111 Ill. App. 545 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the court.
The condition of the bond sued on being to comply with the conditions of the lease from McCullough to Stebbins, as to the erection of buildings on a portion of the demised premises, the conditions of the lease, as to the erection of buildings, are as much a part of the condition of the bond as if set forth at large therein. Therefore, the condition of the bond must be read as follows: The condition of the above obligation is such that if the said Landt and Moore, or their assigns,'shall erect and complete upon said premises, by or before the first day of May, 1893, a block of good and substantial, three story at least, first-class brick or stone buildings, not less than five in number, then this obligation to be void, otherwise in full force and effect. It has been shown in the statement preceding this opinion that the condition was modified, as averred in the declaration, by extending the time for the erection of the block of buildings till May 1, 1897. The main contention of counsel for defendants is that the description of the block of buildings to be erected is so vague, indefinite and uncertain, and the damages, if any, resulting from the alleged breach of the condition of the bond, so manifestly speculative and unascertainable, that there can be no recovery. This is not a suit to compel specific performance, by the defendants, nor is it necessarily to be regarded as a suit for unliquidated damages, but may be regarded as a suit for the $5,000, the sum named in the bond, on the theory that that sum was fixed by the parties as liquidated damages. It is not contended by counsel for the defendants that it would have been impossible for defendants to have erected on the demised premises a block of good and substantial, first-class brick or stone, buildings, three stories high. This could certainly have been done, and the fact that with the exception that the buildings were to be three stories high, of brick or stone, good and substantial, and first-class, all other things were left to the discretion and judgment of the defendants, certainly was not to their disadvantage, but rather the contrary. It was contemplated that they or their assigns would occupy the premises for at least fifty years from' the date of the lease, apd it was left to them to decide as to all things in respect to the character of the buildings, as to materials, number of rooms, width and depth, etc., except that they should be first-class, of stone or brick, good and substantial, and, at least, three stories high. If, as contended by defendants’ counsel, damages cannot be estimated because it cannot be known just what kind of houses the defendants might have constructed, and what the plaintiff may have been damaged by being deprived of the security which would have accrued to him from their erection, this does not militate against the theory of the plaintiff that the sum named in the bond is to be regarded as liquidated damages.
In Hennessy v. Metzger, 152 Ill. 505, 517, the court say:
“ When, from the nature of the contract, the damages cannot be calculated with .any degree of certainty, the stipulated sum will usually be held to be liquidated damages, where they are so denominated in the instrument,” citing numerous cases.
In the case cited a certain sum for every day’s delay after a certain day in constructing a mill, was fixed by the contract “ as liquidated damages,” so that the language of the court, viz.: “ When they are,so denominated in the instrument,” was strictly applicable to that fact; but it is not the law tb,at the presence or absence of the words “penalty,” or “ penal sum,” or “ liquidated damages,” will control, in determining whether a sum named is to be considered as liquidated damages, or merely as a penalty.
lv Sedgwick on Measure of Damages, 8th ed., secs. 406, 408. This author writes:
“ The question whether a stipulated sum is to be allowed as liquidated damages is a question of law, and no agreement of the parties to call it a penalty or liquidated damages can decide the question.” Ib., sec. 408.
See, also, to same effect: Jaquith v. Hudson, 5 Mich., star p. 124, 138; Scofield v. Tompkins, 95 Ill. 190; 19 Am. & Eng. Ency., p. 400, and cases cited in note 1.
' In Jaquith v. Hudson, supra, which is a well-considered case, Christiancy, J., delivering the opinion, says :
“ In ascertaining this intention, no merely technical effect will be given to the particular words relating to the sum, but the entire contract, the subject-matter, and often the situation of the parties with respect to each other and to the subject-matter will be considered. Thus, though the word ‘penalty’ be used, (Sainter v. Ferguson, 7 M. G. & S., 716; Jones v. Green, 3 Y. & Jer., 299; Pierce v. Fuller, 8 Mass. 223,) or ‘forfeit,’ (Moble v. Moble et al., 7 Cow. 307,) or ‘ forfeit and pay,’ (Fletcher v. Dyclce, 2 T. Tr., 32,) it will still be held to be stipulated damages, if, from the whole contract, the subject-matter and situation of the parties, it can be gathered that such was their intention. And in proportion as the difficulty of ascertaining the actual damage by proof is greater or less, where this difficulty grows out of the nature of such damages, in the like proportion is the presumption more or less strong that the parties intended to fix the amount.” o Mich., star p. 138.
