Quinlan v. Keen

72 Ill. App. 129, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 602
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 2, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 72 Ill. App. 129 (Quinlan v. Keen) 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
Quinlan v. Keen, 72 Ill. App. 129, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 602 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiffs in error, composing the members of a syndicate, filed their bill December 31, 1893, by which they seek the cancellation and rescission of the option contracts below described, and a decree that defendants in error repay them the money paid by plaintiffs in error in the original purchase" of the lands in question, or that plaintiffs in error should be allowed the benefit of any profits which Clarke & Co. might make or might have made in connection with the transaction detailed below. In the trial court, as well as in this court, plaintiffs in error admitted in argument they could not be allowed the latter relief, and waived it.

The record shows the following facts, in substance, to wit:

In the latter part of the year 1890, plaintiffs in error entered into an association having for its object the purchase and resale of certain lands in the village of Morgan Park, Cook county, Illinois. This association was organized by Benjamin F. Clarke and George R. Clarke, his half-brother, who induced the various parties to become members and to invest their money in the enterprise.- George R. Clarko was widely and favorably known in the community, and to many of the persons who composed the association. He subscribed for one-quarter of the original capital, and was one of the most active participants in the affairs of the concern. He was elected one of the board of managers and appointed treasurer, with entire charge of its funds. Benjamin F. Clarke was elected secretary, with the usual duties pertaining to the office. The whole plan of this syndicate, originated and was mapped out between these two and in the office of the latter, and the name of George B. Clarke headed the list of subscribers to the articles of association. He was most active in the meetings of the association, prepared the prospectus which was used in obtaining members and selling stock, was its chief promoter and most active manager.

The land was purchased from one George C. Walker, who held the same as trustee for the stockholders of the Blue Island Land & Building Company, a corporation organized under a special charter of the Illinois legislature, and which charter had expired in 1889. Title was taken in the name of William H. Quinlan, for the benefit of the members of the syndicate and for convenience of transfer, but the. fact that Qúinlan acted in a trust capacity does not appear to have been known to Walker at that time, nor until about one year later. There is no proof that plaintiffs in error didn’t know that Clarke & Co. were the agents for the sale of the land, except as hereinafter stated.

The purchase price was $200,000, $50,000 being paid in cash and the notes of Quinlan given for $150,000, payable in installments of $50,000 each in one, two and three years respectively, with interest at six per cent. At the expiration of the first year the land was still unsold; some of the members were unable to contribute their share of the amount of money which then fell due, and the others could not make payments upon their respective parcels because there had been no partition among the members.

After long negotiation it was agreed that Quinlan should reconvey the land to George C. Walker as trustee, and that-all of the members of the association should execute quitclaim deeds and surrender their certificates of stock, and that Mr. Walker should execute eighteen options of purchase running to Charles L. Morgan, one of the members of the syndicate, providing that said Morgan or his assigns might purchase the land described therein at certain prices therein stated at any time on or before December 31, 1893.

This plan was finally consummated on or about April 11, 1892.

In May of the same year George R. Clarke died and left his widow, Sarah D. Clarke, his sole legatee and devisee, and Joseph A. Davol, another of the defendants, died prior to the filing of the bill. Benjamin F. Clarke had made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors and had absconded, and it was impossible to obtain his testimony. William B. Keen, Jr., and George Keen, two other defendants, were so sick that their testimony could not be obtained, and under the statute each and all of the complainants were disqualified from testifying.

About thirty days before the option contracts expired the syndicate held a meeting at the office of its attorney, and it was then and there stated that George R. Clarke, then deceased, was largely interested in the lands bought by the syndicate, through his connection with the firm of Clarke & Co. This was the first time the fact had ever been mentioned at any meeting of the syndicate. This testimony is given by two witnesses called on behalf of the complainants.

George R. Clarke was a member of the firm of George R. Clarke & Co., which firm was composed of George R. Clarke, who owned a one-half interest, George Keen, one-sixth, William B. Keen, Jr., one-sixth, and Joseph A. Davol, one-sixth interest.

. There existed a sales contract between the firm of Clarke & Co. and the Blue Island Land and Building Company, which was continually in force from April 15, 1886, and which expired April 30, 1891, under which Clarke & Co. were to receive twenty per cent as a commission on all lands sold for the Building Company up to a certain upset price mentioned in the sales contract, and that all sums in addition to the upset price were to be divided equally between Clarke & Co. and the Building Company, but Clarke & .Co. were to pay all advertising expenses and also to furnish money to build houses as needed, and were never to acquire the land nor any interest in it. The amount of money Clarke & Co. would have been entitled to receive on the sale in question, if it had been consummated, was $80,-348.95, and they did actually receive it out of the first cash payment, and what was advanced to them by Walker subsequently.

In April, 1892, George R Clarke and the members of the firm of Clarke & Co., on the one hand, and George C. Walker, as trustee for the Building Company, on the other hand, entered into a certain settlement contract, under which it was finally agreed in substance that Clarke & Co. should have advanced to them their share of the profits paid by the syndicate, and that in case the syndicate failed to exercise the options of repurchase that they should be entitled to buy the lands in question; deducting their profits the price would have been a little over half the price to the syndicate.

This settlement contract was entered into by Clarke and his partners on the one hand, and at about the time when Clarke as a partner in the land association was engaged in effecting a settlement with Walker on behalf of said association.

The firm of Clarke & Co. for years occupied a suite of offices in common with George C. Walker, and were intimately associated in business affairs, and the members of the firm were all related to Walker by blood or marriage.

Immediately after the option contracts were executed Walker resigned as trustee for the Building Company, and George Keen, one of the" members of the firm of Clarke & Co., became his successor, and while. he had ostensibly assigned his interest in that firm to his brother, William B.

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72 Ill. App. 129, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinlan-v-keen-illappct-1897.