Pierce v. Coryn

126 Ill. App. 244, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 480
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 2, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,496
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 Ill. App. 244 (Pierce v. Coryn) 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
Pierce v. Coryn, 126 Ill. App. 244, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 480 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill filed on December 11, 1895, by Kels Pierce and Gust S. Lundquist against Isedore Yerhulst, to foreclose a mortgage upon real estate in Moline, given to secure two notes of $800 each, wherein Yerhulst was the maker, and L. O. Lewis was payee, said notes having been sold and indorsed by Lewis to Pierce and Lundquist. Yerhulst answered, setting up that said notes were given as part consideration for a contract between Lewis and himself, and that he had been enjoined from retaining the fruits of said contract, and therefore the consideration had failed. The cause was referred to the master to take and report proofs and conclusions. The master heard proofs only as to the execution and assignment of the note and mortgage, and that Pierce and Lundquist purchased the notes before maturity, for value. On June 29, 1896, the master filed a report, recommending a decree for complainants. ¡Nothing further was done in said cause for several years, the parties apparently awaiting the termination of the litigation wherein Yerhulst had been enjoined. Yerhulst died intestate, and his administrator and heirs at law were made defendants, and answered and filed an amended answer, after the termination of the litigation wherein Yerhulst had been enjoined. Complainants filed exceptions to the amended answer, which were overruled, and complainants did not reply. The administrator and heirs of Yerhulst filed a cross-bill against Pierce and Lundquist, to have the mortgage declared a cloud upon the title to said premises, and to have the notes surrendered. Pierce and Lundquist demurred to said cross-bill, their demurrer was overruled, and they elected to abide by the demurrer. The court set aside the reference to and report by the master, and the cause was heard upon the bill and various supplements and amendments thereto, the amended answer, thereby taken as true, and upon the cross-bill, taken as confessed; and a decree was rendered finding that the consideration of said notes and mortgage had wholly failed; dismissing the original bill for want of equity; setting aside the mortgage as a cloud upon the title of the premises therein described, and directing Pierce and Lundquist to deliver up said mortgage and notes, and release the mortgage.

The correctness of this decree depends upon the mean-ins: and effect of the contract between Lewis and Yerhulst, above referred to. On January 24, 1893, A. J. Blethen entered into a contract with A. R. Stoddard and L. O. Lewis. He therein represented himself to be the owner, either in person or as stockholder, of about twelve hundred acres of land near Briar Bluff, in Henry County, known as the property of the Briar Bluff Mining and Stock Company, upon which there was a growth of timber covering about five hundred acres, and that he desired to have said timber cut and removed. By that contract he leased and sold and gave to Stoddard and Lewis the right to remove all the timber upon said real estate within five years after February 1, 1893. Certain lands and timber were exempted from the contract, the manner of doing the work was specified, and a sufficient consideration was recited. Lewis became possessed of the interest of Stoddard in said contract. On May 23, 1894, Lewis entered into the contract here in question with Yerhulst. In the first part thereof, Lewis stated that in consideration of the covenants and agreements of Yerhulst thereinafter set forth, he sold, assigned, transferred and set over unto Yerhulst all his right, title and interest in and to said contract from Blethen to himself and Stoddard; following which words of sale and assignment was this language: “The right, privilege and interest assigned to said party of the second part, as received by the said Lewis and Stoddard from the said Alden J. Blethen and by the said Stoddard assigned to said Lewis, is as follows:” Then the entire contract between Blethen and Stoddard and Lewis was set out, together with certain modifications that had been made thereto. The contract between Lewis and Yerhulst then recited that Lewis, in consideration of the covenants and agreements of Yerhulst, had also bargained and sold, and by those presents did grant and convey to Yerhulst all of the down timber and wood then cut and contained on said premises, and also the portable engine, large and small saw-tables and saws, belts, shafting, gearing, and all appliances and tools then owned by Lewis, and used by him and Stoddard in the wood business on said premises. Lewis also therein agreed to retire immediately from the xvood business, and turn over all his wood business and good will then enjoyed by him to Yerhulst, which retirement should continue for the period of five years, or so long as Yerhulst kept the covenants and agreements on his part therein specified. Yerhulst therein agreed to pay Lewis $2,500 as follows: $900 cash in hand, the receipt of which was acknowledged, and $800 in one year and $800 in two years after date, according to the tenor of the two notes above referred to, with interest at seven per cent, per annum, and secured by mortgage upon said real estate in Moline. Yerhulst entered and began removing timber under said contract.

In fact, when Blethen made his contract with Stoddard and Lewis, this real estate was the property of the Briar Bluff Mining and Stock Company, of which Blethen was a stockholder and officer, and said company had, prior thereto, executed a trust deed upon said real estate and other lands, securing an indebtedness of $100,000, which trust deed had been recorded. On January 29, 1895, a bill was filed in the Circuit Court of Henry County to foreclose said trust deed. On June 29, 1895, Yerhulst was made a defendant to that bill, and was enjoined from entering on the premises, or taking or removing or converting to his own uses any of the wood then standing, or which had been cut from said premises, and from taking and removing the tools, machinery and appliances then on said premises. Yerhulst defended that suit, and had a decree dismissing the bill as to him, which decree was reversed in this court on February 28,1898, in Minneapolis Trust Company v. Verhulst, 74 Ill. App. 350, and the cause was remanded. Yerhulst had died, and his administrator was substituted in his place after said cause was remanded to-the Circuit Court of Henry County, and on April 17,1901, a final decree was rendered in said cause, wherein it was determined that the steam engine and boiler and tools and appliances included in said injunction were the property of Yerhulst, and as to said property the • injunction was dissolved. It was ordered that one-half of $842 remaining in the hands of the receiver in that cause should be paid to Yerhulst’s administrator, and said administrator was given till the first day of the next term to file a suggestion of damages for the wrongful issuing of said injunction.

The amended answer by the administrator and heirs of Yerhulst was filed in the case now before us after said final decree in the Henry Circuit Court. That answer, after setting up in detail that said txvo notes of $800 each were a part of the consideration given by Yerhulst to Lewis for said contract of assignment and sale, further stated that in pursuance of said agreement Yerhulst “proceeded to cut and remove some of the wood from said premises, and continued so to do until on or about the 29th day of June, A. D. -1895,” when Yerhulst was enjoined as aforesaid.

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Related

Pierce v. Coryn
139 Ill. App. 445 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
126 Ill. App. 244, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-coryn-illappct-1905.