delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of forcible detainer, brought by Jordan, against Davis and one Twoma, a tenant upder Davis. One Pearce'was the owner of the premises. He had previously leased them to Davis for a term of five years, which would expire March 1, 1882, the payment of the rent having been guarantied by one Snyder, the father-in-law of Davis, the guaranty being indorsed^on the lease. Jordan’s (the plaintiff’s) claim to the premises was under a lease from Pearce, the owner, bearing date December 2, 1881, for the term of five years, from March 1,1882, at the rent of $1650 per year. Davis’ (the defendant’s) claim was under a paper writing purporting to be a lease from Pearce to Davis, made October 6, 1881, for the term of five years, from March 1, 1882, for the rent of $1500 per year. There was judgment for the defendants, which was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Third District, and the plaintiff appealed to this court.«
A motion was made to dismiss the appeal foy want of jurisdiction of this court. The amount or value involved in the suit appears to be more than $1000, and on this ground we are of opinion this court may properly entertain jurisdiction of the appeal. See Cummins v. Holmes et al. 107 Ill. 552.
The point of contest, on the merits of the case, is whether the paper writing of October 6, 1881, purporting to be a lease from Pearce to Davis, was ever delivered by Pearce to Davis, so that it became a valid lease binding upon Pearce. Pearce resided in Kentucky, and there was evidence tending to show that on October 6, 1881, Pearce met Davis at Chenoa, in this State, where the premises are situate, and made an agreement with Davis to lease to him the premises for five years, from March 1, 1882, at the rent of $1500 per year, the payment of the rent to be guarantied by Snyder, the father-in-law of Davis, by Snyder’s guaranty, in vmting indorsed on the lease, as it had been on the former lease; that they went into the office of a scrivener to have the. lease drawn in duplicate ; one was drawn and signed by Pearce and Davis, and Pearce, being about to leave on a train for Chicago, could not wait for the duplicate to be drawn, and it was left to be drawn by the scrivener, and then both be handed to Davis, which was done; that Snyder was not at home at the time, and Davis was to see him and get his signature to a guaranty of payment of the rent; that on November 11, 1881, Davis wrote to Pearce that it was impossible for him to get the guaranty, and that the land was at Pearce’s disposal, if Pearce did not .consider Davis responsible, and at the same time.Snyder wrote Pearce that he would not guaranty the payment of the rent; that no further communication took place between Pearce and Davis, except that Pearce 'testifies that on receipt of Davis’ -letter he wrote to Davis that their trade was off, and he had-authorized his agent, Mr.'Bishop, to rent the land to. a Mr. Jordan, and. on November 30, -1881, Shyder mailed to Pearce a copy of the lease, with an indorsement upon it of his guaranty of payment of the rent, which was received by Pearce and returned by him to Snyder; that on December 2, 1881, the lease from Pearce to Jordan was made through Mr. Bishop, the agent of Pearce in this State.
At the trial the plaintiff asked the following instruction to the jury: f
- “That if the lease of October 6, 1881, was signed and left with the defendant for the purpose of procuring a written guaranty, and signed by Snyder, and then to be forwarded to Pearce, pud that-the same was-not to become a binding contract between the parties until the same was so guarantied, then before Pearce was bound to regard the contract as completed he was entitled to a valid and binding lease guarantied by Snyder; and if not made in a reasonable time, or on notice by the defendant that he could not procure the guaranty of Snyder, and that he might regard the contract at an end unless he would let him have it without security, this would end the contract, unless Pearce afterwards agreed to let him have it without security. ”
This, with other instructions of like purport, was refused. In this we think there was error. The delivery of a written contract is indispensable to its binding effect, and such delivery is not conclusively proved by showing the placing of the paper by the alleged contracting party in the hands of the other. Delivery is a question of intent, and it depends whether the parties at the time meant it to be a delivery to take effect presently. Upon the hypothesis of the refused instruction, which there was evidence tending to prove, there was no completion of the contract to lease until there had been a guaranty by Snyder of payment of the rent, and the leaving of the lease, signed by Pearce, in the hands of Davis for him to get the indorsement of the guaranty of the rent upon it, was not an execution or delivery of the lease as the deed of Pearce, and the execution of it would not be perfected and the delivery of it made until the guaranty of payment of the rent had been obtained. Mr. Washburn, in his treatise on Real Property, (4th ed.) vol. 3, pp. 292, 293, upon this subject, says : “It is an essential prerequisite that the instrument in question should be understood by the parties to be completed and ready for delivery, in order to have a mere placing it in the hands or possession of the grantee or his agent construed into a delivery. ” The subsequent refusal of Snyder to guaranty the payment of the rent, and Davis’ communication to Pearce of his inability to obtain the guaranty, terminated the negotiation, and the initiatory proceeding in the making of a lease, and the subsequently obtained guaranty, availed nothing without the assent of Pearce.
The trial of the cause in the circuit court proceeded upon an incorrect theory. The following instruction was given for the defendants:
“That if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the lease of October 6, 1881, admitted in evidence, was executed by Pearce and by Davis, and unconditionally delivered to Davis either by Pearce, or by Shepherd under Pearce’s direction, then such lease was not made to Davis upon condition that lie would procure J. E. Snyder to guaranty the payment of the lease; that no such condition is found in the lease, and no verbal agreement to give such guaranty, if made prior to the execution of the- lease, would be of any effect as against the terms of the lease. ”
This instruction, as applied to the facts in the case, was false and misleading. Shepherd was the scrivener who drew the lease. The testimony was that the contract for the lease was made between Pearce and Davis themselves before they came to the office of Shepherd to have the lease drawn. This being so, it might well be, as testified by Shepherd, that a.t the time the lease was delivered into the hands of Davis, in .Shepherd’s office, nothing was said about obtaining .the guaranty. But that was understood between the parties, if it had been arranged for before, as part of the contract, and might properly be shown, not as contradicting the contents of the writing, but as showing that the lease was never delivered,—that it was not placed in Davis’ hands as the act and deed of Pearce, but for the purpose of Davis getting upon it the indorsement of guaranty of the rent, when, only, it would ' be the lease of Pearce. The prior arrangement between Pearce and Davis for the lease would be part of the whole transaction, and it would be as if the terms of that arrangement had been repeated over at the time the lease was left in the hands of Davis. This instruction carried the wrongful idea to the jury that the condition for the guaranty of the rent, to be of avail, should have been embodied in the lease, and that a verbal agreement therefor, made prior to the drawing of the lease, could not be shown, as it would be contrary to the terms of the lease. The verbal agreement for the lease was not offered in contradiction of the terms of the lease, but to disprove delivery. The question of delivery is something aside from the writing in an instrument. It depends upon proof by parol, and the evidence of delivery arising from possession of tlie deed by the grantee may be rebutted by the same kind of evidence by parol. Further on, at the conclusion of the paragraph from which the above quotation is made, the same learned author says: “While, therefore, it is not competent to control a deed by parol evi-. denee when it has once taken effect by delivery, it is always competent, by such evidence, to show that the deed, though in the grantee’s hands, has never been delivered. ”
For error in refusing and giving the instruction, as above, by the circuit court, the judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.
Mr. Justice Scott: I dissent from this opinion.