“ Where, independently of the stipulation, the damages, would be wholly uncertain, and incapable or very difficult of being ascertained, except by mere conjecture, there the damages will be usually considered liquidated.” 1 Sedgwick on Measure of Damages, 8th ed., sec. 416, citing very numerous cases.
The author, commenting on the rule thus announced, says :
“ The uncertainty contemplated by the rule is an uncertainty as to the extent and amount and not as to the proper measure of damages. * * ' * It must also be clear that there will not be a glaring disproportion between the sum stipulated and the probable legal measure.” Ib. Cases illustrative of the text, among which are Chase v. Allen, 13 Gray, 42, and Jaqua v. Iieadington, 114 Ind. 309,- are cited.
The former case was a suit on a bond, conditioned for the construction and completion of a hotel by a certain day. Mumerous persons had subscribed different sums to-aid in the construction of the hotel, induced so to do, as appears from the opinion, by the benefit which would probably accrue to them by the enhancement of the value of their real property. The question was, whether the sum mentioned in the bond was to be considered as a penalty or liquidated damages. The court held the latter, saying:
“ Where a party agrees to pay a certain sum in case he fails to perform any one of divers acts which are of different degrees of importance, and which are capable of being estimated and measured in money, the sum named as damages is to be treated as a penalty; but if the contract consists of several stipulations, the damages for a breach of which cannot be well ascertained and valued, then, the parties are deemed to have intended that the sum agreed on shall be treated as liquidated damages, from which there is to be no deduction. Green v. Price, 13 M. & W. 701, 702, and 16 M. & W. 346; Atkins v. Kinnier, 4 Exch. 783; Curtis v. Brewer, 17 Pick. 513; Heard v. Bowers, 23 Pick. 455. The case at bar clearly falls within the latter branch of the rule. The subject-matter of the contract is such as to render it quite impossible to form any estimate of the damages occasioned by a breach of its stipulations. Ho standard by which the damages can be measured is furnished by the contract itself,, nor would extrinsic evidence afford any means by which they could be accurately or even approximately ascertained.”
Jaqua v. Headington, 114 Ind. 309, was a suit on a bond in the penal sum of $250, conditioned that the obligor would extend through certain land, which the obligees had purchased from him, three streets of the town of Portland. The court held that, there being no exact standard by which a recovery could be measured, the sum mentioned in the bond should be held to be liquidated damages. See, also, 19 Am. & Eng. Ency., p. 402, parag. 8, and cases cited in note 3.
In Gobble v. Linder, 76 Ill. 157, the court say:
“ It will be inferred the parties intended the sum named as liquidated damages where the damages arising from the breach are uncertain, and are not capable of being ascertained by any satisfactory and known rule, or where, from the nature of the case and the tenor of the agreement, it is apparent the damages have already been the subject of actual and fair calculation and adjustment. Of the latter sort, says Mr. Greenleaf, are agreements ‘to convey land, or, instead thereof, to pay a certain sum.’ 2 Greenleaf on Ev., secs. 258, 259. On a review of the cases, Mr. Sedgwick, in his work on Damages, says certain principles seem deducible from them; among others, that where the agreement is in the alternative, to do some particular thing or pay a given sum of money, the court will, hold the party failing, to have had his election, and compel him to pay the money. Sedgwick on Meas. Dam., side p. 421. Without entering upon an examination of the adjudged cases, it is sufficient to say, they fully support the text cited.”
The contract between the parties in the case last cited is thus stated by the court:
“ The written contract between the parties to the suit obligated them to exchange farms. It contained a provision, in case either one failed to make the deed in exchange, at the proper time, such party would ‘ forfeit and pay, as damages’ to the other, the sum of §1,500.”
