Shipherd v. Underwood

55 Ill. 475
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 Ill. 475 (Shipherd v. Underwood) 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
Shipherd v. Underwood, 55 Ill. 475 (Ill. 1870).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action for money had and received, brought by Underwood against Shipherd & Sweet, to recover a payment or deposit made by him on a contract for the purchase of real estate in Cook county. The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered against the defendants for $1200 and costs.

On the trial the plaintiff testified, that sometime in February, 1869, he contracted with the defendants to buy certain lands, and paid them thereon $1200; that the contract was written; the purchase price of the land $48,000; terms, $16,000 to be paid in twenty days from date, balance in one and two years; warranty deed to be given if first payment is made as above, remainder to be secured by trust deed and notes; failure or refusal to make the first payment within the time above stated to render the contract null and void; money paid to be refunded in case of valid objection to the title, otherwise to be retained as liquidated damages, if the first payment is not made ; time declared to be of the essence of the agreement; $600 acknowledged as received on said first payment; $600 more to be paid on or before the twenty-fifth instant; dated, Chicago, twenty-second day of February, A. D. 1869.

[Signed,] W. H. Hoyt.

By Shepherd, Sweet & Co. Agents.

That there was a delay in procuring an abstract to be furnished ; that he received from the defendants an abstract then produced and identified by him, which they gave him for examination ; that he did not receive it until eighteen or nineteen days after the date of the contract; that as soon as he received it he took it to Mr. Lyman, for a legal opinion, which was prepared in a few days after, and he then had Mr. Lyman go and see the defendants; that after this, he went himself, and saw the defendant, Sweet, and offered to perform, but he did not attempt to remove any of the objections, nor offer to give him a deed.

On cross examination, he said he had not tendered any money at any time; he told defendant he had the money; defendant Sweet told him to go to Mr. Hoyt, who was to make the deed, and tender him the money and put him in default ; that Hoyt lived at Chicago, but he did not go to him ; that he had the money in his pocket and at the bank; could not tell how much he had in his pocket, or how much in bank, but knew that the sums were enough to make the amount required; Sweet said nothing about giving a deed, but told him to go to Hoyt and make him a tender if he had the money; he demanded of them the money he had paid, which was refused. This was somewhere about the twentieth to the twenty-fifth of March, 1869.

Mr. Lyman, an attorney at law, testified that he received an abstract from plaintiff nineteen days after the date of the contract ; he examined it, and some seven or eight days after, gave plaintiff an opinion in writing, and went himself to see defendants, to call attention to defects, and ask explanation; they gave none. The abstract was offered in evidence, from which it appeared, that, at the date of the contract and giving the abstract to plaintiff, there were mortgages upon the property to the amount of $21,000, and a judgment for the sum of $6033,-49, which were liens thereon, and taxes unpaid for the year 1867, for which the property had been sold, from which it had not been redeemed, and that the title to the premises was in Tewksbury, and Hoyt had only a contract therefor.

Benjamin J. Sweet, one of the defendants, testified: we were the agents of W. H. Hoyt at the time we executed the contract, and had full authority from Hoyt to make the same; the plaintiff never tendered the money provided for the first payment, nor any part thereof; some time about twentieth of March, plaintiff came in, with his lawyer, and objected to the title, and said he was ready to pay; I told him if he had the money to go and tender it to Mr. Hoyt, and if he could not make the title good, he would be entitled to recover his money back, and we would be entitled to our per centage; that our business with Hoyt closed with this one single transaction, which was isolated; we did no other business for him. After the plaintiff had made his objection to the title, and after I had told him to go to Mr. Hoyt, he gave us a paper, signed by him, as follows:

“ Chicago, March 25, 1869.
“ Shipherd, Sweet & Co. at 155 and 157 LaSalle Street, Chicago, are hereby authorized to sell for me, blocks 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24, in Maher’s subdivision, section 15, town 38, range 14, 3 P. M., being forty acres, more or less, in Cook county, Illinois, upon terms as follows: Any sum from $1300 to $1500 per acre, $20,000 down, balance at one and two years, seven per cent interest; subject to two and one-half per cent commission to them.
J. G. Underwood, Owner.”

This is the same property as described in the contract. Which was substantially all the evidence in the case.

Upon this state of facts it is contended:

1. That no liability attached to the agents, but the remedy, if any, exists against the principal.

We find a want of entire harmony among the authorities, upon the point, under what circumstances, money, in the hands of an agent, to which another person than the principal is entitled, may be recovered from the agent at the suit of such person. Story lays down the rule, without qualification, that if a party who has paid money to an agent for the use of his principal, becomes entitled to recall it, he may, upon notice to the agent, recall it, provided the agent has not paid it over to his principal, and also provided no change has taken place in the situation of the agent since the payment to him, before such notice. Story on Agency, sec. 300.

The cases cited by appellee’s counsel, of Buller v. Harrison, 2 Cowp. 566, Cox v. Prentice, 3 M. &. S. 348, and Hearsey v. Pruyn, 7 Johns. R. 181, were cases where the principal had no right to receive the money, as in the first case, or where it was paid by mistake, as in the last two. In all such cases, it appears to be settled, that the action lies against the agent, where he has not paid over the money, or in some way altered his situation in relation to his principal.

But where the money is properly paid to the agent, according to many authorities, the agent’s liability is to his principal, alone.

The cases cited by appellants’ counsel, are those of Greenway v. Hind, 4 T. R. 553; Bamford v. Shuttleworth, 11 Adolph. & Ellis, 926; Stephens v. Babcock, 23 E. C. L. 160. The first was an action against a revenue officer, for money erroneously paid by way of duty, and the action held, by Lord Kenyon, not to lie, on the ground that it would not lie against a known agent; yet, in Elliot v. Swartwout, 10 Peters R. 137, an action was sustained against a collector for an excess of duties paid to him. In the case of Bamford v. Shuttleworth, the agent gave a written receipt for the deposit money on a sale, in the name of his principal, and the sale falling through on account of a defect in the vendor’s title, the action was held not to lie against the agent by the vendee, for the money paid.

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55 Ill. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shipherd-v-underwood-ill-1870.