Buchanan v. International Bank

78 Ill. 500
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 78 Ill. 500 (Buchanan v. International Bank) 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
Buchanan v. International Bank, 78 Ill. 500 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, brought by appellant, to remove from the record and cancel two certain trust deeds, which were executed on the 19th day of January, 1871, by Alpheus C. Badger to one Rogers, as trustee, to secure the payment of two promissory notes of $6666.66 each, given by Badger, payable to the order of Samuel J. Walker, one in one year and the other in two years from the date thereof, with interest at eight per cent per annum.

To the bill, the appellee, the International Bank, filed its answer and cross-bill, in which it prayed that a decree might be rendered ordering the premises described in the trust deeds, which were given to secure the two notes from Badger to Walker, be sold, and the proceeds of the sale paid to the bank to the full amount of the two notes and interest, or so much thereof as should be realized upon a sale of the premises. .

Upon the hearing, the court entered a decree dismissing appellant’s bill, and ordered the premises sold as prayed for in the cross-bill, and that the proceeds of the sale, to the amount of the two notes and interest, should be paid to appellee, and the balance to appellant.

To reverse the decree, appellant has brought this appeal.

The two trust deeds given by Badger were at once placed upon record, and, on the 21st of January, 1871, Walker borrowed of appellee $9500, and to secure the payment of the money, he transferred to appellee, as collateral security, the two notes executed by Badger, which were secured by the two deeds of trust.

The $9500 debt was subsequently reduced to $8000. This amount, together with the interest upon it, appellant concedes appellee is entitled to have paid by a foreclosure of the two deeds of trust, while appellee claims the right to have the balance of the two notes secured by the trust deeds applied on other indebtedness due from Walker to it, under an agreement executed by Walker, as follows :

“Chicago, July 7, 1869.
Whereas, the undersigned has heretofore, and intends hereafter, to borrow money from the International Mutual Trust Company, on his own note or notes, or the note or notes of H. H. Walker; and whereas, to secure the payment of such note or notes he has heretofore, and intends hereafter, to deposit collateral securities; and whereas, such collaterals were given and are hereafter to be given to secure the payment of specific notes; now, therefore, for the purpose of more fully securing the said International Mutual Trust Company, I do hereby agree that all and singular the collaterals by me given, or to be given as aforesaid, shall, of the option of said International Mutual Trust Company, apply generally to all notes held at any time by said trust company, executed by me or said H. H. Walker, and shall also apply and be considered collaterals to secure the payment of any and all notes negotiated for my account, by said trust company.
Samuel J. Walkee.”

There had been a large amount of dealing between Walker and appellee, and at the time of the trial, appellee showed an indebtedness against Walker of over $2,000,000, which appeared from various promissory notes. Among others were two dated December 30th, 1871, one for $10,000 and the other for $16,740.

It also appears that, on the 27th day of March, 1872, Badger, by quit-claim deed, conveyed the premises in controversy to Walker, which was recorded on the 16th day of May, following. Prior to this, however, Walker, on the 23d day of February, 1872, conveyed the premises by general warranty deed to one Kinney, which deed was recorded Aug. 13, 1872.

On the 23d day of March, 1872, Kinney conveyed by trust deed to Rogers, to secure three notes of $6666.66 each, given to Walker. This deed was recorded on the 26th of March, 1872.

On the 7th day of May, 1872, the Commercial Loan Co., through appellant, its cashier, purchased the notes given by Kinney to Walker. On the 25th day of April, 1874, after the note given by Kinney to Walker was due, on default of payment, the trustee, Rogers, sold the premises on the trust deed, and appellant purchased the same for the sum of $5000.

While it is true, at the time appellant purchased the Kinney notes from Walker, he was informed by the latter that the premises were free from prior liens, and although he had no actual notice of the trust deeds which secured the notes held by appellee, yet these trust deeds being upon the record at the time Kinney derived title, and at the time he executed the notes and deed of trust under which appellant claims, he was bound to take notice of the existence and legal effect of the prior deeds of trust upon the premises, and whatever rights he acquired under the Kinney deed of trust, were subject to those first given and placed upon record.

The registry laws would be useless, unless subsequent purchasers were bound to take notice of the existence of a deed previously recorded, and although appellant may have been an innocent purchaser in fact, he can not be so regarded in law. He had no right to rely upon the representations of Walker in regard to the title to the premises, and if he saw proper to do so without consulting the record, which was open to his inspection, it was at his own peril.

At the time Walker obtained a deed of Badger, he had parted with the title to the notes and trust deeds Badger had previously given. They were held by appellee, and, hence Walker occupied no better position than an entire stranger to the transaction would, had he purchased of Badger. The conveyance could not have been made otherwise than subject to the trust deeds held by appellee. Kinney, being a grantee of Walker, and appellant claiming under Kinney, could occupy no better position.

Then the only real question involved in the case is, whether, under the contract executed by Walker on the 7th day of July, 1869, appellee is entitled to hold the Badger notes as security for any indebtedness of Walker other than the §9500 debt, for the payment of which these notes were specially pledged on the 21st day of January, 1871.

By the terms of the contract executed by Walker, he expressly agreed that any and all collaterals which he had or should pledge to appellee to secure the payment of specific indebtedness, should be held and applied by appellee gener-. ally, to the payment of any and all such notes as appellee might hold against Walker at any time.

The contract was one for the security of prior and future advances by the pledge of collateral security. A collateral then or thereafter pledged for the payment of one note, under the terms of the agreement, could be held not only as security for the payment of that particular note, but for the payment of all notes held by appellee against Walker, regardless of the manner in which such other notes might be secured, or the date they might be given.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ill. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-international-bank-ill-1875.