Brosseau v. Lowy

70 N.E. 901, 209 Ill. 405
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 901 (Brosseau v. Lowy) 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
Brosseau v. Lowy, 70 N.E. 901, 209 Ill. 405 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant contends that the transfer of the Gillespie notes and trust deed in question by Anton Boenert to appellee, Lowy, as security, was without the knowledge or authority of Auguste Boenert, who seems to have been the owner. On the part of appellee, Lowy, it is contended that such action on the part of Anton Boenert was with the authority and as the agent of his wife, Auguste, and there is evidence in the record to support such contention. The trial court, in the opinion attached to appellant’s brief and based on the same evidence here presented, also states: “The proof also tends to show that Anton Boenert was the agent of his wife, having full power and authority to bind her in all matters.” The Appellate Court has also accepted such conclusion, and we are satisfied to concur therein. If, then, as stated by the trial court, “Anton Boenert was the general agent of his wife, having full power and authority to bind her in all matters,” the transfer of the notes and trust deed to appellee, as security, by Anton Boenert, though his wife may have been the legal owner of the same, was binding upon her, and we cannot sustain the insistence of appellant that the transfer in question, being for the benefit of Anton Boenert, was therefore not binding upon his wife.

The question next remains to be considered, what effect did the purchase of the land from Ziese by Auguste Boenert, and her subsequent conduct in reference thereto, have upon the Ziese note and trust deed? It is contended by appellee, and was so held by the Appellate Court, that the Ziese §1500 note, secured by the trust deed to Coombs, which encumbered eighty acres, of which the twenty acres subsequently encumbered by the trust deed now held by appellee, Lowy, form a part, constituted a part of the consideration for said purchase. The evidence would seem to leave no doubt of the correctness of this contention. Ziese and Boenert both testified that only §1200 in cash was paid to Ziese for the conveyance to Auguste Boenert. Ziese stated, when asked who was to pay his §1500 note: “Hot me; the man that followed me was to pay it; the mortgage stays on the farm until the farm was sold to somebody else.” He also stated that he was never asked to pay the note, or to pay the interest thereon, after he sold the farm; that he knew nothing- about the extensions of time or changes as to the interest, which, with the payments of interest, were •endorsed on the note. When asked if he was to pay his note after such sale, he answered: “I could not pay the $1500; I don’t own the land; I guess the owner of the land has to pay.” And in reply to the further inquiry if he paid it, he replied, “No.” Anton Boenert testified that Ziese said to him, “If you or your wife, or whoever buys the property, gives me so much for my equity, I will convey the property and go to Dakota,” and that the consideration in the deed was $8000 because the land was then considered worth $100 per acre. The cash payment and the Ziese note together would make but $2700. How the difference between this amount and the consideration named in the deed was made up, if it was made up at all, the record does not disclose.

The facts connected with the execution of the two release deeds also tend strongly to show that Auguste was to pay the Ziese note as a part of the purchase price, in the purchase of the land from Ziese. Ziese was not consulted and had no knowledge of their execution. The release deeds, being for sufficient land to pay the note, released Ziese of all personal liability. After Mrs. Boenert received the Ziese deed she paid the interest on the Ziese note to Coombs, and finally, in order to procure a still further extension of the Ziese note, the Boenerts; •on February 26, 1893, gave Coombs a gold note for $1500, ■due in two years, and after the giving of that note no interest was paid on the Ziese note, but it was still held by Coombs as collateral security for the gold note, and finally, when the gold note was paid by Mrs. Boenert, in 1896, the Ziese note was surrendered to her. The loan of the $6000 from Lowy was obtained April 30, 1896,— just a few days before the gold note was paid,—and it is likely it was from this source that the money was obtained to pay off the gold note.

The conduct of Mrs. Boenert, and the testimony of Anton Boenert and Ziese, seem conclusively to indicate that Mrs. Boenert was to pay the Ziese $1500 note, as a part of the purchase price of the equity of Ziese, and if, then, we accept such to be the fact, and also- that Mrs. Boenert assumed the encumbrance on the land by her thus purchased, the land became the primary fund for the payment of said encumbrance, and when Mrs. Boenert purchased the Ziese note the encumbrance was discharged. (Lilly v. Palmer, 51 Ill. 331; Drury v. Holden, 121 id. 130, and cases cited.) The Ziese note and encumbrance, by the surrender of the said note to Mrs. Boenert, the legal owner of the fee, were discharged, and it was impossible, by any manner or form of transfer, as to third parties, to keep the same alive.' In the case at bar, Coombs, the trustee in the trust deed, at the solicitation and request of one or both the Boenerts, and without the knowledge of the mortgagor, Ziese, not only extended the time of payment of the indebtedness, but released more than enough of the land covered by the trust deed necessary to make good the entire debt; so the mortgagor must have been released, even as to the liability of a surety, which relation he might otherwise have held.

The rule to be extracted from the numerous holdings of the courts upon this subject is, that where the amount of the mortgage is to be paid as a part of the purchase money, it is an assumption of the debt, (Thayer v. Torrey, 37 N. J. L. 344;) and that precise and formal words are unnecessary to impose upon a grantee an engagement to pay off a mortgage, but the inquiry is as to the intention of the parties. (Collins v. Rowe, 1 Abb. N. C. 99.) In Drury v. Holden, supra, this court said (p. 137): “It is well established that when a party purchases premises which are encumbered, to secure the payment of indebtedness, and assumes the payment of the indebtedness as a part of the purchase money, the premises purchased are in his hands a primary fund for the payment of the debt, and it is his duty to pay it. (Lilly v. Palmer, 51 Ill. 331; Russell v. Pistor, 3 Seld. 171.) And the rule is the same, although there be no assumption of payment of the indebtedness, if the purchase be made expressly subject to the encumbrance, and tjie amount of the indebtedness thereby secured is included in and forms a part of the consideration of the conveyance.—Lilly v. Palmer, supra; Comstock v. Hitt, 37 Ill. 542; Fowler v. Fay, 62 id. 375; Russell v. Pistor, supra; Ferris v. Crawford, 2 Denio, 598.” In Winans v. Wilkie, 41 Mich. 264, it was held that if a grantee of mortgaged premises assumes the encumbrance and afterwards takes an assignment of the mortgage, he extinguishes the debt and cannot afterwards give any right to foreclose the mortgage by assigning it. In Carlton v. Jackson, 121 Mass. 592, it was held that when an encumbrance is paid by one whose duty it was, by contract or otherwise, to pay it, such payment effected a release or discharge of the debt, and it could not thereafter be kept alive for any purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 901, 209 Ill. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brosseau-v-lowy-ill-1904.