130 Ill. App. 414 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendant in error brought this suit in assumpsit against plaintiff in error to recover damages for an alleged breach of the following contract:
“Know all mew by these pbesehts, That .William T. Baker, of Taylorville City, Township of Taylorville and State of Illinois, in consideration of $1 in hand paid by the Indiana, Decatur & Western Railway Company, and here receipted, and to induce the location and construction of another railroad into the county of Christian, and avoid the vexation and expense of legal proceedings to condemn,- do agree that said Indiana, Decatur & Western Railway Company, its successors and assigns, may locate, construct, maintain and operate a railway, on the following strip or parcel of land, situated in the township of Mt. Auburn, county of Christian and state of Illinois, and described as follows, viz.:
Being a strip or parcel of land sixty-six feet in width running through my land, on the line as now located in section twenty (20) township fifteen (15), range two (2) west.
It is hereby further agreed by the said railroad company, that a fence shall be built on both sides of the right of way, if necessary.
It is hereby further agreed that the said railway company shall locate a station on the land of William T. Baker, and on or near the Bolivia road, about one-half mile south of the Bolivia school house, said road to be open to the railway, at no expense to the railway company. Compensation in full for the taking of said strip or parcel, by said company, its successors and assigns, shall be One Dollar ($1), on payment whereof I agree to convey the same by deed of general warranty to said Indiana, Decatur & Western Railway Company, its successors and assigns.
It is-further agreed that if the said railroad is not completed within two years from this date, this contract shall be null and void. The said William T. Baker shall have the right to locate depot on either the north or the south side of the track at some convenient and practical point and further agrees to furnish an additional amount of land for sidetrack. Witness my hand and seal this 6th day of April, 1901.
W. W. G-raham.
Agent 1, D. & W. By. Co.
W. T. Baker/'
Plaintiff in error is the successor and assignee of the Indiana, Decatur & Western By. Co., and bound by its agreement to assume all the liabilities and perform all the contracts of the latter company. The declaration alleges the construction and operation by the Indiana, Decatur & Western By. Co. of a railroad upon the land of defendant in error, described in the contract; that defendant in error designated a site for a depot at a convenient and practical point south of said railroad, and is ready and willing to furnish an additional amount of land for a sidetrack; that plaintiff in error has not located or constructed a depot and station, nor constructed a sidetrack, as it agreed to do, but refuses to do so. There was a trial by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment against plaintiff in error for $700.
Neither at the time defendant in error instituted his suit, nor at any time since, has he conveyed or offered to convey to the Indiana & Western Bailway Co., or to plaintiff in error as the successor and assignee of said company, the land described in the contract for right of way. It was incumbent upon defendant in error, before he could recover damages from plaintiff in error for an alleged breach of the contract to allege and prove that he, himself, had complied with all the provisions of the contract upon his part. A party to a contract seeking to recover damages for the nonperformance of the contract by the other party, must allege and prove that he, himself, has performed all the conditions of the contract by him to be performed, or that such performance has been waived, and that such other party is in default. If both parties are in default neither can maintain an action for a breach of the contract by the other. Harber Bros. Co. v. Moffat Cycle Co., 151 Ill. 84; Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Ryan, 107 Ill. 226. The agreement on the part of defendant in error to convey-a strip of land for right of way, if not a condition precedent, was, at least, to be performed concurrently with the agreement on the part of the railway company, and in either event the performance by defendant in error .was a condition precedent to his right to recover damages for a breach of the contract by the railway- company.
It appears from the evidence that as a compliance with its agreement to locate a station on the land of defendant in error, plaintiff in error erected a frame structure on the north side of its track, 8x14 feet in size, and open on the south side.
Both parties, by their instructions, submitted to the jury, as a question of fact, what constituted a station within the meaning of the contract. The interpretation of the contract was a question of law for the court, and not for the jury. In the absence of an instruction defining what constituted a station within the meaning of the contract, the jury was left to determine the meaning of the contract in that particular. The contract must be held to speak for itself, and to express the intention of the parties. Properly, the court should have instructed the jury as to the meaning of the provision in the contract requiring plaintiff in error to locate a station on the land of defendant in error, and then submitted, to the jury the question of fact, whether or not plaintiff in error had complied with that provision of the contract as interpreted by the court.
Evidence was admitted by the court of statements by alleged agents of plaintiff in error, made after the execution of the contract, as to the character of the station plaintiff in error expected or proposed to erect upon the land of defendant in error, and also as to the character of stations plaintiff in error had erected at other points on its railroad. The evidence was incompetent for any purpose, and should have been excluded.
Much incompetent evidence was introduced by defendant in error, upon the theory that the measure of his damages for a breach of contract to locate a station on his land, were the profits which might or would have accrued to him by the subdivision of his farm lands into lots and the sale of such lots. Such possible damages were, in this case, too speculative and remote to be admeasured. If defendant in error was in a position to enforce his remedy for an alleged breach of the contract, the measure of his damages would be the value of the land conveyed. R. R. I. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Beckmeier, 72 Ill. 267.
For the errors indicated the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.