Wrobel v. Wojtasiek

173 N.E. 348, 341 Ill. 330
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20158. Reversed in part and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 348 (Wrobel v. Wojtasiek) 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
Wrobel v. Wojtasiek, 173 N.E. 348, 341 Ill. 330 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court :

The appellants, John Wrobel and Antonina Wrobel, husband and wife, filed their bill in the superior court of Cook county against Josef Wojtasiek, appellee, for the specific performance of a contract for an exchange of real estate. The defendant answered and filed a cross-bill to cancel the contract as a cloud on his title. The cross-bill was answered and the cause was referred to a master, who reported the evidence with his findings and conclusions, recommending a decree granting the relief prayed for in the bill and dismissing the cross-bill for want of equity. Exceptions to this report were sustained by the chancellor and a decree was rendered dismissing the bill for want of equity and canceling the contract as a cloud on the title of the cross-complainant. The complainants in the original bill have appealed.

On July 2, 1927, Wrobel and Wojtasiek executed a written contract whereby Wrobel agreed to convey certain real estate in Chicago to Wojtasiek at a consideration of $19,000 and Wojtasiek agreed to convey certain real estate in DuPage county to Wrobel at a consideration of $10,000. The $9000 difference between the values of the properties exchanged was to be paid in cash on the delivery of the deeds, or Wrobel was to take back a first mortgage on the property conveyed to Wojtasiek, payable on or before five years after date, with five per cent interest. Brokerage fees, three per cent of $19,000, were to be paid by Wrobel to John Svatilc. The contract contained other provisions not material to the present controversy.

The appellee’s right to relief against the contract is based on his claim that the contract is very oppressive upon him and its execution by him was procured by unfair means while he was intoxicated by the procurement of Wrobel and his agents. It is alleged in his amended answer that he is an ignorant and illiterate man of Polish extraction, unable to read or write the English language and not familiar with legal documents or with instruments conveying real estate; that he had been for many years employed in the tailoring business as a workman; that the complainants, by themselves and their agents and others conspiring together to defraud him, prepared the contract for the exchange of properties and on July 2, 1927, induced him to become intoxicated so that he was unable to know what he was doing or to understand the effect of his action; that if the signature purporting to be his mark appears on the contract it was placed there by him without knowing what he was doing and while he was under the influence of intoxicating liquor administered to him by the complainants and their agents, without his being informed of the nature of the instrument to which his signature was attached; that the transaction was void and fraudulent for the further reason that the value of the defendant’s premises greatly exceeded the value of the premises of the complainants and that they were reasonably worth $19,000 while the complainants’ premises were not reasonably worth more than $9000, and the contract provides for an exchange of defendant’s property for complainants’ at a grossly inadequate consideration, and the exchange is an unconscionable bargain, whereby the defendant would be defrauded of a large part of the value of his premises. The amended answer further alleged that the complainants, unknown to the defendant, procured Frank Nieminski, a neighbor of the defendant, to induce the defendant to enter into the contract, and in consideration thereof and of the services of Nieminski in procuring the signature of the defendant to the contract the complainants made and executed a promissory note for $500, payable to the order of Nieminski, for commission to him for his services; that Nieminski offered to show the defendant a salesman for his property and introduced him to one Svatik, a real estate broker who was acting for the complainants; that thereafter Nieminski was active in inducing the defendant to sign the contract and took the title papers of the defendant without his consent and delivered them at the Depositors State Bank to one Jurik, who delivered them to an attorney for the bank for examination; that Nieminski, though pretending to be counseling and assisting the defendant, was, on the contrary, unknown to the defendant, in the pay and service of the complainants in procuring the signature of the defendant to the contract. The answer further alleged that the contract was not entered into fairly, freely and understanding^ by the defendant, was not explained to him and he was not advised as to his obligations under it.

The appellee was born in Austria. At the time he testified before the master he was forty-five years old, was unmarried, and had lived in America thirty years and in Chicago twenty-seven years. He was a tailor working at his trade. He understood the Polish language but not the English. He lived in Downers Grove, where he owned a tract of land of about three acres, having a number of large trees on it and known as a picnic grove. There was a dancing pavilion on it of little value. The tract fronted 300 feet on Fairview avenue, a paved street, and there were unpaid assessments on it for the paving.

The appellants were the owners in joint tenancy of a lot fronting 25 feet on Fourteenth place, in the city of Chicago, 125 feet deep, having on it a three-story-and-basement brick building with a stone front, about thirty years old, having three front and three rear four-room flats. A few days before July 2, when the contract was executed, John Wrobel, John Svatik (a real estate broker in whose hands Wrobel had placed the flat-building for sale about a month earlier) and Joseph Pinda visited the property of the appellee but did not see him. After seeing the appellee’s grove they went to the grocery store and butcher shop of Frank Nieminski, in Downers Grove. Nieminski had not previously known Wrobel. He knew Svatik. They told- Nieminski they would like to exchange Chicago property for the grove. Wojtasiek was not at home at that time, and Nieminski told them who owned the grove and promised to bring the owner to Chicago to see the building. There was no talk about paying Nieminski anything for his trouble. Before July 2, also, Wojtasiek came to Nieminski and talked with him about exchanging his property, because the assessments were too heavy and he could not pay them. He asked Nieminski if he knew about some property, and Nieminski said he did not know but he would show him a salesman, Svatik, a real estate man whose sign he had seen in a window on Ashland avenue, and Svatik would find it. Svatik testified that, in fact, he had known Nieminski three or four years when he was living near Svatik, three or four blocks away; that he was a broker when Svatik first knew him and had a butcher shop in Downers Grove.

Wrobel, Wojtasiek and Nieminski were Polish and Svatik was Slovak. On July 1, after Wojtasiek returned home from work, Nieminski took him in his car to the office of Svatik, in Ashland avenue, where they arrived at six o’clock. The three went over to look at Wrobel’s property. They saw the building from the outside and then went inside. Wojtasiek said he was satisfied and Svatik said they would see it to-morrow morning better. The next morning Wojtasiek came by Nieminski’s butcher shop in Downers Grove and Nieminski brought him over to Svatik’s office about eleven o’clock. They went to Wrobel’s property to see it on the inside and were admitted by Mrs. Kubalewski, who was a tenant of one of the flats.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 348, 341 Ill. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrobel-v-wojtasiek-ill-1930.