153 N.E. 677 | Ill. | 1926
The superior court of Cook county by decree dismissed for want of equity a bill in chancery brought by appellants against appellees to compel the specific performance of a contract, by which appellees, upon certain conditions, agreed to convey to appellants certain real estate and which contract appellees had refused to carry out. This appeal has been perfected from that decree.
The purchase price of the real estate in question, which was encumbered by two mortgages, tax and other liens, was $4730, and it was agreed that as a part thereof appellants should remove these encumbrances. Both parties knew that appellants did not have the money to do this and that in order to re-finance the proposition it was necessary to procure a new loan from some third person, and it was provided in the contract that appellants should place a new first mortgage on the property and pay all expenses connected with the same, and that the balance of the purchase price of $4730, after deducting the amount of the encumbrances, should be secured by a second mortgage to appellees, payable at $30 a month for the first year and $40 per month thereafter until paid. The contract contained a provision that the agreement was to be an option on the purchase of the property, to expire in thirty days from the date thereof and was conditional upon the ability of appellants to secure a sufficient loan to complete the deal, and that the recording of the agreement by either party should constitute a violation of the same. One of the provisions of the contract was as follows: "It is also agreed by the first and second parties hereto, that in order to make it easy to get the loan on said property, that each of the parties hereto agree to represent the property as having sold for $7000, and that another set of contracts shall be drawn up, if necessary, to represent the same, in which second parties are to be represented as paying part in cash, part by second mortgage as above and part by first mortgage as above *491 stated, and that this contract is to be held in trust by R. Armstrong, agent, permanently and in strict confidence by all the different parties herein mentioned. But in no way shall the second parties be charged more than $4730 for the property in question."
The above provision of the contract was an integral part thereof and constituted a conspiracy on the part of both appellants and appellees to obtain money by false pretenses, and being in violation of the statute law of this State was therefore contrary to the public policy of the State of Illinois, which is to be found embodied in its constitution, its statutes, and, when these are silent on the subject, in the decisions of its courts. (People v. City of Chicago,
The clause in question being an integral part of the contract the entire contract was tainted with fraud, was against public policy, and both parties having knowingly and understandingly subscribed to it were particeps criminis. Appellants did not come into a court of equity with clean hands, and the contract was one of that character for the enforcement of which courts of equity have invariably refused to lend their aid. The superior court of Cook county therefore properly dismissed appellants' bill for want of equity.
Decree affirmed.