Van Vlissingen v. Manning

105 Ill. App. 255, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 73
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 30, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 Ill. App. 255 (Van Vlissingen v. Manning) 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
Van Vlissingen v. Manning, 105 Ill. App. 255, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 73 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Waterman

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the spring of 1895 there was issued and sent by appellant, to lawyers, real estate agents and others in Chicago, a printed circular setting forth that appellant had money to loan on first mortgage on improved property and would divide commissions evenly with parties bringing borrowers. Appellee, a lawyer, received one of such circulars and testifies that in reply thereto he wrote to appellant that a Mr. Bishopp wished to obtain a loan of §17,000 or §18,000 on certain improved property. Upon the trial, being asked if there was anything else in the letter that he remembered, it not being produced, he stated that he remembered he gave the location of the property and that Mr. Bishopp valued it at §35,000; that he believed that what he had stated was the substance of the letter. Upon being asked if there was any reference to commissions in the letter, over objection, he stated : “ I remember acknowledging receipt of his circulars offering to divide the commissions evenly.” This was not a clear statement that he remembered there was anything in the letter about commissions. From other evidence it appears that the date of this letter was April 19th, and the witness on cross-examination stated that in this letter the circular issued by appellant was referred to. To the letter sent by appellee April 19th appellant replied, enclosing an application for a loan to be signed by Mr. Bishopp. Mr. Bishopp signed the application and appellant procured for him the sum of $16,000, with interest at six per cent per annum, receiving from him as a commission for procuring the loan, $320. It does not appear that any time prior to the actual making of the loan, appellee notified appellant that he would expect one-half the commission paid upon such loan, in any way-other than by that which appellee testifies was in the letter sent by him upon the 19th of April, 1895. Shortly after making the loan appellee wrote to appellant demanding $160, being one-half of the commission. To this letter appellant at once replied denying that he owed appellee anything and refusing to pay.

Upon the trial there was read in evidence, without objection, the correspondence which passed between the parties after the loan was made, with respect to the payment of commissions. Among this, a letter dated September 17, 1895, written, to appellee by Mr. Watson, who was a clerk in the office of appellant at the time the loan was applied for and made, and who had to do with the transaction. In this letter is contained the following, which, though clear! v h ear say, seems to have been admitted without objection:

“ 1 will say further that when I mentioned your name to Mr. Bishop in connection with the loan, that he volunteered the information that you would not expect any part of the commission as you had merely acted as his "representative.”

Appellant upon the trial was not permitted to introduce in evidence a memorandum made by Mr. Watson the 25th of April, 1895, concerning the loan. Mr. Watson testified as to the making of the memoranda and further that he did not make it with reference to the letter of appellee dated April 19th and that he did not remember the contents of the letter of April 19th.

As before stated, appellee had testified to the contents of such letter as remembered by him. Mr. Watson testified that he wrote the reply of appellant to the letter of appellee dated April 19th and that when he did so he had that letter before him. After he had stated that he did not remember the contents of the letter of April 19th, he was asked whether or not there was in it any reference to a division of commissions and also whether he remembered if in it there wTas any reference to a division of commissions. These questions the court refused to permit him to answer. We think the questions proper. While he did not remember and could not state the contents of the letter, he may have been able to state that certain things material to this controversy were not in it, that is, he may have been able to state that there was in it no reference to commissions. It is very frequently the case that a witness may not be able to state the contents of a paper which he has written or read and yet may be able to say that certain things were not in the paper. We do not think that memoranda made by Watson was admissible. It was not made as a record of something then done by the maker or seen or heard by the maker, but as a conclusion to which he or some one else had come as to a division of commissions. And if the position of appellant be well taken, it was not made in respect tó a business or transaction with which appellee had anything to do. Appellant testifies that the letter of April 19th, addressed to him by appellee, did not contain anything calling attention to a circular offering to divide commissions.

The court found for the plaintiff and allowed him $160 as commissions, with interest thereon to the time of the trial. The issue presented is not altogether like that of the offering of a reward for arrest of certain parties or the return of lost or stolen property.

Appellant was in the business of procuring, for a commission, loans for parties who applied to him. No one was entitled to any portion of the commission he earned in such business, save by virtue of a special agreement by appellant.

If there were, prior to the making of the loan, nothing putting him upon notice that if a loan was made to Mr. Bishopp as requested by him, appellee would expect that the commissions therefor would be evenly divided with him, appellant is not liable to appellee for one-half the commissions. The rule as to the payment of offered reward is based upon the principle applicable to contracts; it being universally held that if one having knowledge of an offered reward does that for which the offer is made, by such performance there is a meeting of minds and a contract made. By many courts it is said that if one, without knowledge of an offered reward, do that for which the offer is made, he is entitled to the reward. Vol. 7, 2d Ed. Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 137.

The question in this case in this regard is whether appellant had, prior to the making of the loan, notice that appellee expected that commissions would be equally divided with him. We do not wish to be understood that such notice must have been in clear and unequivocable terms. It is sufficient if the circumstances surrounding the transaction were such that a reasonable man in the position that appellee was, would have inferred therefrom that appellee expected that commissions would be equally divided with him. C. & A. Ry. Co. v. Sebring, 16 Ill. App. 181, 6th Ed. Parsons on Contracts, Vol. 1, page 74.

In the case of Babcock v. Henry J. Raymond and others, 2 Hilton, 61, there had been issued by the New York Daily Times, the following:

“ Hotice to correspondents: Yoluntary correspondence, containing important news from all quarters of the world, is solicited; if used, it will be liberally paid for.”

The plaintiff, Babcock, sent to the Times a communication containing political news thought by the publishers of the paper to be of importance enough to justify its publication and it was published.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ill. App. 255, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-vlissingen-v-manning-illappct-1902.