Robar v. Isham

142 N.E. 460, 310 Ill. 585
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1924
DocketNo. 15116
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 N.E. 460 (Robar v. Isham) 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
Robar v. Isham, 142 N.E. 460, 310 Ill. 585 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal of Mary Isham, administratrix of the estate of Elmer B. Isham, deceased, from a decree of the circuit court of Grundy county decreeing the specific performance of a contract for the sale of a tract of land located in the State of Wisconsin, entered into by L. H. Robar, appellee, as vendor, and Elmer B. Isham as vendee, and dismissing the cross-bill of Isham for want of equity. Isham died during the pendency of the appeal, and the administratrix aforesaid has been substituted as appellant.

The contract, which is set out in hcec verba in the bill, acknowledges the payment of $1000 by note and provides for the further payment of $27,160 as follows: $5000 in cash March 1, 1921, $1080 by note bearing six per cent interest, due March 1, 1923, and the remainder by assuming two existing mortgages for $12,793.50 and $7206.50. A deed and possession of the premises were to be delivered to Isham on March 1, 1921, and a merchantable abstract was to be furnished to Isham for examination by November 1, 1920. Isham was to have thirty days from the delivery of the abstract to examine it and to return it to appellee with his objections, and appellee was to have a reasonable time in which to perfect the same and complete the title if objections were made. Isham was a resident of Mazon, in the county of Grundy, Illinois. He owned a farm near said town and had farmed practically all of his life but at the time the contract was made he was engaged in no particular business. Appellee was a resident of Delavan, Wisconsin, and was engaged in the real estate and insurance business. Isham had had previous dealings with appellee, and about a year before this contract was entered into he had purchased a farm from appellee and had resold it at a profit. About the middle of October, 1920, Isham was visiting his brother, Wilbur Isham, at Delavan, Wisconsin, and while there accompanied appellee on several trips in the country which were made for the purpose of showing prospective buyers the farms that appellee had for sale. Appellee and Wilbur Isham were jointly interested in the farm described in this case but the deed and title had been taken in appellee’s name. During their visits on those trips Isham became interested in the tract of land known as the Mills farm. About that time there was considerable exchange of property in that locality and large numbers of prospective buyers were looking over the land and prices had been advancing. It appears from the evidence that Isham’s purpose was to re-sell for a profit any land that he bought, and the selling possibilities of the Mills farm were discussed between appellee and Isham. These two parties met at the home of Wilbur Isham on the evening of October 16, 1920, and after much discussion entered into the contract to which reference is above made. Isham then directed appellee to show the farm to prospective buyers and to re-sell it for a profit to him of about $20 an acre. On the last day previous to the signing of the contract in the evening, Isham had directed appellee to show the farm to other prospective buyers as his farm and to sell it for him. While it was disputed by Isham in his testimony, we think it is clearly shown by the evidence that on the morning of the day after the contract was made Isham called at appellee’s office and while there appellee told him that he had the abstract ready to deliver to him at that time; that Isham stated to him, in answer to appellee’s offer of the abstract, “If the abstract is good enough for you it is good enough for me;’’ that appellee then made a memorandum on a piece of paper, with the knowledge of Isham, and pinned it to the contract, reciting, in substance, that the examination of the abstract had been waived. This occurred on a Sunday. The note for $1000 which Isham had given to appellee as part payment became due on November 16, 1920, and on that date Isham sent to appellee a check for $1005 in payment of the note. The farm had previously been rented, .at the request of Isham, in his name, and the tenants had delivered their notes to him for $1399 in payment of the rent for one year. These latter two facts are strong corroboration of appellee’s claim that Isham, at the time aforesaid, waived the presentation to him of the abstract for examination, in connection with the fact of the written memorandum being pinned to the contract. In December, 1920, Isham became ill and was confined in the hospital at Morris, Illinois, for several months. A few days prior to March 1, 1921, (the day the deed and abstract brought down to date were to be delivered,) appellee went to Morris, to the hospital where Isham was confined, but was informed that Isham was too ill to transact any business, and the deed for that reason was not delivered according to the terms of the contract. Appellee testified that he had the deed prepared, signed and witnessed, the taxes paid, and was ready to deliver the deed and abstract, brought down to date, on that day but was prevented from doing so because of the illness of Isham. Nothing further was done except the passing of several letters between the parties until June 6, 1921, when appellee went to Mazon to tell Isham he was ready to complete the deal. Isham refused to accept the deed and to carry out the contract, stating as his ground therefor that no abstract had been tendered, and when his attention was called to the fact that he had stated, in substance, that he did not desire to examine the abstract, he replied that any talk or agreement on his part not in writing could not affect the written contract. About December 1, 1920, land values in the vicinity in which the farm was located began to decrease. Isham about that time began a course of correspondence with appellee which shows that at first Isham was urging appellee to sell his farm immediately at a profit, as he did not care to keep it, and that appellee had promised that he would try to sell it for him. His later letters to appellee were to the effect that he desired to get out of the contract and wanted appellee to take the farm off his hands and return the money he had paid, and that he, in turn, would surrender the rent notes to appellee.

The first question that arises in this case is whether or not there was a waiver by Isham of the tender and examination of the abstract on the day mentioned in the contract for the delivery of the abstract. It is a well settled .principle of law that where parties to a written contract mutually consent and acquiesce in the oral modifications and in the non-performance of certain provisions thereof and later comply with the other terms of the contract, each party is estopped to deny the efficacy of the modifying agreement and cannot set up such non-compliance of provisions thus waived in order to defeat specific performance, provided the proof is strong that such waiver or modifications have been assented to. (Ames v. Witbeck, 179 Ill. 458; Kissack v. Bourke, 224 id. 352; Zempel v. Hughes, 235 id. 424.) The proof is clearly against appellant on this question of waiver in this case, and it leaves no doubt in the minds of the court that Isham made the statement to appellee aforesaid, and thereby, and by'his subsequent acts, waived the requirement that appellee furnish the abstract for examination according to the terms of the written contract.

On the trial below the attorney for Isham, when asked by the trial court if he found any fault with the title of appellee to the land in question, answered that he only found fault with the form of the abstract and not with the title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 N.E. 460, 310 Ill. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robar-v-isham-ill-1924.