Buehler v. McCormick

48 N.E. 287, 169 Ill. 269
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 287 (Buehler v. McCormick) 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
Buehler v. McCormick, 48 N.E. 287, 169 Ill. 269 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Cook county entered a decree in favor of the complainant to the bill, John W. Buehler, foreclosing as a mortgage a deed of trust given by the defendant, Tilton H. McCormick, upon real estate. The Appellate Court for the First District has reversed that decree and dismissed the bill. The case is here on Buehler’s appeal.

The facts are these: McCormick being indebted to William Haerther for the purchase of the real estate, on March 27,1893, executed his note for $820, payable to Ms own order one year after its date. He endorsed it in blank and delivered it to Haerther. To secure its payment he also executed his deed of trust upon the property to one Austin, as trustee, and delivered the same also to Haerther. Before the note was due, and only about a month after it was given, McCormick paid Haerther $300, and Haerther credited it on the back of the note. About three weeks later he made another payment of $100 on the note, for which Haerther gave him a receipt, and a few days later, by agreement with Haerther, he delivered to him, Haerther, a certificate of deposit of the Milwaukee Avenue State Bank for $515 in full payment of the balance of the note, principal and interest. McCormick did not, when he made the last payment, take up the note or deed of trust nor did he ask for a return of the same to him, but relied upon the trustee, Austin, who had a desk in the office of Haerther, to release the deed of trust and to return the same and the note to him, but Austin neglected the matter and moved out of Haerther’s office, whereupon McCormick sought Haerther and endeavored to obtain his note and deed of trust. Whether Haerther avoided him or not, he was unable to get any satisfactory response until in the latter part of September, when he obtained from Haerther a receipt in full for the amount of the note and interest. About two months after the note was executed and some days after it had been fully paid in the manner before stated, Haerther, being indebted to the Garden City Banking and Trust Company, of which appellant, Buehler, was the cashier, gave the bank his note therefor, and delivered, among others, the note in question to the bank as collateral security. Some two monthse later, about July 20, 1895, the bank sold the note in controversy under the pledge, and appellant, Buehler, bought it at the public sale. Before the sale, notice was served upon the bank that the note had been paid in full, and demand was made for the surrender of the note and deed of trust.

Appellant contends that it does not appear that Haerther held the note when it was paid, but as it was endorsed and delivered to him by McCormick in payment for the property purchased of him, and he did not transfer it to the bank until after it was paid, and there being no evidence that any one else held the note in the meantime, it must be presumed that he was the legal holder of it.

It is not contended that appellant acquired any rights, as against apjiellee, superior to those possessed by the bank before it sold and delivered the note to him, Buehler. But counsel for appellant, while recognizing the common law rule as applied and followed by this court in Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188, and many subsequent cases down to McAuliffe v. Reuter, 166 Ill. 491, that the assignee of a mortgage takes it subject to all equities existing between the assignor and the mortgagor, insist that the rule cannot be applied in this case,—to use their language: “First, because, by the tenor of the instruments, the maker is estopped from availing himself of such equities; second, because no assignment, equitable or otherwise, of the mortgage in question is involved; third, because the negligence of appellee, which enabled the perpetration of a fraud upon appellant, deprives him of the right to urge his equities as against appellant.” And in this connection it is urged, that as the note was made payable to the order of the maker and endorsed by him in blank and delivered to Haerther, it thereafter passed by mere delivery, the same as if it had been made payable to bearer, and that the trust deed recites that the maker “is justly indebted unto the legal holder of the principal promissory note hereinafter described, in the principal sum of $820, being part of the purchase money for the premises thereby conveyed,” etc., and describing the note; and the point is made that in such a case the equities of the maker against an innocent holder cannot prevail, even although the instrument is not assignable either at-common law or by statute.

It is, of course, apparent that McCormick would have had a complete defense to any suit which Haerther might have brought, either upon the note or to foreclose the mortgage. It is also apparent that as the note passed from Haerther to the bank before its maturity and without notice that it had been paid, the bank could recover from the maker the amount appearing to be unpaid and due upon it, in an action on the note. It is clear, also, that unless the mortgagor has estopped himself, or the case falls within some of the exceptions which have been created to the general rule that the assignee of a mortgage takes it subject to all of the equities existing between the mortgagor and mortgagee, the defense that McCormick paid the debt in full to the legal holder of the note, even before its maturity, must be held a valid one. The point made by appellant that Haerther was not mentioned, either in the note or mortgage, we regard as immaterial under the facts. (See Shippen v. Whittier, 117 Ill. 282; McAuliffe v. Reuter, supra.) When McCormick endorsed the note in blank which he had made payable to himself, and delivered it, with the deed of trust, to Haerther, Haerther became the legal holder, and both instruments were, of course, while in his hands, subject to the defense of payment, but as the note passed by delivery as if payable to bearer, the bank took it, before its maturity, free from the defense of payment. He was, in fact, an assignee of the note, and, by virtue of that fact, an assignee of the mortgage also, though as to the mortgage only an equitable assignee. (1 Randolph on Com. Paper, pp. 231, 243; 1 Daniel on Neg. Inst. sec. 729.) Because the mortgage secured the payment of the note to the legal holder instead of to the payee by name, cannot, upon any legal principle which we are aware of, make any difference. It was no more a contract with successive legal holders taking by mere delivery, than it would have been in the other case with successive endorsees. In both cases the note secured would be negotiable and would pass free from all equities between the parties; but the legal and equitable character of the mortgage remained the same, and when the mortgagor paid the debt to Haerther, who was the legal holder of the note, the effect was the same as it would have been if Haerther had been named as payee.

We cannot hold that by the terms of the instrument all the attributes of negotiable paper were imparted to this deed of trust. Nor does the case fall within the principles announced in either of the cases cited,—Peoria and Springfield Railroad Co. v. Thompson, 103 Ill. 187, and Miller v. Larned, id. 562. In the former case this court held that the rule applied in Olds v. Cummings did not apply, and among other things said (p.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 287, 169 Ill. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buehler-v-mccormick-ill-1897.