Builder's Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Bickley

262 Ill. App. 603, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 231
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1931
DocketGen. No. 35,000
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 262 Ill. App. 603 (Builder's Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Bickley) 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
Builder's Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Bickley, 262 Ill. App. 603, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 231 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Keener

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 21, 1928, the complainant, Builder’s Bond & Mortgage Company, filed its bill to foreclose a trust déed dated September 1, 1926, executed by defendants John H. Biekley and Letta M. Bickley, his wife, given 'to secure the note of the defendants for $20,000, payable in instalments of $400 each for 23 months commencing January 1, 1927, and the balance due on December 31,1928, with interest at six per cent per annum, payable monthly on the whole amount remaining from time to time unpaid. The property secured by the trust deed was at 2200 Rosemont avenue, Chicago, and was known as the Rosemont property. In the trust deed the defendants covenanted to pay prior incumbrances and interest thereon at the time and place when due and payable, and agreed that in the event of a breach of any covenant of the trust deed the whole of the indebtedness secured by the trust deed would at the option of the legal holder become immediately due and payable, and might he recovered by foreclosure. The bill alleged failure to pay principal and interest due December 15, 1928, on a prior incumbrance securing an indebtedness of $76,000 and to pay complainant $2,148.87 accrued principal and interest due February 1,1928, and to make principal payments of $200 each, due on the first day of October, November and December, 1928, respectively, with interest on the balance of the principal of the note remaining on said dates unpaid. Defendants answered, admitting the execution of the note and trust deed and alleged that only $17,000 had been received on the $20,000 note, the difference being retained as an usurious commission; alleged an agreement reducing payments of the instalments to $200 each and denied that they had defaulted in failing to pay principal and interest due December 15, 1928, on prior incumbrance, by averring, that the holders of the prior incumbrance had extended payment of the amount due 90 days; denied default had occurred February 1, 1928, in failure to pay accrued principal and interest of $2,148.87, but admitted that the October, November and December instalments of $200 each were due and unpaid, and averred that on December 11, 1928, complainant by resolution of its board of directors resolved that there should be no action taken to foreclose the trust deed.

The cause was referred to a master to take the testimony and report his conclusions of law and of fact. The master filed his report, in which he found that when payments of $606.75 and $330.50 were made by the defendants to complainant, said payments so made were made upon the agreement that nothing would be done until the mortgage matured, in order to give defendants time to complete a loan which they were making for the purpose of paying the balance due complainant; that defendants were not in default; that $3,000 was charged defendants for making the loan, which charge constituted usury, and that no action prior to the filing of the bill was taken by the complainant declaring the whole amount due, and recommended the bill be dismissed for want of equity. Objections to the report were ordered to stand as exceptions, which were overruled and a decree entered dismissing the bill for want of equity. To reverse the decree complainant has appealed.

It appears from the evidence that the complainant is a corporation engaged in the real estate mortgage loan business and defendant John Biekley, a real estate broker, was one of its incorporators and directors and its president from 1926 to the date of his resignation as such president and director some time in December,-1927; that the defendant John Biekley, Edward Sager and Neis Johnson constituted a committee whose duty it was to pass on loans made by the complainant. Edward Sager was Biekley’s attorney and he submitted the loan involved in the instant case to this committee, but it was not submitted to the board of directors until after the money had been paid in checks drawn at Bickley’s office and sent to the treasurer for his signature, when it was accepted by the complainant. The note executed by the defendant was for $20,000, payable in monthly instalments of $400 each, commencing on January 1, 1927, with interest at six per cent per annum, payable monthly, on the whole amount of principal remaining from time to time unpaid', the balance being payable on December 31, 1928. Only $17,000 of the loan was actually paid by complainant. During the month of December, 1927, Bickley resigned his office in the complainant corporation and surrendered his stock to the complainant for which he received a credit of $5,000, and by agreement between the parties the defendant was credited with $1,760.22 on the loan in the instant case, the balance of the $5,000 being credited among other loans that he had with complainant. Some time between November 1, 1927, and January 1,1928, it was agreed by the parties that the monthly instalments to be paid on account of the note be reduced from $400 to $200 a month, the $200 a month payments to commence February 1, 1928. From the date of the loan up to and including December 1, 1928, the defendants paid complainant on account of the note the sum of $7,169.41. The interest computed to December 21,1928, the date of the filing of the bill, on the whole amount of principal remaining from time to time unpaid, assuming the loan to be $17,000 and not $20,000, amounts to $1,960.93, which sum deducted from $7,169.41, the amount actually paid, leaves the defendants a credit of $5,208.48.

It further appears that the premises were encumbered with a first mortgage for $76,000; that on December 15, 1928, there became due thereon a principal payment of $2,000 and interest amounting to $2,970; that defendants paid $500 on account' and the balance of $4,470 was past due and unpaid on December 21, 1928, and complainants in order to protect the lien of its junior trust deed, after the filing of the bill, on January 30, 1929, paid $1,500 and on February 27, 1929, $470 upon said' prior incumbrance.

Before proceeding to a discussion of the contentions of the parties it will be necessary to arrive at a decision as to whether or not the loan is tainted with usury. It is conceded that at the time the loan was made by complainant Biekley was its president and director and that complainant paid and the defendants received $17,000 on the $20,000 note, the balance appearing on the books of complainant as a commission. Biekley testified he did not submit the loan to the board of directors because it was his mortgage and he did not think it was the proper thing to do; Sager testified that at a meeting of the board of directors the president read the financial report of the company which set forth the making of the loan and the board voted then to accept the making of the loan. Neis Johnson, secretary and director of the complainant, testified that Biekley reported to the board that the loan had been made, and the board accepted the loan. Joseph Hallner, a director, testified there was no authorization by the board of directors to make the loan; the loan was made by Biekley and then submitted to the company after it was made. John N. Wietor, treasurer and director, testified that the first he knew the loan had been made was after Biekley and Sager had told him about it, when Biekley called upon him to sign a check; that the loan was discussed at a meeting of the board of directors after it had been made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gilbert v. Otterson
550 A.2d 550 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Builder's Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Bickley
274 Ill. App. 638 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 Ill. App. 603, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/builders-bond-mortgage-co-v-bickley-illappct-1931.