Mikelaiczak v. Kruppa

98 N.E. 257, 254 Ill. 209
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 257 (Mikelaiczak v. Kruppa) 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
Mikelaiczak v. Kruppa, 98 N.E. 257, 254 Ill. 209 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee filed his bill in the circuit court of Cook county for the specific performance of a contract made between him and two of the appellants, Frank Kruppa and Sadie Kruppa, for the conveyance of certain real estate. The agreement between the parties was entered into and signed on the 27th day of September, 1910. By the contract Frank Kruppa and Sadie Kruppa agreed to convey to appellee two pieces of property in the city of Chicago particularly described and known as Nos. 4715 and 4728 South Wood street, the first mentioned property subject to an encumbrance of $2300. The consideration for the conveyance named in the contract was $12,000 and the encumbrance was to be assumed by appellee as part of the consideration, and as a further part of the consideration appellee agreed to convey to Prank and Sadie Kruppa, by general warranty deed, free from all estates of homestead and dower rights, a farm of 170 acres in Juneau county, Wisconsin, valued at $8500, together with the crops, stock, fixtures and machinery on the farm. The farm was subject to a mortgage of $400, which Prank and Sadie Kruppa assumed as a part of the consideration. The contract further provided that appellee shopld also give Frank and Sadie Kruppa his promissory note for $1600, due in five years from date, with interest at five per cent per annum, and provided that each party would furnish the other, within a reasonable time, an abstract showing merchantable title to their respective properties, and each party agreed to deposit $200 to insure the faithful performance of the contract on their respective parts. The contract recited that Prank and Sadie Kruppa had deposited $50 in cash and their demand note for $150, and appellee had deposited his demand note for $200. The party who failed to perform the contract agreed to forfeit his deposit. Each party was given ten days after receiving an abstract to notify the other of any objections to it, and if material defects were found in the title and were not cured within sixty days after notice thereof, the contract was to become null and void. The deeds were to be passed and the negotiations closed at the office of R. H. Smith within five days after the title had been found good. It was agreed the contract was to be held by R. H. Smith for the mutual benefit of the parties concerned. The bill alleges that on the 5th day of October, 1910, Prank and Sadie Kruppa conveyed the premises Nos. 4715 an(l 472& South Wood street to Joseph Husalc and Mary Husalc, who claim to be the owners thereof. The bill alleges Joseph Husalc and Mary Husak each had actual, positive and definite notice of the execution of the agreement between Frank and Sadie Kruppa and appellee before and at the time the conveyance was made to them, and that they took said conveyance with full knowledge of the contract between appellee and Frank and Sadie Kruppa and appellee’s rights thereunder. The bill further alleges that appellee has ever since the execution of the agreement been ready, able and willing to comply with its terms on his part, and on the 7th day of October, 1910, he tendered Frank and Sadie Kruppa a warranty deed for the Wisconsin farm, a bill of sale of the stock, crops, fixtures and machinery on said farm and appellee’s promissory note for $1600, bearing interest at five per cent, in accordance with the provisions of the contract, and requested compliance therewith by the said Frank and Sadie Kruppa, but they refused to make the conveyance to appellee according to their agreement.

Joseph and Mary Husak answered the bill denying that at the time the Kruppas conveyed to them they had any knowledge of the existence of the agreement between the Kruppas and appellee for the conveyance to appellee of the property. The answer further averred that the contract between appellee and the Kruppas was not a legal and valid contract; that the farm of appellee in Wisconsin was appellee’s homestead; that he resided thereon at the time with his wife, who had an interest in the premises and who did not join in the execution of the contract. The Husalcs also filed a cross-bill praying that the agreement, which was of record, be decreed to be null and void and canceled and set aside as a cloud upon their title. Frank and Sadie Kruppa filed an answer averring that Frank Kruppa was intoxicated when the contract was executed and that he did not know what it was he signed; that whatever paper he signed was without consideration, was never delivered to appellee and its recording was never authorized. An amendment to the answer of Joseph and Mary Husak set out the statute of the State of Wisconsin, which provides that no alienation by a married man of his homestead exempt by law from execution shall be valid or of any effect as to such homestead without the signature of his wife to the conveyance.

After replication filed, the evidence was heard in open court by the chancellor and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The chancellor found and recited in the decree that at the time the deed was made to Joseph and Mary Husak they had actual and positive knowledge of the making, delivery and existing binding force and effect of the contract between appellee and the Kruppas, dated September 27, 1910, and of appellee’s rights thereunder; that the conveyance from the Kruppas to the Husalcs was made to defraud appellee and to prevent him from obtaining a conveyance from the Kruppas; that the Husaks were not innocent bona fide purchasers and took no title to the property as against the rights and interests of appellee, and the deed to them was ordered canceled, annulled and set aside, Frank and Sadie Kruppa ordered and directed to execute and deliver to appellee a deed in accordance with the agreement, conveying the said two pieces of property, and Joseph and Mary Husak to execute and deliver to appellee a quit-claim deed therefor. The cross-bill was dismissed. This appeal is prosecuted from that decree.

It is first contended the court erred in decreeing specific performance of the agreement for the reason that it was lacking in mutuality. The basis of this contention is that the Wisconsin farm was the appellee’s homestead, and the agreement not having been signed by his wife, it is claimed that it could not have been enforced against appellee by the Kruppas, and therefore appellee cannot maintain a bill to enforce the agreement against them. In Cohen v. Segal, 253 Ill. 34, the court sustained the right to specific performance of a contract for the exchange of properties made between a married man and a married woman which was not signed by the wife or husband of the parties to the contract. Whether there was any right of homestead in either of the parties does not appear, but it was held the signature of a husband or wife having an inchoate right of dower was not necessary to authorize specific performance, if the vendor seeking performance is able to make good title by conveyance releasing the inchoate right of dower within the time agreed upon in the contract. The court cited and quoted from Maryland Const. Co. v. Kuper, 90 Md. 540. In that case it was said the great weight of authority is, that to authorize specific performance it is not required that the party seeking it should possess, at the time of making the contract, a clear title to the property he agrees to convey, but it is sufficient that he is able to convey the property according to the agreement when called upon by his contract to do so. In Watson v. Doyle, 130 Ill. 415, and White v. Bates, 234 id.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 257, 254 Ill. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mikelaiczak-v-kruppa-ill-1912.