Kneedler v. Anderson

43 Ill. App. 317 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1892

Sample, J.

The appellants brought this suit to recover damages from the appellee for his failure to comply with his written contract, of date September 2, 1890, to convey a certain tract of land to them. The contract price of the land was $5,000, to be paid by the plaintiffs on or before the 2d day of September, 1894. The contract was signed by the defendant under his private seal. The uncontradicted evidence is that the scrivener, Squire Nelson, who drew up the contract at the house of the defendant, made a mistake, by which the contract price was made to appear $6,000, instead of $5,000, as had been agreed. This mistake was discovered by the defendant at the time the contract was written, but not by the plaintiffs until the next day, when one of them informed the defendant of the fact, when he replied : “ I noticed the mistake at my house, but if you were willing to have it that way, I was.” Whereupon said plaintiff and defendant got into the latter’s buggy, drove to Squire Nelson’s office and called him out, when the defendant informed the squire of the mistake, that the consideration expressed in the contract should have been $5,000, instead of $6,000, and directed him to correct the contract to make it conform to the agreement in that regard. The contract was corrected by ¡Nelson as directed, by erasing $6,000, and inserting $5,000 as the consideration. Thereafter and before this suit was brought, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant the sum of $5,000 in payment of the land, as provided in the contract, which the defendant refused to receive, claiming that he had sold and deeded it to another party, whereupon this suit was brought. The purchase price per acre under the contract was $62.50, while the proof showed that it was worth from $80 to $100 per acre, the land lying within one-half mile of the corporate limits of the city of Collinsville. The court sustained an objection to the introduction of the contract, on the ground of the change that had been made, heretofore mentioned, and instructed the jury to find for the defendant. Tor this alleged error this case is sought to be reversed. The contention of the appellee is that the contract was under seal, and could not be changed by subsequent parol agreement; and second, that the contract related to the conveyance of land, and therefore the agent could not make the change without written authority from appellee. The appellants contend that the change was made as directed, by the parties to the contract, and therefore the contract as changed is valid and binding upon the defendant. It is clear, as contended by appellee, that a contract under seal can not be changed by a parol agreement. This doctrine, however, applies where the parol agreement exists independent of the contract under seal, and where such contract is left intact in its form. It does not relate to an actual change in the instrument itself, by the direction or consent of the parties thereto. In such case there is no parol agreement existing independent of the contract. The parol agreement is merged in the sealed instrument, just as much as the parol agreement that existed before the original instrument was written. That changes can be legally made in sealed instruments after their execution, by consent of the partiés, is uniformly held in modern cases (Collins v. Collins, 51 Miss. 371; Wooley v. Trustees, 4 John. 54), although made after delivery, and the fact of such consent may be proven by parol evidence. Steak v. W. S., 9 Cranch, 28. In this respect, as to an actual change in the written instrument itself, sealed contracts are placed upon the same basis as those not under seal.

The question as to either kind of contract is, was there consent? If so, the contract as changed is valid; if not, and the change was material, it is invalid, and no recovery can be had upon it. The remaining question is, was there consent of the parties to the change made in this contract? The statement of-fact would appear to answer the query. Appellee’s counsel, however, makes the point that, as the contract was for the conveyance of lands, under the statute of frauds, Nelson, the scrivener, could not make the change, even by the direction of the parties, unless he was authorized so to do in writing, and hence there was no lawful consent. It will be observed that this proposition can have no relation to the fact that the contract in this case was under seal, for a contract for the sale of land does not have to be under seal; neither does the agent’s authority to make such contract; but to be valid, it must be in writing; that is all the statute of frauds requires. The fundamental error of appellee’s position is in assuming that Nelson was the appellee’s agent to make the sale of his land. Nelson was not his agent for any such purpose, and therefore the statute of frauds can have no application. He was merely the agent of the parties to put the parol agreement of sale, made by appellee himself, in suitable written form. When the change was made by direction of appellee, and by consent of all parties, he was merely their agent for that purpose, and as such, merely the hand of the parties themselves. The direction of another hand to do that which they could lawfully do by their own, and the doing of it by such hand, was merely the execution of their own purpose by their own act. After such change, no part of the contract rested in parol or was not under seal. It remained the contract entire of the appellee as effectually as if he had made the change by his own hand. The court erred in excluding from the jury the contract for the sale of the land, and for this error the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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