ingraham contributed $70,000 capital and Cooper $30,000; that the executors and trustees of Ingraham’s estate have succeeded to his rights and liabilities, and that Mariner and Underwood are the assignees and have succeeded to the rights and incurred the obligations of said Cooper under the original contract; that said losses arising from said joint enterprise should be borne pro rata, in proportion to the amount contributed by each of said parties, and the master was instructed to make his report in accordance with the instructions in the decree, and that the proceeds of said sale be held by the master until the further order of the court. That decree was affirmed ón appeal by the Appellate Court for the First District and by this court on a writ of error to the Appellate Court. Manner v. Ingraham, 255 Ill. 108.

The decree now brought before this court for review-states an account between the said parties interested in the proceeds of the sale of said land. The master first found that the total loss of the enterprise was $168,834.88. He found the total indebtedness of the enterprise to be: First, principal of the' $30,000 incumbrance on the land, with six per cent interest from the last interest day to the date of sale, October 1, 1908, $30,450; second, capital contributed by Ingraham, $70,000, and six per cent interest from date of contract to date of sale, $82,903.34, making $152,903.34; third, taxes and assessments paid by Ingraham and executors, with six per cent interest thereon to date of sale, $86,870.82, less receipts collected from the property and six per cent interest thereon to date of sale, $8299.85, making $78,570.97; fourth, expenses paid by Mariner and Underwood, with six per cent interest from time of payment to date of sale, $1679.37; total indebtedness of enterprise October 1, 1908, the date of sale, $263,603.68. By deducting from the total liabilities the net proceeds of sale after deducting expenses of sale, $94,768.80, the master found the total loss of the enterprise to be as above stated. He further found that the decree of May 24, 1909, required Underwood and the executors of Mariner to bear thirty per cent of this loss, or $50,670.46, and that they were entitled to a credit of $1679.37 'f°r expenses advanced by them, with interest, leaving as the net amount due .the Ingraham estate the sum of $48,971.09, and that said sum should bear interest at five per cent from December 21, 1908, to the date that decree should be entered, (July 14, 1914,) amounting to more than $14,000. The master allowed the last sum mentioned as interest, on his conclusion that the original contract was an instrument in writing within the meaning of our statute on interest, section 2 of which provides: “Creditors shall be allowed to receive at the rate of five (5) percentum per annum for all moneys after they become due on any bond, bill, promissory note, or other instrument of writing.”

Objections were filed to the master’s report by J. Platt Underwood and the executors of the estate of Ephraim Mariner, deceased, and were by the master overruled and exceptions taken. On final decree the court sustained the master in all things except the awarding of interest on the amount found due the Ingraham estate, and decreed that Underwood and the executors of Mariner should pay to the estate of Ingraham the said sum of $48,971.09 and the further sum of $597.87, master’s and stenographer’s fees paid by said estate, and that said amounts should bear interest at the legal rate from July 14, 1914; that upon satisfactory evidence of the payment of said sums, and interest, the master in chancery is ordered to pay to Underwood and the executors of Mariner all moneys and securities, and interest accrued thereon, remaining in his hands as part proceeds of the sale of said land,—i.

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280 Ill. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mariner-v-gilchrist-ill-1917.