Simmons v. Berryman

174 N.E. 410, 342 Ill. 274
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1930
DocketNo. 20211. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 410 (Simmons v. Berryman) 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
Simmons v. Berryman, 174 N.E. 410, 342 Ill. 274 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the defendant from a decree of the superior court of Cook county setting aside a contract of sale by the complainant, Daisy L. Simmons, to Laura P. Berryman, the defendant, and dismissing the cross-bill of the defendant for a specific performance for want of equity.

The real estate which was the subject matter of the contract was situated at 5915 and 5917 Calumet avenue and had on it a three-story brick apartment building having six apartments. The legal title was in the Chicago Title and Trust Company as trustee and the entire beneficial interest was in the appellee, who, having furnished the apartments, was letting them to white people. She was white and the appellant colored. The title was subject to a mortgage of $15,000. On March 19, 1928, the appellee agreed to sell and the appellant to buy the real estate for $30,000, $5000 cash and the remainder at $125 a month until $10,000 should be paid, when the purchaser should be entitled to a deed and should give a second mortgage for the remainder, payable $125 a month. The contract referred to another contract executed simultaneously, in the form of a lease of the premises by the appellant to the appellee for a term beginning April 1, 1928, and ending March 31, 1930. This lease provided that the lessee should pay as rent the net proceeds received by her from the operation of the premises for a rooming house or for other purposes, and agreed that the net proceeds should not be less than $300 in any month, and a failure of the lessee to earn and pay $300 in each month should work a forfeiture and the lessor might take possession of the premises. The lessee further agreed to pay all expenses of running the premises, including interest on a $15,000 mortgage, repairs and taxes, and at the expiration of the lease to re-decorate the premises at her own expense in a manner, satisfactory to the lessor. It was further agreed that the net proceeds should be credited each month on the purchase price of the premises. A third contract for pro-rating the taxes of 1928, the insurance premium and the mortgage interest was executed at the same time. The contracts were all executed in duplicate, but one of the copies of the third contract had written upon it below the signatures the following words, which were not on the other copy: “It is further agreed that Mrs. Berryman is to receive $50 per month from the rents for her personal use.” The contracts were executed in the office of George R. Jenkins, an attorney, who testified that Charles T. Broch, one of his clients, came to his office with these two women and told him they had agreed upon a contract, which they wanted him to look over to see if it was all right. The contract and lease were produced by Mrs. Simmons. Jenkins read them and explained them carefully as he understood them. He suggested that there was no provision for Mrs. Berryman’s living expenses, and after some discussion they agreed to such a provision. Jenkins wrote it on the third contract, as has been mentioned. Upon the execution of these documents Mrs. Simmons received $5000. After the execution of these instruments the appellee remained in possession of the premises, collecting rents and paying expenses for several months, going to the office of Broch, appellant’s agent, and endorsing upon the contract credits upon the principal and interest of the amount of the net receipts, which in no month after April amounted to so much as the $300 specified in the lease. This continued until the first of September, when the appellant moved into one of the apartments and during the remainder of 1928 collected the rents and paid them to the appellee, deducting the expenses of operation. The premises were situated in a neighborhood which was becoming occupied by negroes. When the sale was made to the appellant the appellee was renting the apartments to white people, without any fixed periods. Soon after the sale the white people began to leave the building and the revenue diminished. After September 1 apartments were rented only to negroes, and as an apartment was rented the appellee moved her furniture from the apartment and stored it in' the basement. After the end of 1928 the appellant deposited the receipts to her own credit and paid. the expenses, and when this suit was brought on June 1, 1929, the net receipts which she had amounted to $1203.43, out of which she paid $525 interest upon the $15,000 mortgage in compliance with an order of the court. A receiver was appointed, who has had charge of the receipts and disbursements since the commencement of the suit.

The contract of sale provided that time should be of its essence, and in May, 1929, the appellee served written notice upon the appellant that on and after May 31 she would require strict compliance with the terms of the contract. The appellant and the appellee both testified, and their testimony as to the circumstances under which the appellant moved into the building and began to collect the rents is in conflict. The appellant testified that the appellee asked her to come into the building as the appellee’s housekeeper and rent the apartments, taking the front room as an office. The appellant unwillingly consented to try to do what the appellee asked and eventually went to the building, but told the appellee that she did not care what the appellee did — the appellant had nothing to do with it and was going to hold the appellee to the lease; that the appellee told her when she collected the rents to call the appellee right up and she would go over and get the rents and when the tenants paid she would call the appellee up, and never kept any of the rents from September to January. The appellee kept up the expenses of the building. The appellant quit paying the appellee the rents when the appellee told her that the appellant could not carry the building and owed the appellee. After that she put all the money in the South Side Trust and Savings Bank. The appellee testified that she operated the building until midsummer, when she had a talk with the appellant about the tenants moving out, and told her she would have to take the property over because business was dropping off sooner than they thought it would and it was running under $300 net proceeds. The appellant said she would have to do it, and moved in and took possession of the building the last week in August. The appellee told her that she would not insist upon the terms of the contract and the appellant would not have to pay $125 a month and interest, because the building would not pay it. The appellee was going to be very lenient with the appellant and would not regard the contract as binding and would work with her in filling up the building; that they would take up the terms of the contract and go on in the regular way, and that she was going to help the appellant and see that she did not lose the building. The appellee gave the appellant credit for the payment for the month of July, which the appellant never collected and did not expect to collect.

Both parties misunderstood their rights under the contract witnessed by the various instruments which they had executed. The appellant thought that under the lease she was entitled to a credit of $300 a month regardless of the amount of the net proceeds derived from the building. The appellee, on the other hand, thought that the lease terminated automatically when the net proceeds were less than that amount. The proper construction of the lease was that the appellant was entitled to credit on the contract of sale for the net proceeds from the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 410, 342 Ill. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-berryman-ill-1930.