Wood v. Williams

31 N.E. 681, 142 Ill. 269
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 681 (Wood v. Williams) 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
Wood v. Williams, 31 N.E. 681, 142 Ill. 269 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholeield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Two questions are presented by the arguments made in this case: First, is the letter set out in the third count of appellant’s declaration a contract or instrument in writing, within the meaning of section 16 of the Statute of Limitations; and second, is the replication of the fraudulent concealment of the cause of action, as pleaded, an answer to the plea of tL^e Statute of Limitations ? Both were answered in the negative by the courts below, and in our opinion they were correctly so answered.

First — Section 16 of the Statute of Limitations is: “Actions on bonds, promissory notes, bills of exchange, written leases, written contracts, or other evidences of indebtedness in writing, shall be commenced within ten years next after after the cause of action accrued.” The words “other evidences of indebtedness in writing,” by a familiar rule of construction, do-not extend to a different class than that included by the preceding particular enumeration, (Potter’s Dwarris on Statutes,. 275; Sedgwick on Stat. Construction, 423,) and can therefore.have been intended to include only contracts whereof the parties intended to put the evidence in writing at the time they were made, and hence can have no application to verbal contracts sought to be proved by subsequent admissions in writing.

The letter set out in the third count of appellant’s declaration is as follows:

“Bloomington, III., July 17, 1882.
“Mr. Milner Brown, Delavan, III.:
“Dear Sir — We have to-day drawn papers for a loan of $2500, to be secured on one hundred and sixty acres of improved farm land in Livingston county, valued at $6400. The security is ample. We made the papers payable to Samuel D. Wood, and the loans bear seven per cent annual interest, payable July 1, each year. We get no commission from the borrower, and as agreed with you, Mr. Wood will receive six and one-half per cent interest net to him, and the other one-half of one per cent per annum, when interest is paid, comes to us, for our trouble and expense in the matter. The title is all right, and the papers will be back here in a day or two, and if convenient you may send us the amount on the receipt of this, and oblige,
“Yours truly,
Williams & Burr, (A. B.)”

It is very clear that this does not purport to be the statement of a contract in writing previously made, nor does it profess to be itself the contemporaneous expression of a contract then being made. It assumes that a contract has been previously made, and it is a narrative of what has been done, under such a contract. It assumes a previously understood relation between appellant and Brown, to whom the letter is addressed, and it expressly says there was a previous agreement between Brown and appellees, and it assumes that by that agreement the time for which the loan was to run was fixed, and also that it was thereby determined by whom the expenses incidental to the performing of the contract were to be borne, and by whom the interest to become due on the loan was to be collected, for these were indispensable to making the loan, and they are not alluded to in the letter. The only thing that remained to be done by appellees (and that that even remained to be done is inference only,) was the delivery of the note and mortgage to appellant. It is therefore impossible that the letter could have been intended to be the evidence of a contemporaneous contract, and in no view could it be evidence of a contract previously made, unless accompanied with parol evidence supplementing its omissions; but then, in legal estimation, the contract would be a verbal contract. Bishop on Contracts, sec. 164, and cases cited.

The cases cited by appellant are not analogous. In Barney v. Forbes, 118 N. Y. 580, there were express present undertakings of the parties, fully set out in the letters. In Bank of Owensboro v. Western Bank, 13 Bush, 526, there was, first, a request in writing, by the cashier of the' appellant bank, addressed to the cashier of the appellee bank, that the latter bank would invest “some means” for it “in good paper, at thirty, sixty, ninety or one hundred days’ time.” Then there was the reply of the cashier of the appellee bank that he had on that day invested as requested, followed by subsequent explanations by letter, and so the writings clearly evidenced the beginning and each successive step- in- a finally consummated contract. In Bradstreet v. Everson, 72 Pa. St. 124, the writing expressly acknowledged the receipt, for collection, of the acceptances, and this amounted in legal effect, to an undertaking to collect. In Critzer v. McConnel, 15 Ill. 172, the receipt stated that “Bonesteel had received the money of McConnel for the purpose of being used to purchase for him, and in his name, a certain judgment specified, and in the receipt Bone-steel agreed to procure a transfer of the judgment to McConnel in ten days or to return the money, the judgment to be by McConnel transferred to Bonesteel, at any time within oné year, upon his paying him $336 therefor,” and thus it was the complete statement of a present undertaking. In Riddle v. Hoffman, 3 Pa. 224, the receipt contained an express undertaking of the party signing it, to collect.

In Ames v. Moir, 130 Ill. 582, Plumb v. Campbell, 129 id. 101, Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Johnson, 34 id. 389, Dunning v. Price, 56 id. 338, Abrams v. Pomeroy, 13 id. 133, McCloskey v. McCormick, 37 id. 66, and Memory v. Niepert, 131 id. 623, cited by counsel for appellant, there were distinct present undertakings expressed in the instruments in question, and no case has been cited that is analogous to the present case, and we do not believe that any well considered case can be found where a writing like this letter, has been held, of itself, alone, to be sufficient evidence of a “written contract,” or sufficient “evidence of indebtedness in writing,” as those words are employed in our statute, supra.

Second — The replication to the plea of the Statute of Limitations is as follows, omitting formal beginning:

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 681, 142 Ill. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-williams-ill-1892.