Bowen v. Fridley

8 Ill. App. 595, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 65
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 14, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Ill. App. 595 (Bowen v. Fridley) 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
Bowen v. Fridley, 8 Ill. App. 595, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 65 (Ill. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

A former decree in this cause in favor of the complainants was before this court on appeal at the October term, 1879, and reversed, for reasons stated in the opinion then filed. Fridley v. Bowen, 5 Brad well, 191. The cause being again heard in the court below on pleadings and proofs, a decree was entered dismissing the bill at the complainants’ costs for want of equity, and from this decree the complainants have appealed to this court and assigned errors.

On the hearing, the counsel for the complainants admitted in open court that they only sought to obtain a decree for the amount due on the note for $4,711.77, claiming that note to be a renewal of the $4,000 note which formed a part of the original $17,000 indebtedness from Edmund D. Taylor to the First National Bank of Mendota, for which the mortgage sought to be foreclosed was given as collateral, the balance of said indebtedness having been satisfactorily adjusted, and the complainants making no claim now in respect thereto. The question to be decided on this appeal, then, is whether the complainants are entitled to a decree of foreclosure for the amount due on the $4,711.77 note.

The determination of this question depends, 1, upon whether, as a matter of fact, this note is a continuations or renewal of the indebtedness formerly represented by the $4,000 note; and 2, whether, under the terms upon which the mortgage was given by Taylor to the bank, it can be held for the payment of the $4,000 note, after $13,000 of the original $17,000 which it was given to secure, has been paid.

In the former record it appeared that the $4,000 note was surrendered by the bank to Taylor and canceled, and that other notes were given by Taylor to the bank from time to time, the last of said notes being the note for $4,711.77, but we failed to find in that record satisfactory evidence that these several notes were given in continuation or renewal of the same indebtedness formerly represented by the $4,000 note, and accordingly held that the surrender of the $4,000 note and the taking of new notes was, prima facie, a payment of the former note, but that such prima facie presumption was liable to be rebutted by proof, the burden of making such proof being on the complainants.

On the last hearing this proof we think was supplied. Evidence was introduced by the complainants from which it satisfactorily appears that the indebtedness formerly secured by the $4,000 note was not intended to be paid, and was not in fact paid, but that after being renewed a number of times by the surrender of the old note and the substitution of a new one, it finally assumed the form of the $4,711.77 note — the $711.77 being the unpaid interest on the original debt. It only remains to be determined whether this indebtedness is still secured by the mortgage.

In the opinion delivered on a former appeal, the conclusion was reached that, as the record then stood, it appeared presumptively, that the entire $17,000 had been paid, thus completely discharging the premises from the lien of the mortgage. This conclusion was necessarily decisive of the whole case. A further view, however, was advanced to the effect, that the $10,000 note and mortgage were in fact given to secure $10-000 of the $17,000, or ten-seventeenths of Taylor’s indebtedness j to the bank, and that when that proportion of the indebtedness was paid, the mortgage was satisfied. The soundness of this view is now called in question, and as it seems clear that its statement was unnecessary to the decision of the case, we do not regard ourselves bound by it as res adjudicata, and if on further consideration we reach the conclusion that it is untenable, it will be our duty to so decide.

It appears that at the time the note and mortgage were given, Taylor was owing the bank various sums of money, evidenced by sundry notes and drafts, amounting in the aggregate to $17,000. A few days before the date of the mortgage, he applied to the bank for a further loan of $8,440, which the bank refused, unless he would first reduce or in some way secure his existing indebtedness.Having shortly before that time obtained from Fridley a conveyance of the premises in question, he exhibited to the officers of the bank his deed and an abstract of title, and it was finally arranged that if he would improve his personal credit by giving a mortgage on the property for $10,000 of the $17,000, the bank would comply with his request for a further loan. He accordingly executed the note and mortgage for $10,000 as a security for that amount of the previous indebtedness, and thereupon the bank made him a further loan of $8,440. Ho portion of the $17,000 was specifically set apart or designated as the' part to be secured by the mortgage, but the mortgage was deposited with the bank under this ágreement, viz., that it should secure $10,000 of the $17,000 indebtedness.

There is no evidence that Taylor, at or before the time of making any of his payments, made any specific appropriation of such payments to the satisfaction of the mortgage nor does it appear that the bank performed, any act, at least up to the time it commenced proceedings to foreclose the mortgage, evidencing an election on its part'to consider the items of indebtedness first paid as belonging to that part of the indebtedness not secured by the mortgage. The question then is, whether the law will, under these circumstances, apply the payment first to the satisfaction of the mortgage.

The general rule in relation to the appropriation of payments undoubtedly is, that where a debtor is owing a creditor several debts, and makes payments, he has a right to direct their application to any one or more of the debts as he may choose; but if he makes payments and omits to give directions as to their application, the creditor may then apply them as he sees fit. Where, however, an appropriation is made by neither party, the law will direct as to how it shall be made. The authorities are not altogether uniform as to the principles upon which the law will proceed in making this appropriation, as some of the reported cases hold that it should be made in the way most beneficial to the debtor. But the rule which seems to be supported by the overwhelming weight of authority, as well as by the strongest considerations of equity and justice, is that it should be made in the way most advantageous to the creditor. Thus where one of the debts is secured and the other unsecured, or where one security is more precarious than the other, the law will apply the payment to the debt which is unsecured, or to the one the security for which is most precarious.

A leading case on this subject is Field v. Holland, 6 Cranch, 8, where Chief Justice Marshall, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “The principle that a debtor may control, at will, the application of his payments, is not controverted. ^Neither is it denied that on his omitting to make this application the power devolves on the creditor. If this power is exercised by neither, it becomes the duty of the court, and in its performance a sound discretion is to be exercised. It is contended by the plaintiffs that if the payments have been applied by neither the creditor nor the debtor, they ought to be applied in the manner most advantageous to the debtor, because it must be presumed that such was his intention. The correctness of this conclusion cannot be conceded where a debtor fails to avail himself of the power which he possesses, in consequence of which that power devolves on the creditor.

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8 Ill. App. 595, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-fridley-illappct-1881.