Bjornberg v. Myers

212 Ill. App. 257, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 57
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 1, 1918
DocketGen. No. 24,087
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 212 Ill. App. 257 (Bjornberg v. Myers) 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
Bjornberg v. Myers, 212 Ill. App. 257, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 57 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McSurelt

delivered the opinion of the. court.

Complainant filed her bill to foreclose a trust deed given to secure payment of certain notes. The- master to whom reference was had reported that there was due her $1,701.63, for principal, interest and solicitor’s fees, but that she should have a lien on the real estate described in the trust deed for $1,450 only, and should have judgment against Chester C. Broomell, a defendant, for the remainder due. A decree was entered in accordance with this recommendation, from which complainant appeals, saying that she is entitled to a lien on the premises for the entire amount found to be due her, and to a sale of same to satisfy this lien.

The matérial facts are that William H. Myers was the owner of the premises in question and caused the same to be duly registered under the provisions of the “Act concerning land titles,” in force May 1, 1897 (Hurd’s Ill. St. 1915-16, page 608, J. & A. ¶ 2284 et seq.), usually called the Torrens System, and on April 10, 1902, a certificate of registration was issued to him. On April 1, 1910, Myers entered into a written contract with Edward H. Craft, one of the defendants, to convey said premises to Craft for $3,100, which was to be paid, $100 on signing the contract and the balance in monthly instalments, with interest, until the whole should be paid. The contract provided that Myers should furnish a certificate of title under the Torrens System showing a merchantable title in him. This contract was not registered. Shortly after the contract was executed Craft took possession of the dwelling house upon the premises and has used and occupied the same ever since as his home. A short time prior to October 3, 1910, Myers applied to Chester C. Broomell for a loan of $1,400 on the premises. They went together to examine the same, and Mrs. Craft was told of the proposed loan. Subsequently, on October 3,1910, the loan was closed by Myers giving the notes and trust deed in question to Broomell, who paid the money represented by the loan to Myers. Subsequently the trust deed and the notes became the property of Ellen H. Bjornberg, the complainant. Before the loan was closed, Broomell knew of the contract with Craft for the purchase of the property and that he was in possession. The trust deed was filed by Broomell with the Registrar of Titles under the provisions of the Torrens System on October 3, 1910, and a memorial thereof duly entered on the certificate of title.

There are other circumstances and details appearing by the evidence which doubtless moved the chancellor towards the conclusion that the decree entered was proper upon general equitable grounds. However this may be, another consideration impels us to the opinion that the decree must be reversed. We hold that complainant is correct in her contention that under the Land Titles Act the registered trust deed from Myers to Broomell became and still is a lien upon the premises described therein, superior to the unregistered contract of purchase held by Craft and his rights thereunder, and that Broomell in taking from the registered owner and registering the trust deed as security for a loan made in good faith was unaffected by his knowledge of Craft’s interest.

The Land Titles Act referred to has been held constitutional by our Supreme Court in People v. Simon, 176 Ill. 165, the court saying that when the title has been registered,' ascertained and declared, “thereafter the tenure of the owner, the right of transfer and incumbrance, and all rights subsequently accruing, shall be determined in accordance with the rules now prescribed.” In a recent opinion by a branch of this Appellate Court, Hacken v. Isenberg, 210 Ill. App. 120, it was held that as the Torrens Act was a special act concerning registration of land titles, it supersedes any rules of the general law with which it is in conflict, and this conclusion is supported by citations of decisions in New Zealand and the State of Washington, where similar land title acts have been the subject of adjudication. McMullen & Co. v. Croft, 96 Wash. 275; Bishop v. Rowe, 23 New Zeal. L. 66.

In Fels v. Knowles, 26 New Zeal. L. 604, the court characterized the Torrens System thus:

“The cardinal principle of the statute is that the register is everything, and, that, except in cases of actual fraud on the part of the person dealing with the registered proprietor, such person, upon registration of the title under which he takes from the registered proprietor, has an indefeasible title against all the world.”

In Mordaunt’s Assignee v. Gibson, 33 New Zeal. L. 1423, the court said:

“The Land Transfer System can take no notice of agreements. Eegistration is necessary to effect a transfer of an interest. But what the second mortgagee asks the court to do is to record the unregistered memorandum or the agreement as transferring to him a priority and giving to him a right without any registration thereof. Were unregistered documents to be recognized as affecting registered documents the Land Transfer System would be destroyed. * * * The mere execution of registrable instruments was held to transfer no interest. Eegistration was necessary to give effect to them.”

This is supported by Otago Harbor Board v. Spedding, 4 New Zeal. L. 272, and Waitara v. McGovern, 18 New Zeal. L. 372. In accord with this holding is also the opinion in Cooke v. Union Bank, 14 N. S. Wales L. R. Eq. 280.

We believe it is correct to say that in all the reported cases touching this question it has been held that a registered title, lien or interest is prior and superior to an unregistered title, lien or interest. It is an insufficient reply to say that as these decisions concern cases in foreign jurisdictions they are of no weight here. Naturally adjudications touching the construction of land title acts would be found more numerous where such acts were earliest in force, and as our act is concededly adopted from those countries and in substance and many particulars identical with those acts, the construction placed thereon by such courts should be of great persuasive influence.

The provisions of the Illinois Land Titles Act (J. & A. ¶¶ 2325, 2329) pertinent to the present controversy are as follows:

“42. Except in case of fraud, and except as herein otherwise provided, no person taking a transfer of registered land, or any estate or interest therein, or of any charge upon the same from the registered owner shall be held to inquire into the circumstances under which, or the consideration for which such owner or any previous owner was registered, or be affected with notice, actual or constructive, of any unregistered trust, lien, claim, "demand or interest; and the knowledge that an unregistered trust, lien, claim, demand or interest is in existence shall not of itself be imputed as fraud.”
“46. The bringing of land under this act shall imply an agreement which shall run with the land that the same shall be subject to the terms of the act and all amendments and alterations thereof. And all dealings with land or any estate or interest therein after the same has been brought under this act, and all liens, incumbrances and charges upon the same subsequent to the first registration thereof, shall be deemed to be subject to the terms of this act.”

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Bluebook (online)
212 Ill. App. 257, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bjornberg-v-myers-illappct-1918.