Bennitt v. Wilmington Star Mining Co.

18 Ill. App. 17, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 94
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 Ill. App. 17 (Bennitt v. Wilmington Star Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennitt v. Wilmington Star Mining Co., 18 Ill. App. 17, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 94 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Baker J.

The facts involved in this case are very numerous and quite complicated, and in the view we take of the merits of the controversy, it is necessary to state but comparatively few of them, and these may properly be referred to in connection with the points it is deemed essential to consider and decide.

1. The Coleman Gas Works Manufacturing Company filed its petition for a mechanic’s lien in the Circuit Court of Grundy county, on the 14th day of September, 1875, against the Coalfield Coal Company, Charles H. Goold and H. LeBoy Thayer : and it is admitted that this was within the six months after the last payment for labor and' materials became due and payable, that is allowed by section 28 of the lien law, for the institution of a suit for the purpose of enforcing such lien in order to make it effective as against other creditors and incumbrancers. .It appears, however, that the Coalfield Coal Company parted with its title to the hotel premises in question after the petition was filed, but before jurisdiction of its person was acquired by the service of process or otherwise. We understand the claim of appellees, made in this behalf, to he that in such case one who purchases from the owner of the land and defendant to the petition, takes the title to the property forever freed from the lien created by the statute. This position is not tenable, and for several reasons. In the first place, a purchaser is not within the protection of this section, as he is neither a creditor nor an incumbrancer; it was expressly so held in Dunphy v. Riddle, 86 Ill. 22. In the second place the statute saves the right of the holder of the lien, if suit is instituted to enforce such lien within the six months limited, for such purpose; and it has been decided that the proceeding under the statute of liens is a chancery proceeding, and that the filing of the petition is the institution of the suit. Work v. Hall, 79 Ill. 196 ; Dunphy v. Riddle, ante. And, in analogy, where an amendment is allowed making a new party defendant to the petition, the suit is brought as to.him at the time of the amendment. Crowl v. Nagle, 86 Ill. 437. If the rule were as is urged, then this lien law would afford but scanty protection to those whom it is intended to benefit, for the owner might in every instance by simply evading service of process have both power and opportunity to either sell or incumber to the full value of the land, and thereby render nugatory the plain intent of the statute.

2. It is objected by appellees to the validity of the decree that was entered in the mechanic’s lien suit as affecting their rights, that on the 27th of July, 1875, and prior to the filing of the petition, the Coalfield Coal Company executed to Frank Goudspeed, as trustee, a trust deed, to secure the payment of 81,750 to Go old and Thayer, and that while Goold and Thayer, the cestwis que trust, were made parties to the proceeding, yet the trustee was not, and that they were each and all necessary parties. We understand the general equity rule to be as is claimed. McGraw v. Bayard, 96 Ill. 146; Scanlan v. Cobb, 85 Id. 296; Story’s Eq. Pl., Sec. 207. The first cited case is directly in point, and it was there decided that where a trustee is interposed between lender and borrower merely for the purpose of enabling the lender to obtain payment through the exercise by the trustee of powers conferred upon him, both trustee and cestui que trust must be made parties. It is also true, that it was held in Crowl v. Nagle and Dunphy v. Riddle, that where there is an existing incumbrance at the time the suit is brought and the incumbrancer is not, within six months after the last payment becomes due, made a party to the petition, then the lien of the mechanic will be postponed to that of the incumbrancer.

In order to properly apprehend this matter of the omission of the trustee as a party defendant in the lien proceeding, it is necessary to briefly state a few additional facts that appear in the record. On the second day of May, 1876, Goodspeed made a sale, under the provisions of the trust deed, of the-premises, and conveyed them to Goold and Thayer, who were purchasers at such sale. On the third day of October, 1876, Goold and Thayer entered into a written contract with Ira F. Benson for the future conveyance of the property to him, Benson. On November 22, 1876, Benson assigned his interest in the contract and made a quitclaim deed of the premises to the Wilmington Star Mining Company, one of the appellees herein. On the the 18th day of December, 1878, the mechanic’s lien suit, a former decree therein having been reversed by the Supreme Court and the cause remanded, was still pending and undetermined in the Grundy Circuit Court. At that time the three defendants to the petition, the Coalfield Coal Company, Goold and Thayer, filed answers to it, for the first time; and the only persons who then had any interest in the premises upon which the lien was sought to be enforced, were the two latter and the Wilmington Star Mining Company. The title of the Coalfield Coal Company had long prior been divested by the sale under the trust deed. The- suit had become Us pendens in respect to Thayer, on the 28th of October, 1875, by the service of process on him; but it is questionable whether it became Us jpendens with reference to Goold and the Coalfield Coal Company before their answers wore filed. Assuming that Goold and Thayer, by the failure of the petitioners to make Goodspeed, the trustee, a party to the proceeding, and by the conveyance from such trustee, were in a position to insist the lien could not be made effective to their prejudice, then it was their bounden duty to interpose such defense in the pending litigation. The petition charged that Goold and Thayer were interested in the real estate covered by the lien as mortgagees or otherwise, and prayed for a lien and that the lots might be sold clear of all incumbrances. If these parties to the suit had a valid defense to the enforcement of the -lien as against any rights they were vested with, they should have disclosed it, and if they either did or did not do so, the binding force of the lien is res judicata as between them and their privies, and all parties claiming under the decree. That decree necessarily affirmed the validity of such lien as against whatever right or title the defendants therein possessed, for the court expressly found and decreed that the “petitioner is entitled to a first lien upon said premises,” and it is conclusive upon the parties and their privies. The doctrine of resjudicata embraces not only what has actually been determined in the former suit, but also extends to any other matter properly involved, and which might have been raised and determined in it. Hamilton v. Quimby, 43 Ill. 90; Rogers v. Higgins, 57 Id. 244; Kelly v. Donlin, 70 Id. 378; Ruegger v. I. & St. L. R. R. Co., 103 Id. 449. In Bigelow on Estoppel, p.46, note, it is said: “It follows, also, from the authorities considered, that a valid judgment for the plaintiff sweeps away every defense that should have been raised against the action; and this too, for the purposes of every subsequent suit, whether founded on the same or a different cause.” See, also, Gage v. Ewing, 107 Ill. 11, and Scates v. King, 110 Id. 456.

This rule of the binding and conclusive effect of a former adjudication has a still broader application than we have thus far stated, and will- include not oily Goold and Thayer, but the Wilmington Star Mining Company. Sometimes persons who are not parties to the record, and have not acquired interests pendente lite, are bound by the judgment or decree.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ill. App. 17, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennitt-v-wilmington-star-mining-co-illappct-1886.