Reiss v. Scherner

87 Ill. App. 84, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 328
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 Ill. App. 84 (Reiss v. Scherner) 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
Reiss v. Scherner, 87 Ill. App. 84, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 328 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Jacob N. Schemer and others, defendants in error, filed a petition for mechanics’ liens on certain premises described in the petition, against Joseph P. Holzbauer, the owner of said premises, Otto Reiss, plaintiff in error, Julius Schilling and others. The issues having been made up, the cause was referred to the master to take proofs and report. The master in his report recommended, among other things, that a trust deed of the premises held by plaintiff in error, and by virtue of which he claimed a lien, should be released, as a cloud on the title. The court overruled Reiss’ exceptions to the master’s report, confirmed the report and dismissed Reiss’ cross-bill praying relief in respect to his trust deed.

The facts are substantially as follows: May 17, 1897, Jacob M. Schemer and Joseph P. Holzbauer contracted for the erection by the former of a building on the premises described in the petition, the building to be completed on or before August 15,1897, for the consideration of $4,000, payment to be made by Schemer to Holzbauer, as follows: $1,500 when the roof should be on; $1,000 when the building would be plastered; $500 when it would be ready for painting, and $1,000 when it would be completed, delivered and accepted. The contract was, at the time it was made, formally reduced to writing, ready for the signatures of the parties, but was not then signed, it appearing from the evidence that the parties did not intend to sign it, but intended it merely as a memorandum of their agreement. After the agreement was reduced to writing, and about May 19,1897, it was further agreed between Schemer and Holzbauer that the former should build a barn on the premises for the sum of $150, and that he should substitute cherry for oak in the front parlor of the building for the sum of $25. This latter agreement was not reduced to writing. At the time of the agreements mentioned there was a mortgage on Holzbauer’s premises to secure payment of the sum of $500, and he, intending to borrow money to make the improvements contracted for with Schemer, desired to remove the mortgage incumbrance, and for this purpose he borrowed from Scherner $500, and with that sum paid the money secured by the mortgage. Holzbauer then, through John C. Krasa, applied to Theodore Schintz for a loan on the property, and Schintz agreed to lend him $3,000, but required that Holzbauer and Schemer should sign the writing of May 17th, embodying the terms of the contract between them, which they did. This was about two weeks after the making of that contract.

May 24, 1897, Joseph Holzbauer executed and delivered to Schintz two principal notes, each payable to his own order .and by him indorsed; one note being for the sum of $500, due three years after date, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually; the other for the sum of $2,500, payable and indorsed in like manner, due five years after date, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. At the same date Holzbauer executed and indorsed notes for the semi-annual interest to become due on each of the principal notes. Also, at the same date Holzbauer and his wife, Emma, executed to Theodore Schintz a trust deed of the premises described in the petition, to secure the payment of the $500 note, which was recorded June 23, 1897, and also executed to Schintz a trust deed of the same premises to secure the payment of the $2,500 note, which was recorded May 29,1897. June 2, 1897, Julius Schilling purchased from Schintz the $500 note, paying therefor $500. In the latter part of May, 1897, Otto Reiss purchased from Schintz the $2,500 note, paying therefor $2,500. July 16, 1897, Schintz gave his check to Holzbauer, payable to the latter’s order, for the sum of $500, which check Holzbauer indorsed and delivered to Schemer about July 1.7, 1897, in payment of the $500 theretofore lent to him by Schemer to remove the incumbrance on the premises prior to the trust deeds in question. The Schintz check was paid and the $500 mentioned in it was all the money which Holzbauer ever received from Schintz on account of his notes and trust deeds. Each of the principal notes had a power of attorney annexed to it, which authorized the holder to declare the note and interest thereon due, and confess judgment for the same in the event of non-payment of interest when due. The first interest note for the semi-annual interest due on the $2,500 note not being paid, Otto Eeiss elected to declare the principal note for $2,500 due and payable, and, November 27,1897, caused judgment to be entered by confession for $2,625, the amount of said note and interest thereon. Subsequently the court granted leave to Holzbauer to plead to the declaration, the judgment to stand as security.

Schemer commenced work under his contract with Holzbauer May 17, 1897, and fully completed the same by July 21, 1897, and the same was accepted by Holzbauer. The value of the lot on which the house and barn were erected is $1,000, and the value of the improvements placed thereon ■by Schemer $1,500. The court, by its decree, found that the amounts due Schemer, and others claiming mechanics’ liens, were first liens on the value of the buildings, exclusive of the value of the lot, and that Schilling had a prior lien on the lot, exclusive of the value of the buildings. The decree concludes as follows:

“ The court orders that unless the various sums above found due, and costs of suit, including $310 allowed for master’s fee, are paid within three days, said premises be sold; that out of the proceeds of sale the master retain his fees, etc., and pay the aforesaid parties or their solicitors their costs, and then pay said Schemer, Susmilch Bros., Sirovy, McConnell and Dawson Bros, and Julius Schilling, or their solicitors, the amount found due each of them respectively, with lawful interest, etc.; that in case the sum realized is not sufficient to pay said sums, the master, after paying costs and disbursements, shall pay Julius Schilling two-elevenths of said proceeds, and to said Schemer, Sirovy, Susmilch Bros., McConnell and Dawson Bros., nine-elevenths, until the lien of said Schilling is satisfied, and thereafter pay the whole of said proceeds to complainants and Dawson Bros, pro rata”

Counsel for plaintiff in error contend that there is a variance between the petition and the evidence, in that the petition alleges that the contract between Schemer and Holzbauer was verbal, whereas the evidence is that it was in writing, álso that the parties attempted to vary the written contract by oral agreement.

We find no variance between the petition and the evidence. The petition alleges the facts as they are proved to have occurred. Neither do we find any verbal modification of the written contract, even though it be considered as signed by the parties May 17,1897, when it was reduced to writing. The subsequent verbal agreement between the parties was that Schemer would erect a barn on the premises for the consideration of $150, and would also substitute cherry for oak in the front parlor of the house for the consideration of $25 in addition to the contract price. JBy the written contract it was not agreed that Schemer would erect a barn, and it certainly can not be said that a contract to erect a barn is a modification of a prior contract to erect a residence. Neither was the agreement to substitute cherry for oak in the front parlor a deviation from the written contract inconsistent with its terras. The written contract contains the following:

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Bluebook (online)
87 Ill. App. 84, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiss-v-scherner-illappct-1900.