delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal arises out of an action brought by Bruno Kucinski against Chain O’Lakes Game Corporation (now doing business as
The record reveals that prior to December 21, 1961, Deno Buralli was the owner of an Illinois corporation known as Chain O’Lakes Game Field Corporation. For many years prior thereto, Bruno Kucinski and his family owned and operated a business known as Thread and Gage Company, Inc., which specialized in thread grinding for aircraft parts and high precision machines. The business consisted of a parcel of improved real estate in Schiller Park, Illinois, owned by Kucinski in his own name and various items of machinery owned by two corporations which Kucinski controlled, namely, Thread and Gage Company, Inc., and B. K. Machine Leasing Company. Buralli worked for Kucinski for several years as a manufacturer’s representative.
On December 21, 1961, the parties executed a series of agreements to effectuate the sale of Kucinski’s business to Buralli’s corporation, Chain O’Lakes. The first agreement provided for the sale of the assets of B. K. Machine Leasing Company for $25,000; $5,000 down and the $20,000 balance payable in monthly installments of $250 or more a month commencing on September 1, 1962, with no interest being charged on the principal unless there was a delinquency in any of the installments and, if so, then a charge of 5% interest per annum on the principal, payable each month. The agreement included a list of certain items of machinery that were covered under this particular transaction.
The second agreement between Kucinski and Buralli, as agent for Chain O’Lakes, covered the sale of the assets of Thread and Gage Company, Inc. The agreement stipulated that the $100,000 purchase price was to be satisfied by Chain O’Lakes’ payment of $10,000 down and installment payments totaling $90,000 under an installment plan with terms identical to the first agreement. A separate list of machinery
A third agreement was on a form entitled “Articles of Agreement for Warranty Deed” (warranty deed agreement), whereby Kucinski undertook to sell certain real estate located in Schiller Park, Illinois, to Chain O’Lakes. The agreement provided that the purchase price for the real estate was $75,000; $5,000 down and the $70,000 balance to be paid in monthly installments of $500 or more commencing on September 1, 1962, with no interest charged on the principal unless there was a delinquency in payment and, if so, then 5% was to be charged on the principal balance until the delinquent installment was paid.
The parties further agreed that Kucinski’s corporation was to release the corporate name of Thread and Gage Company, Inc., to permit Chain O’Lakes to assume the name. After the documents were signed and the various downpayments were made, a dispute arose between the parties over the fact that certain items of machinery sold to Chain O’Lakes under the B. K. Machine Leasing Company agreement (BKML agreement) were also included under the agreement covering machinery belonging to Kucinski’s former Thread and Gage corporation (Thread and Gage agreement). On September 1, 1962, when the first installment payments were due under the three agreements (a total of $1,000; $250 under the BKML agreement, $500 under the warranty deed agreement, and $250 under the Thread and Gage agreement), Bur alii, on behalf of Chain O’Lakes, refused to make the $250 payment due under the BKML agreement. Additionally, Buralli testified that he informed Kucinski no future payments would be made under that agreement.
Each month thereafter, Thread and Gage (formerly Chain O’Lakes) made installment payments to Kucinski in the sum of $750, rather than the $1,000 due under all three agreements. The monthly checks were either cashed or deposited by Kucinski.
On May 20, 1969, an attorney, acting on behalf of Kucinski, sent a letter to Thread and Gage requesting payment of $20,000 plus 5% interest, which was claimed due for the machinery covered under the BKML agreement. Thread and Gage, however, continued in its repudiation of the agreement, sending monthly checks in the sum of $750 instead of $1,000.
On March 27, 1973, Kucinski filed a complaint at law, seeking $250 per month, plus interest from September 1, 1962, to February 1, 1973, or a total of $31,250. In its answer, Chain O’Lakes denied liability and on January 10, 1975, countersued Kucinski in equity for specific performance of the articles of agreement for warranty deed. The
On December 21, 1976, Kucinski amended his complaint at law and alleged, for the first time, that the failure of Thread and Gage to make payments under the BKML agreement constituted a breach of the other two agreements, thereby triggering interest from September 1, 1962, for the combined balance of all the agreements. The amended complaint sought damages in the sum of $196,000 plus 5% interest.
The trial court found that “all of the documents were in fact executed at one time” and “did in fact constitute one transaction.” The trial court further determined that the transaction was to be completed by Chain O’Lakes (the present Thread and Gage) in three separate phases: (1) purchase of the realty under the warranty deed agreement; (2) purchase and payment of the agreement wherein the former Thread and Gage sold all of its assets to Buralli or his nominee; and (3) payments to be made under the BKML agreement.
The trial court further found that the present Thread and Gage was in compliance with the terms and conditions of the first two phases, but that it breached phase three of the transaction in failing to pay the first installment due September 1, 1962, under the BKML agreement. Accordingly, the court awarded judgment to Kucinski in the sum of $20,000 plus 5% interest from September 1, 1962. Upon payment of this judgment, the court ordered Kucinski to specifically perform under the warranty deed agreement and convey a deed to Thread and Gage. The court further ordered Thread and Gage to continue complying with the terms of the second phase.
