Singer Mfg. Co. v. Ellington

103 Ill. App. 517, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 177
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 11, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 Ill. App. 517 (Singer Mfg. Co. v. Ellington) 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
Singer Mfg. Co. v. Ellington, 103 Ill. App. 517, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 177 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Wi? Justice Worthington

delivered the opinion of the court.

Suit commenced before a justice, where judgment for $45 was rendered in favor of plaintiff, from which judgment the defendant appealed to the Circuit Court of St. Clair County. By agreement, the venue was changed to the City Court of East St. Louis, where judgment for $45 was again rendered for plaintiff, from which judgment defendant appeals.

The suit is to recover $45 paid in installments by appellee to appellant for a sewing machine, which appellee received under a written agreement, in substance as follows:

“ This certifies that I, Mary Ellington, have rented and received from the Singer Manufacturing Company, one Singer sewing machine, style Y. S. 5 Dr. Oak, and Mo. 13,748,259, with apparatus belonging thereto, all in good order and valued at $60 dollars, which I am to use with care, and keep in good order, and for the use of which I agree to pay rent as follows: $20, consisting in $5 cash, $15 old White on the delivery of this agreement, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and accepted as payment for the rent of the first month only, and then at the rate of $3.per month thereafter, for sixteen months, at its agency in East St. Louis, without notice or demand.
But if default shall be made in either of said payments, or if I shall sell or offer to sell, remove or attempt to remove, the said machine from my aforesaid residence without the written consent of the said Singer Manufacturing Company, then and in that case, or' at the expiration of the time for which the machine is rented, I will return and deliver the same to the Singer Manufacturing Company in good order, save reasonable wear, and the said company or its agents may resume actual possession thereof; and I hereby authorize and empower the said Singer Manufacturing Company, or its agents, to enter the premises wherever said machine may be, and take and carry the same away, hereby waiving any action for trespass or damage therefor and disclaiming any right of resistance thereto; and also waive all right of homestead and other exemptions, under, the laws of said state, as against this obligation.
Witness my hand and seal this fifth day of December, 1896.
Mabt Ellington. [Seal.] ”

Appellee gave in evidence, without objection, the conversation with Craig, the agent of appellant, which led up to and induced the making of this contract. Her testimony was not contradicted, nor was that part stricken out which referred to what was said before the contract was signed. When this conversation was about being detailed by Dan Ellington, who was called after appellee testified, objection was made by defendant’s counsel to his stating what was said, and the objection was sustained.

Counsel for defendant then moved as follows:

“ I want to make this further motion; that the court exclude from the jury all the testimony of Mrs. Ellington and this boy, tending to change or vari'", later on, the terms of the lease, or written contract, on the ground that all subsequent parol agreements are inadmissible for the purpose of contradicting a contract under seal. This lease is under seal, and I make that objection.
“The Court: The objection will be sustained so far as it will apply to anything that will undertake to change the conditions of the contract, but it will be overruled so far as any evidence is concerned showing a waiver of it by the company.”

It will be observed that the motion was only to exclude testimony “ tending to change later on the terms of the lease or written contract on the ground that all subsequent farol agreements are inadmissible for the purpose of contradicting a contract under seal,” and to this extent the motion was sustained.

This leaves for our consideration, all the testimony of appellee as to what was said or done before the execution of the contract.

Appellee testifies in substance :

“ Craig came and asked me if we wanted a machine. Said he was one of the managers of the company; that Mrs. Kent sent him to me to buy a machine; I told him that I was not ready; I had just buried my son and could not afford it; he said for me to buy it and there would be no trouble; I could put in my old machine and they would give me ample time; this was about the fifth of December. He sold me a machine,- $5 down, $15 for my old machine, and I was to pay $3 a month, if I had it, and if I did not have it, he would take less. I told him not to take my old machine until I was ready to pay the $5; he said there would be no bother about it. He took the old machine that day and brought the new machine into my house. I told him I did not have the money to pay down on it; he said, when would I have it? I said I did not know how soon; he said he would wait until February, would that do? I told him yes, I would have the money in February. He brought me a paper for me to sign. I supposed it was a bill of sale. I signed it and he took it with him.”

In cross-examination, appellee testified:

“ When I signed the paper it was this way; it was folded; and he laid it down for me to sign mv name. It never was opened out at all; when I wrote my name at the bottom he folded it again; he turned it over one time like that, and laid it down; it was folded when he brought it; he laid it down for me to sign my name. I signed it and he turned it over and told me to sign again. He did not open it up.. He told me it was a bill of sale.”

This testimony is important as throwing light upon the true construction of the written contract in evidence. To the same effect is the testimony of Mrs. Kent, as follows:

“ I was the one that had the agent bring the machine to Mrs. Ellington. I wrote the company if I could sell a machine would they give me five dollars. 1 told them if they agreed, to send their agent out to Mrs. Ellington. At that time she ivas willing to take the machine. They sent an agent out about two days after.”

This evidence tends to prove a sale and not a lease. It shows that appellee thought she was buying a machine, not leasing one, and that the agent of appellee so represented.

If the uncontradicted testimony of appellee 'is true, the agent of appellant perpetrated a fraud in securing her signature to a folded paper which is a lease in form, giving her in terms no right or title to the machine when all the payments were made, and telling her that it was a bill of sale. But outside of this testimony, we think that an examination of the written instrument itself, warrants the construction that it represents a conditional sale and not a lease. It is not reasonable that $20 should be paid in advance as the rent of a sewing machine for the first month, and that $3 rent monthly should be paid thereafter until $60 in all was paid, with no provision as to whose machine it should then be, or what should be done with it, when the statement of the agent before the contract was signed, was to the effect that the selling price of the machine was $60.

In the case of Murch v. Wright, 46 Ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 Ill. App. 517, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-mfg-co-v-ellington-illappct-1902.