McRae v. Murdoch Campbell Co.

94 Ill. App. 105, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 634
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 18, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 Ill. App. 105 (McRae v. Murdoch Campbell Co.) 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
McRae v. Murdoch Campbell Co., 94 Ill. App. 105, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 634 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Jdstice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the court.

The findings of fact made by the master in chancery to whom this cause was referred, from the evidence produced before him, were in substance as follows :

“That in the latter part of March, 1896, complainant (defendant in error) and John D. McRae entered into an oral contract to put in a store front in building situated on the premises last above described, known as 733 W. Van Burén street, the terms of which were that complainant was to furnish labor and material, and render a bill to John D. McRae & Bro. for the cost of labor and material, with ten per cent added for the profit of complainant; that on or about April 25, 1896, complainant proceeded to put in a store front at 733 W. Van Burén street and completed the work May 25, 1896; that the costs thereof with said profits amounts to $753.43; that $13.47 was subtracted therefrom by complainants, and an itemized bill for $740 was rendered to John D. and William M. McRae about September 12,1896; that about September 16, 1896, John D. and William M. McRae paid thereon $100, which sum is credited; that the said bill for labor and material furnished at 733 W. Van Burén street were fair and reasonable prices for the same at the time; that on September 25, 1896, complainant filed a claim for a lien in the Circuit Court of Cook County against John D. McRae et ah; that the title to said property is in Catherine McRae, under the last will and testament of William McRae, for life, with power of disposal, and remainder over to her children, John D. and William M. McRae, Katie McRae Chamberlain and Bella McRae Law in fee simple; that the improvements upon said premises were made with the full knowledge of Catherine McRae.”

The decree confirmed the master’s report and ordered a sale of the premises.

The petition, as originally filed, alleged (as found by the master and approved by the decree) that a verbal contract was made by the petitioner corporation with John D. McRae to furnish all material and labor to build for him and William M. McRae the alleged improvement upon certain described premises at a reasonable price therefor. And it was alleged that Catherine McRae holds a life estate and said John D. and William M. McRae and Katie McRae Chamberlain and Bella McRae Law have an interest in the premises, the exact nature of which is unknown to petitioner, as devisees of William McRae, deceased.

The petition was subsequently amended by adding thereto and making a part thereof, a copy of the claim of lien which the petitioner had filed in the Circuit Court clerk’s office.

By that claim of lien it was set forth that the contract for the improvement mentioned was entered into between the petitioner and John D. McRae, William M. McRae, Katie McRae Chamberlain, Bella McRae Law and Catherine McRae.

It will be observed that in the original petition the allegation was that the contract was made with John D. McRae alone, and the master, and the court by its decree so found.

Mow, if, as argued by counsel for petitioner, the amendment was equivalent to an allegation that the contract was with the owners, the decree is at variance with the proofs. There is no proof of a contract with anybody except with John D. McRae, and the master so found, and so does the decree.

For the purpose, seemingly, of meeting this difficulty, the petitioner obtained leave at the time of the hearing by the court of exceptions to the master’s report, to make a further amendment to the petition, and did so by averring that “ defendants Catherine McRae, Katie McRae Chamberlain and Bella McRae Law, had knowledge that said improvements were being made upon said premises, and they and each of them knowingly permitted the said improvements to be made and the said contract to be carried out upon the premises as herein described at the time specified.”

This is the first time that there was any explicit allegation that the improvement was “knowingly permitted” by the owners.

But passing that by, and also omitting all consideration of whether this last amendment introduced into the case a new issue which it was error to deny the plaintiffs in error, or some of them, an opportunity to take additional proof upon, let us see what effect this last amendment had upon the case.

Without treating of it in all its aspects, the case, as it then stood, may, perhaps, be construed as a petition based upon a contract with John D. McRae for the making of improvements, which the owners Catherine McRae, Katie McRae Chamberlain and Bella McRae Law had knowledge of and knowingly permitted to be done.

It will be noticed that the master reported, as to the knowledge of said owners, that Catherine McRae, only, had any knowledge of the making of the improvements. The decree also finds that the improvement was made with the full knowledge and consent of Catherine McRae, but does not make any finding with reference to the knowledge or permission of either Katie McRae Chamberlain or Bella McRae Law. But the decree proceeds and orders a sale of the whole premises. We think so doing was plainly erroneous.

Whatever the evidence may show as to the knowledge that Catherine McRae and Bella McRae Law had of the improvement being made, there seems to be no evidence even tending to show that Katie McRae Chamberlain ever knew of, consented to or knowingly permitted the work to be done, or knew that a contract therefor had been made for its doing.

To sell her property under such circumstances would be a grievous wrong to her.

The petitioner was bound to choose whether it would claim alien upon the theory, either that its contract was with the owners, or was with somebody else, and that the owners consented to and knowingly permitted the improvement to be made; but it could not do both.

Mo case was made, upon the record before us, to sustain the decree under either theory.

The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Opinion on Rehearing.—Upon a further examination of the evidence, and of the concluding portions of the master’s report, and of the decree that was entered thereon, it is apparent that we were in error in saying that the contract was made with John D. McRae alone. It was with John D. McRae and William M. McRae, doing business as partners under the name of John D. McRae & Bro. (represented by John D. McRae), that the defendant in error contracted to do the work in question.

All that we said to the contrary in our former opinion, in respect thereof, needs to be and is modified accordingly. Any conclusion which legitimately follows from such a change, in our opinion, should necessarily be considered and embodied in any decree to be hereafter entered by the Circuit Court, upon the same, or like evidence.

It is insisted that the interests in the land, of the other defendants, Catherine McRae, Katie McRae Chamberlain and Bella McRae Law, were properly bound by the decree, because of their having knowingly permitted the improvement to be made. What we said in the former opinion concerning the knowledge, consent or permission of Katie McRae Chamberlain, to the work being done, must stand.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ill. App. 105, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcrae-v-murdoch-campbell-co-illappct-1900.