Moyses v. Schendorf

142 Ill. App. 293, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 182
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 10, 1908
DocketGen. No. 4,969
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 Ill. App. 293 (Moyses v. Schendorf) 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
Moyses v. Schendorf, 142 Ill. App. 293, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 182 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Willis

delivered the opinion of the court.

In vacation, after the October term of the Lake County Circuit Court, appellants, Margaret Schendorf and Henry C. Schendorf, confessed judgment on a promissory note in favor of appellee, Sam Moyses, for $1,515. At the next term, said appellants moved the court to stay execution, vacate the judgment, and for leave to plead. This motion was heard without objection or exception, upon an affidavit of Henry C. Schendorf with, a contract attached thereto, as an exhibit, and upon counter-affidavits for appellee, and an affidavit in reply by appellant Henry C. Schendorf. Notwithstanding the absence of objection to that method of hearing the motion, we are of the opinion that the court should have opened the judgment independent of the showing in the counter-affidavits, if the showing in support of the motion made a prima facie defense to the note. It appears that appellee and appellant, Henry C. Schendorf, hereinafter called Schendorf, entered into a written contract dated September 1,1906, for the purchase of 100 shares of the capital stock of the E. Goldstein Company, a corporation doing business in Chicago, Illinois, for $8,000, the same to be paid not later than November 1, 1906. To secure the consummation of the contract, Schendorf and Margaret Schendorf, his wife, appellants, executed and delivered to appellee a promissory note for $1,500 payable November 1, 1906. The contract provided that if Schendorf paid for the stock according to the terms of the contract, the note was to be returned to him; if he did not, the note should become due and payable immediately. This was the note upon which the judgment was .entered-.

The business of the E. Goldstein Company was a saloon and restaurant operated together. By the terms of the contract, Schendorf became manager of the restaurant portion of the business at a salary of $25 per week, which position he was to hold until the first of November, 1906. He, however, continued as manager until November 15,1906, when he surrendered the keys to appellee’s attorney.

It is contended that appellants were not liable on the note because appellee did not tender Schendorf the 100 shares of stock contracted for, and that he did not show that he owned the stock. It is no doubt true that when the time for performance has come, the vendor must possess the thing to be sold, and must tender it, if it is susceptible of manual delivery, or by conveyance if it is not, before he can put the other party in default. Augsberg v. Meredith, 101 Ill. App. 629, and cases there cited. There is an exception to this rule however. If the vendee or grantee declares his intention not to perform, or refuses to perform, then a tender of delivery or a conveyance is not necessary, as the law does not require a needless formality. Osgood v. Skinner, 211 Ill. 229. From the proof it is clear that the capital stock of the E. Goldstein Company consisted of 200 shares, that Goldstein owned 100 shares and appellee 100 shares on November 1,1906, and it is undisputed that Schendorf told appellee or his attorney that he would not take the stock. Since appellee owned the stock and Schendorf declared that he would not take it, it was essential that appellee tender it to him in order that a right of action should accrue on the note.

Appellants’ main contention is that the contract and note given to secure their compliance therewith, were procured by false and fraudulent representations. It appears from the affidavit first filed by Schendorf, that on or about August 25,1906, as an inducement for him to buy the stock, appellee told him that this saloon and restaurant business was making money, and that this statement was absolutely false, and known to be false by appellee; and that at the time said negotiations were being made said saloon and restaurant business was being run by the Goldstein Company at a loss of $35 to $50 per day, and that said loss continued at the same rate up to the time Schendorf gave up said restaurant, November 15, 1906.

Schendorf, in an affidavit filed in reply, stated that appellee told him that the restaurant was not paying, but that the saloon was paying first rate, and was making so much money that both operated together were profitable, and on a paying’ basis. It is contended by appellee that these statements, if made, were but puffing one’s wares, and that the seller had a right to do that. If the statement had been that it would pay in the future, this position would be correct. If, in fact, the saloon and restaurant business was being conducted at a loss of from $35 to $50 per day then the statement made by appellee to Schendorf that it was being conducted at a profit was false, as a matter of fact, and not as a matter of opinion, and that fact was within the knowledge of appellee, and not of Schendorf. We, however, conclude that the proofs appearing-in the affirmative were not sufficient for this reason to warrant the court in opening the judgment and giving leave to set this matter up as a defense. Obviously Schendorf did not know, from his own knowledge, that the business was run at a loss of from $35 to $50 per day during the period covered by the negotiations, and if he had learned that fact from anyone, it was but hearsay on his part. If someone knew the fact, and told him of it, there should have been an affidavit showing that fact by some person knowing it, or knowing-facts sufficient to show it. In order to know whether the business was being- conducted at a loss, it would be necessary not merely to consider the receipts for a few days, but to know what the .expenditures had been for stock, labor, rent, etc., over a considerable period of time. Schendorf’s was the only affidavit filed showing that the business was being conducted at a loss during the period covered by these negotiations. It is true that Schendorf’s affidavit does not show that he made these statements -upon information and belief, but shows that the statements were made by him as if he knew them to be true, but it is obvious from a consideration of Ms entire affidavit, that he couM not know the fact and that it was but hearsay. We are of the opinion that an allegation of this Mnd, on hearsay only, unsupported by any direct proof of the truth of the statement, or by anything to show that the statement can be supported by such proof, is not a sufficient allegation. It is true that Schendorf stated in his affidavit that while he was manager of the restaurant, from about September 1 to November 15, 1906, the entire business was losing from $35 to $50 a day. If tMs were true, its being conducted at a loss then would not prove that it had been previously conducted at a loss and the loss, if any, might have been due to the inexperienced management of Schendorf. Moreover, Schendorf includes the saloon as well as the restaurant business, and, except for ten days, he apparently had nothing to do with that, and in his affidavit in reply he states that he really did not know that they were losing business before the first of November, so that even his allegation that they were losing money from the time he took possession, at the rate of from $35 to $50 per day is hearsay, without being supported by the affidavit of anyone who knew. Taken altogether, Schendorf’s affidavit means no more than that he had reason to believe that from undisclosed sources he will be able to show that the business was conducted at a loss. We think this insufficient to authorize the court to open the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
142 Ill. App. 293, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyses-v-schendorf-illappct-1908.