160 N.E. 147 | Ill. | 1928
This cause comes on appeal from the circuit court of Will county. The appellant filed a bill for specific performance of the contract hereinafter set out. On hearing *60 of evidence in open court the chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity.
It appears that the appellant had an option with Henry Hohmann to purchase certain farm land in Will county, and at his suggestion the appellee entered into a contract with Hohmann to take the title in the appellee's name. The contract of the appellant and the appellee is as follows:
"It is agreed and understood that G.E. Klotter is to purchase Henry Hohmann farm and that John L. Rae shall have a right to a one-half interest in the purchase by paying his one-half of cost as it becomes due.
J.L. RAE, GEORGE E. KLOTTER.
"This is a temporary agreement, to be amended on agreement when first payment of $1250 is made.
J.L. RAE, GEORGE E. KLOTTER."
The bill alleges that Klotter entered into the contract with Hohmann on June 18, 1925. The amount of land contracted for by Klotter was 108 acres, for which $2500 was paid at the time of the making of the contract and the sum of $2575 was to be paid on March 1, 1926, when a deed should be delivered and a purchase money mortgage executed for the sum of $18,225. The contract between Klotter and Rae was also executed during the day on which Klotter entered into the contract with Hohmann. On June 26 following, Rae paid the sum of $1250 to Klotter, who gave him the following receipt:
"Received of J.L. Rae, $1250 — Hohmann deal.
G.E. KLOTTER."
The prayer of the bill is for specific performance of the contract of June 18 between the appellant and the appellee and for general relief. The answer admitted the allegations of the bill concerning the execution of the agreement by which the appellant was to have a one-half interest in the purchase of the land by paying one-half the cost thereof; admits that the appellee entered into the contract for the purchase of the Hohmann property and paid Hohmann *61 $2500 on the contract and that the appellant paid him the sum of $1250 on the Hohmann deal, but avers that in June, 1925, he and Rae agreed that Rae's interest in the Hohmann contract should be canceled and the $1250 paid by him should apply on a certain other contract for the purchase of a farm of 434 acres of one Salinger; that he (Klotter) made arrangements for his part of the first payment on the Salinger land, but owing to the fact that Rae failed to pay an additional $3750, which was to be his share of the initial payment on that land, the deal was not consummated. The answer alleges that Klotter had offered to re-pay the $1250 which Rae had paid on the Hohmann land, but Rae refused to accept it.
Counsel for the appellee suggest that this court has no jurisdiction because no freehold is involved. We are, however, satisfied that this is not true. The prayer was not only for specific performance of a contract to permit the complainant to share in a contract for the purchase of the land, but was also for general relief. The record shows that at the time of the hearing Klotter had completed the contract and held the deed to the Hohmann land. Therefore, if under this contract the appellant is entitled to recover he would be entitled to a decree awarding him a one-half interest in the premises upon his payment of the balance of one-half of the purchase price, as he by his bill offers to do. It is evident that the result of the decree of the court below dismissing the bill was to deny the appellant a freehold, and we are of the opinion, therefore, that this court has jurisdiction.
The only other question involved is one of fact. The appellee admits the execution of the contract between himself and the appellant and the payment of the $1250 thereon. In his answer the appellee states that "it was agreed between this defendant and complainant that the $1250 paid by complainant on the purchase of the Hohmann land should apply on the Salinger land, and that complainant *62 would turn over to this defendant an additional $3750 to make up the sum of $5000 as complainant's share of the initial payment to be made on the Salinger land, and it was then and there agreed that complainant should relinquish and abandon all interest in the Hohmann purchase, and that said contract of purchase between this defendant and said Hohmanns should be the exclusive contract to this defendant and that complainant should have no further interest therein," etc.
This answer, it will be observed, admits the execution of the contract; admits the payment by the complainant of $1250 was "on the purchase of the Hohmann land," but sets up a subsequent agreement by which the $1250 so paid should apply on the purchase of the Salinger land. The effect of the answer was to set up an affirmative defense which casts the burden of proof on the appellee to prove, by the greater weight of the evidence, the cancellation of his contract with the appellant. (Supreme Tent K. O. T. M. v. Stensland,
The evidence in the record, including the documentary evidence, when considered with the sequence of events, forces us to the conviction that the appellee has not discharged the burden cast upon him by his affirmative defense of cancellation of the contract, and that the finding of the chancellor was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill.
Reversed and remanded, with directions. *65