The court held the sum mentioned to be liquidated damages, saying, among other things :
“In case of a breach of the agreement, it would be difficult to estimate and prove, with any degree of certainty, the amount of damages sustained, and for that reason we may well presume, in the language of the books, the damages have been the subject of calculation and adjustment, and the sum named was the amount definitely agreed on.”
We think this opinion applicable to the facts in the preséntense. Here the defendants obligated themselves to pay $5,000, the obligation to be void in case they would construct a block of five buildings, generally described, by a certain time; otherwise the obligation to remain in 'full force and effect. They failed to erect the buildings. That the construction of the buildings would have been a valuable security to plaintiff for the performance by the defendants of the covenants of the lease by them to be performed, including the covenant to pay the reserved rent, is unquestionable. To be deprived of this security was certainly a loss or damage to the plaintiff. This loss or damage it is difficult and, as we think, impossible to estimate and prove with any degree of certainty. Although the contract in question is, perhaps, not strictly an alternative contract, as defined in the books, yet to distinguish between it and a strictly alternative contract, on principle, is not free from difficulty. By the strict terms of the bond in suit, the defendants agreed to erect the block of buildings, or, in default thereof, to pay $5,000. It is an agreement to do one of two things, as in the cases of Gobble v. Linder, supra/ Pearson v. Williams, 24 Wend. 244, 26 lb. 630, and numerous other cases which might be cited.
Counsel for plaintiff contend that the uncertainty in.the description of the block of buildings, which the defendants obligated themselves to erect, is conclusive against the right of recovery, and devote the greater part of their argument to this contention.
In Hurlstone on Bonds, p. 7, the following occurs:
“ There is a distinction to be observed between the effect of a condition that is impossible, uncertain, insensible or repugnant, and one that is unlawful. In the former case the condition alone is void, and the bond becomes single, but in the latter instance, not only the condition but the obligation is also void.”
In City of Chicago v. The People, 56 Ill. 327, a contractor was bound by the city charter to agree, and, by his contract with the city to perform certain public work, did agree, to be paid from special assessments for the work, and that he would have no claim or lien against the cit\r, except from the collections of such assessments. The law applicable to the facts of the case was such that the city could not make an assessment. The court, McAllister, J., delivering the opinion, held that the condition to take payment only from special assessments was void, and that the promise of the city to pay the contractor was 'single and absolute.
In Giles v. ITalsted, 24 IN". J. L. 366, the condition of the bond was meaningless. The court say of the condition of a bond :
“ Its office is not to destroy the nature of the obligation under which it is written, unless it discloses that the performance depends on the doing of an act which is either impossible, unlawful, or contrary to sound morals; but it is simply to suspend its efficacy upon the happening of some event or the performance of some act.”
Placing ourselves as nearly as may be in the position of the lessor and lessee of the premises, the generality of the description of the buildings to be erected on the premises seems natural and consistent, in view of the relation of the parties to each other and to the subject-matter.
Plaintiff, the lessor, was mainly interested in having houses erected which would be, in his opinion, sufficient security for the performance by the lessee, or his assigns, as the case might be, of the covenants of the lease; but the lessee, who was to occupy, or whose assigns were to occupy the demised premises for fifty years, was especially interested in having the internal construction and arrangement of the buildings adapted to such purposes as he might contemplate, or to such uses as he might think most beneficial. Hence the construction, beyond the description in the lease, ivas left to the lessee, and, as before stated, this fact did not render it impracticable for defendants to construct the buildings. We think it safe to say, that it is a matter of common knowledge in this county, in which the demised premises are situated, that a block of five first-class buildings, three stories high, and constructed of brick or stone, would have cost, at any time since the date of the bond in suit, more than $5,000; and that sum cannot, we think, be considered an extravagant or excessive compensation for plaintiff’s loss.
We are of opinion that the court erred in sustaining the defendants’demurrer to the entire declaration. Therefore, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.