Wilson v. Roots

10 N.E. 204, 119 Ill. 379
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 10 N.E. 204 (Wilson v. Roots) 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
Wilson v. Roots, 10 N.E. 204, 119 Ill. 379 (Ill. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, by Logan H. Roots, against William Gr. Wilson, filed in the circuit court of Cook county on the 9th day of May, A. D. 1884, for the rescission of a certain contract for the assignment and transfer by Wilson, to Roots, upon certain conditions, of $44,500 of the capital stock of the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Connecticut, in exchange for $40,000 of the bonds of that company. Wilson answered the bill, putting in issue its -material allegations, and then filed a cross-bill for the specific performance of the contract of which rescission is sought by the bill. The circuit court, on hearing, decreed that the cross-bill be dismissed, and that the prayer of the original bill be granted. On appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, that decree was affirmed, and Wilson has appealed from that judgment of the Appellate Court to this court.

The contract in controversy is evidenced by two instruments in writing, executed at the same time and as a part of the same transaction, (as is abundantly proved by the evidence in the record,) which read as follows: o

“Chicago, November 18, 1888.
“L. J. Gage, Esq., Chicago, Ill.:
“Dear Sir:—It is understood between W. G-. Wilson and Logan H. Roots, that W. G-. Wilson is to furnish, properly transferred, $29,500 stock in the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Conn., and receipts of S. Kirby, with proper transfer or assignments of $.15,000 more stock now loaned to said Kirby by him, making a total of $44,500 (forty-four thousand five hundred dollars,) capital stock of said company, and Logan H. Roots is to deposit $40,000 (forty thousand dollars) of the bonds of the said company, bearing six per cent interest, with coupons No. 1 detached; and whensoever you receive notice from the general manager of said company, or other satisfactory evidence, that the company at Wallingford is producing three hundred complete sewing machines per week, you are to deliver the bonds to W. G. Wilson, and the stock to Logan H. Boots.
“In testimony of which request, we hereby append our signatures, it being understood that each party hereto is to make his respective delivery within twenty days from the date hereof. Signed in triplicate.
Bespect. Logan H. Boots,
W. G-. Wilson.”
“For and in consideration of payments made by Logan H. Boots, in purchasing stock from W. G. Wilson, it has been covenanted and agreed between Logan H. Boots, of Little Bock, Arkansas, and W. G. Wilson, of Chicago, Illinois, that W. G. Wilson agrees, without further direct consideration than the reimbursement of his expenses, to give to the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Conn., his unstinted, unreserved, hearty good will, active assistance, counsel, aid and advice, for the next three years, through good and ill, and to do all, except financial management, that he can in anywise do, while others are in actual management, to make the most complete possible success of the Wilson Sewing Machine Company. Wilson also agrees to at once,—after first assigning to himself its present assets,—transfer.and properly assign all of the stock of the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Chicago, to the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Conn., free of all debts; and as a guaranty of good faith, he pledges and hereby forfeits to the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Conn., on failure to continue in the execution of the foregoing agreements, the extent of $25,000 in amount of the royalty of twenty-five cents on each machine, agreed to be paid him by the company for the use of his patents.
“Witness our hands this 13th day of November, 1883.
“Witness: W. G. Wilson,
J. N. Keller, Logan H. Boots.”
S. B. Kirby.

The first of these instruments was executed in triplicate, and one copy was delivered to L. J. Gage, and one was retained by Roots and one by Wilson. The second was executed in duplicate, and one copy, each, was retained by Roots and Wilson.

The rule is familiar, and of frequent application in cases before this court, that where different instruments are executed as the evidence of one transaction or agreement, they are to be read and construed as constituting but a single instrument. Gardt v. Brown et al. 113 Ill. 475; Freer v. Lake, 115 id. 663; Canterberry v. Miller, 76 id. 355; Stacey v. Randall, 17 id. 467; Duncan v. Charles, 4 Scam. 561; Bailey v. Cromwell, 3 id. 71. And, furthermore, although it is not competent to contradict or enlarge the terms of a written agreement by parol evidence, it is competent to resort to parol evidence to ascertain the nature and qualities of the subject to which the instrument refers. (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 3S6.) And so we have said, that courts, in construing written contracts, endeavor, in all cases, to place themselves in the position of the contracting parties, so that they may understand the language used, in the sense intended by the persons using it. Doyle et al. v. Teas et al. 4 Scam. 202; Turpin, Receiver, v. Baltimore, Ohio and Chicago Railroad Co. 105 id. 11; Brand et al. v. Henderson et al. 107 id. 141.

The facts, in the light of which these instruments are therefore to be read, are briefly these: A corporation, spoken of by the witnesses as the Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Chicago, had been in existence and doing business for several years prior to the year A. D. 1882. It occupied certain buildings in the city of Chicago for sales-rooms, store-rooms, workshops and offices, and it had a factory for the manufacture of sewing machines at Grand Crossing, in Cook county. William G. Wilson was the owner of most, if not all, of the stock" of the company. He was its president and manager, and controlled it entirely. In July or August, A. D. 1883, it ceased to manufacture, and about that time,.through the efforts of Wilson, and his. manager, Sheldon, acting under his direction, a corporation ivas organized at Wallingford, Connecticut, under the name of the “Wilson Sewing Machine Company of Wallingford, Connecticut.” Its capital stock was fixed at $300,000, of which Wilson agreed to take $100,000, the Wallingford company agreeing to'take from him the movable plant at Grand Crossing for that sum. Parties at Wallingford took $106,000 of the stock, thus leaving $94,000 untaken, but it was agreed by the promoters of the company that this should be subscribed by Sheldon, with the understanding that he was to pay nothing for it, and that the company should sell it to other parties. Wilson was elected president of the new company, and his salary was fixed at $5000 per annum; and he was also made the general manager of the company. The erection of buildings at Wallingford was begun, and prosecuted with reasonable dispatch, and that company, while the buildings, etc., were being erected, also manufactured sewing machines at Grand Crossing. The evidence shows that this was attended with loss, and in Februa.ry, A. D. 1883, after the buildings at Wallingford had been erected at a cost of some $75,000, there was, substantially, no money in the treasury.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.E. 204, 119 Ill. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-roots-ill-1887.