In accordance with the above order, Thread and Gage tendered payments of $39,981.72 ($20,000 plus 5% interest) and requested the warranty deed. Kucinski refused to accept payment or deliver the deed.
On appeal, Kucinski first argues that the three agreements are to be construed as one contract and that a failure to pay installments under the BKML agreement is a breach of the other two agreements. We reject this argument.
Where different instruments are executed at the same time between the same parties and in the course of the same transaction, all the instruments must be read and construed together. (Sudeikis v. Chicago Transit Authority (1980),
Here, although the three agreements were executed at the same time and constituted one transaction, we believe that it was the parties’ intention to treat payments and defaults under each of the agreements as separately payable and enforceable. First, we note that the language of each agreement is unambiguous; none of the agreements refer to each other. If the parties had intended the failure to pay one of the agreements to trigger a default of the other agreements, they could have provided such terms in the agreement. Courts may not rewrite a contract to suit one of the parties, but must enforce the terms as written. Schroud v. Van C. Argiris & Co. (1979),
Secondly, in September 1962, Buralli told Kucinski no further payment would be made under the BKML agreement because of the parties’ dispute over the inclusion of the same machinery in both the BKML and Thread and Gage agreements. If, at that time, Kucinski thought that a default had occurred in the payment of all three obligations, he had available to him effective means of collecting under the agreements. Instead, however, Kucinski accepted payments under the warranty deed and Thread and Gage agreements for more than 10 years before filing suit. Additionally, when Kucinski made a written claim through his attorney for $20,000 plus 5% interest in 1969 under the BKML agreement, he made no reference to any of the other two agreements. Moreover, Kucinski did not seek damages and interest under the other two agreements when he initially filed suit for breach of contract in 1973 against Chain O’Lakes for its failure to make installment payments of $250 per month from September 1, 1962, through February 1, 1973, plus 5% interest. In fact, it was not until 1975, after Thread and Gage brought its action against Kucinski for specific performance of the warranty deed agreement, that Kucinski amended his complaint to include damages and interest under the other two agreements.
Accordingly, the interpretation of the agreements requested by
We next consider Thread and Gage’s contention that the cause of action on the BKML agreement is barred by Illinois’ 10-year statute of limitations for actions on contracts. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 83, par. 17, now codified as Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 110, par. 13—206.) The trial court refused to apply the statute of limitations and held that Thread and Gage was liable for all payments due under the contract, plus 5% interest from September 1, 1962.
The agreement in question provided for installment payments of $250 each month and, upon default in any payment, acceleration of the payments at the option of the seller (Kucinski). The general rule is that where a money obligation is payable in installments, a separate cause of action arises on each installment and the statute of limitations begins to run against each installment as it becomes due. Light v. Light (1957),
The general rule applies even though the agreement in this case contains an optional acceleration provision. Where the creditor has the option of declaring all installments payable in the event of default on a single payment, and the creditor fails to exercise the option when the debtor defaults, the rule that each installment carries its own limitation still applies. (See Honn v. National Computer Systems, Inc. (Minn. 1981),
Here, although Kucinski had the option of accelerating payment, the record does not reveal that he exercised that right after default on the BKML agreement. Therefore, applying the rule that each installment carries its own statute of limitations, we hold that Kucinski’s claim under the BKML agreement for monthly payments of $250, which became due September 1, 1962, through March 27, 1963, is barred by the statute of limitations. Kucinski’s claim for those monthly payments falling due after March 27, 1963, however, is timely, and he is entitled to the sum of those payments plus interest due under the BKML agreement.
We further find that the present Thread and Gage is entitled to specific performance of the articles of agreement for warranty deed. The granting of specific performance rests on sound judicial discretion, to be determined by the facts and circumstances of each individual case. (Friedman v. 5424 Cornell Corp. (1978),
Finally, we address Kucinski’s request that the trial court’s denial of attorney fees be reversed. We note that the BKML agreement included a confession of judgment clause authorizing entry of judgment for the amount due, together with costs and 20% of such amount as attorney fees. Kucinski, however, did not proceed by way of confession of judgment.
The well-established rule in this State is that attorney fees are ordinarily not recoverable unless specifically authorized by statute or
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is modified, and as modified, is affirmed, and the cause is remanded.
Judgment affirmed as modified; cause remanded.
McGLOON and GOLDBERG, JJ., concur.
Notes
Kucinski and his family formerly owned and operated Thread and Gage Company, Inc., and in December 1961 contracted to sell the business to Chain O’Lakes Game Corporation. As part of this transaction, Kucinski’s corporation agreed to change its name to allow Chain O’Lakes to assume the corporate name of Thread and Gage Company, Inc.
