Booth v. Wiley

102 Ill. 84, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 9
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 102 Ill. 84 (Booth v. Wiley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booth v. Wiley, 102 Ill. 84, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 9 (Ill. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Before proceeding to the questions affecting the merits of the controversy, as presented by the record, it is necessary to pass upon a question of practice.

At the May term, 1880, a hearing was had, both parties introduced all the evidence they then desired to introduce, arguments of counsel on the respective sides were heard, and the court announced what would be its decision, and directed the solicitor for plaintiffs in error to draw up a decree in accordance therewith. Before any decree was signed or entered, the solicitor for the complainant in the original bill moved the court for leave to file an amended bill in said cause. The motion was allowed, over the objections of the solicitor of the plaintiffs in error, and time given until the 20th of September, 1880, within which to file such amended bill. No affidavit was filed in support of the motion.

This is clearly no ground of error. The court is specially invested with power, by statute,* to allow amendments to be made to bills, pleas, answers and replications, on such terms as it may deem proper. Chap. 22, Rev. Stat. 1874, title “Chancery,” sec. 37.

In Jefferson County v. Ferguson et al. 13 Ill. 33, four amendments were allowed to the bill, two of which were after the case had been argued, and while it Vas under advisement in the circuit court, and it was held this was not error, but that it was within the discretion of the court. In Mason et al. v. Bair, 33 Ill. 194, it was held not to be error to allow the bill to be amended after replication filed and the cause submitted upon the evidence. And in Marble v. Bonhotel, 35 Ill. 240, the complainant was allowed to amend his bill after answer filed, ju’oofs taken, and a motion made to dissolve the injunction, and it was held not to be erroneous. The principle that such amendments are purely discretionary, and ordinarily, and in the absence of evidence of an abuse of a reasonable discretion, not the subject of review, is too well settled to justify argument or extended comment. See, also, Hewitt et al v. Dement et al. 57 Ill. 500; Lyndon v. Lyndon, 69 id. 43; March v. Mayers, 85 id. 177. Such amendments must, of course, only be allowed when, or on such terms as that, no undue advantage will thereby be obtained over the opposite party, and upon payment of costs thereby occasioned.

It is impossible to see how plaintiffs in error were here, in any substantial manner, prejudiced by the amendment that was allowed, since they can properly claim no right to have the case disposed of in any other way than according to the actual equitable rights of the parties, and the court decreed the payment of $30 costs, in consequence of allowing the amendment. There was no necessity of an affidavit, if the judge believed that the evidence then before him would make a case under a bill differently framed, as he doubtless did, and as we are to assume he did, from his act.

The question first to be considered on the merits of the controversy, as presented in argument, is, can the sale to Wiley, under the trust deed, be sustained ? It is assailed by counsel for plaintiffs in error upon the ground, first, that there was a contract between the holder of the note and Booth that the loan should run as long as Booth should promptly pay the interest; and second, that the trustee advertised and sold, without any previous request of the holder of the note, but solely upon the request of Wiley, with whom, it is charged, he conspired to wrong and defraud Booth.

The evidence, in our opinion, fails to support either of these propositions. The note, it will be remembered, was executed by Maston C. Scott and A. M. Wiley (Wiley being, in fact, surety for Scott,) to John Gf. Miles. John Gr. Miles died subsequently, and by an arrangement thereafter made between his heirs at law, this note became the property of his daughter, Mrs. Julia M. Dorris, the wife of William Dorris. Dorris and his wife resided at Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, and they were in Europe from in May until in October, 1878. There is no pretense of a contract for an extension of time with John Gr. Miles, and Mr. and Mrs. Dorris explicitly deny that any such contract was ever made with them, or either of them. For convenience, while Dorris and wife were in Europe, Mrs. Dorris left the note and deed of trust in the hands of one Garretson, who resided at Hunting-don, and he, together withE. 0. Cunningham, to whom Garretson subsequently sent the note, and her brother, B. F. Miles, the trustee in the deed of trust, residing in the vicinity of the property in controversy, in this State, were to act, and did act, as her agents, with full power (orally conferred) to act, in regard to the note and deed of trust, (whether to collect by foreclosure and sale, or otherwise, or to leave the debt standing,) as they should think the best for her interests. Now, Booth himself denies that he, in his contract with Scott, assumed the payment of this note, and he makes no claim to having subsequently assumed such an obligation. All that he claims is, that by assurances from Dorris, before Dorris and wife sailed for Europe, and by Cunningham while Dorris and wife were in Europe, he was induced to believe and act upon the assumption that if he kept the interest on the note promptly paid there would be no sale of the property. But this did not amount to a contract.' Booth assumed no express liability to pay the interest. There was no agreement on behalf of the holder of the note that time of payment should be extended to any designated period. Payment of interest due was no more than the holder of the note was entitled to in any contingency, and there was, therefore, no valid consideration to support a promise to extend definitely the time of payment, even if such a promise had been made. It would have been strange, indeed, if Dorris, himself a lawyer, or Cunningham, without specific and' ample power in that regard, had made a valid and binding contract, without the consent of Wiley, (which no one pretends was ever obtained,) to extend the time of payment, for, under, repeated decisions of this court, the effect of such a contract would have been to release Wiley from further liability.

Upon the other question it is difficult to see how Booth is concerned. He claims that he assumed no liability. His counsel say he bought the right to use the property until foreclosure under the deed, and the privilege to redeem afterwards. Whether this, therefore, was worth much or little, concerned only him. ' He might let the property go at whatever should be bid for it at the sale, and there would be no recourse for a balance against him. As between him and the holder of the note there was no privity whatever. After the note was due it was of consequence to no one, in a legal point of view, but the holder, when the property should be advertised and sold. In the very nature of things Booth had no legal or equitable right in the matter. If the property should be advertised and sold promptly, upon default, Booth could not object. If not thus advertised and sold, and he should be permitted to enjoy the property'for months or years longer, this would be by grace and favor, and not by legal of equitable right to require that it must'be só.

The clause requiring the trustee to sell upon request of the holder of the note is manifestly purely for the benefit of the holder of the note, to enable him to control the foreclosure and sale, and not for the benefit of the maker of the note.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Ill. 84, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-wiley-ill-1881.