Bullard v. Turner

269 Ill. App. 369, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 726
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 8, 1933
DocketGen. No. 35,725
StatusPublished

This text of 269 Ill. App. 369 (Bullard v. Turner) 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
Bullard v. Turner, 269 Ill. App. 369, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 726 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause comes to this court on appeal of defendant and cross complainant, Standard Chair Company, from a decree of the superior court of Cook county in favor of complainant against defendants in a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage given by defendant, Turner, to complainant on July 1, 1929, on industrial property in the City of Chicago. Prior to the execution of the mortgage by defendant Turner, on the property involved, Turner had made a lease of a portion of the premises to one of the defendants, the Brockton Heel Company, for a term of 10 years, and after the making of such lease, and prior to the execution of the mortgage, Turner had assigned to defendant and cross complainant Standard Chair Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, the lease to the Brockton Heel Company, together with the rents to be derived thereunder. The assignment was not recorded. A receiver for the property was appointed in this proceeding, and thereafter a petition was filed by the receiver in which the receiver prayed that the tenant, Brockton Heel Company, be required to attorn and pay rent to the receiver. The Brockton Heel Company filed an answer to the bill and an answer to the petition in each of which is set forth the alleged facts concerning the assignment of the lease and rentals thereunder to defendant, Standard Chair Company.

In the order appointing the receiver, the court found that by the trust deed, a copy of which is attached to the bill of complaint and described therein, the defendant, Turner, had conveyed to complainant all rents, issues and profits of the premises described in the trust deed, and an examination of the trust deed shows such to be the fact. The court also found that it is provided in the trust deed that upon the filing of a bill to foreclose, a receiver should be appointed to take and receive the rents, issues and profits of the premises described. Upon the bill of complaint, petition and the answers of the Brockton Heel Company, the court ordered a reference to a master who found and reported that the court had jurisdiction, and that after considering the facts concerning the assignment of the rents, he, the master, concluded that the receiver is entitled to an attornment by the Brockton Heel Company, and that such receiver is entitled to the rents of the premises occupied by the Brockton Heel Company commencing October 1, 1930, and that the court enter an order in accordance therewith.

Upon a hearing following the report of the master, the court entered an order approving the report, and ordered the Brockton Heel Company to attorn and pay the rents to the. receiver. Thereafter, the defendant, Standard Chair Company, filed its answer and a cross-bill in which it set forth its right to the rents under the assignment of the lease and rentals to it by Turner, to which cross-bill an answer was filed by complainant, asserting his right to the rents of the premises under the terms of the trust deed. A reference was had to a master, other than the master who made the first report, upon the cross-bill, answers and replication with direction'to take testimony and report his findings.

By witnesses testifying on the hearings, it is shown that the Brockton Heel Company entered into possession of a portion of the mortgaged premises prior to July 1, 1929, the date of the making of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in the instant ease, and had been in continuous possession of such portion since that time; that prior to August 1, 1927, the Brockton Heel Company had paid its rent to the defendant, A. C. Turner, and that after the last mentioned date it had paid the rents for the premises occupied by it to the Standard Chair Company of Union City, Pennsylvania, upon the direction of the defendant, Turner; that the Brockton Heel Company had entered into possession as a tenant of Turner under and by virtue of a lease from him, and that Turner occupied the portion of the mortgaged premises not leased to and occupied by the Brockton Heel Company. It is also shown that signs indicated clearly the portions of the premises occupied respectively by the Brockton Heel Company and by Turner.

The defendant, Turner, testified that at the time he procured the loan from complainant and executed the notes, he had not advised the complainant, nor any one for him, of the assignment by him of the lease and rentals to the Standard Chair Company. Bullard, the complainant, testified that at the time he made the loan and accepted the mortgage from Turner, he was not and had not been advised by any one that the lease and rentals had been assigned,.as alleged in the cross-bill. Thereafter the last designated master filed his report recommending that a decree of foreclosure be entered in favor of complainant; that the cross-bill of defendant, Standard Chair Company, be dismissed for want of equity, and found the assignment of the rentals to the Standard Chair Company to be subordinate and inferior to the lien of complainant’s trust deed and the assignment of the rents thereunder to the complainant. Exceptions to the report were heard by the court, overruled, and a decree entered approving and confirming the report, from which decree this appeal is prayed.

Two main points are urged by appellant as alleged grounds for reversal. First, that the appointment of the receiver was improper under the allegations in the bill, and the circumstances surrounding the appointment ; second, that the complainant took the mortgage on the property involved subject to the assignment of the lease thereon with the rentals thereunder, to the Standard Chair Company of Pennsylvania, although the assignment of the lease and rents was not recorded, and it is not shown but denied that the mortgagee, complainant, had any notice thereof. It seems to be agreed by both complainant and defendant (appellant), the Standard Chair Company, that complainant’s mortgage was taken subject to all the rights of the Brockton Heel Company, the tenant of Turner, so the question to be determined is whether or not the mortgagee was put upon inquiry as to whether or not the mortgagor had assigned the lease and the rents thereunder to the Standard Chair Company prior to making the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in this suit, in spite of the fact that the assignment of the lease and the rents thereunder had not been recorded.

In Willoughby v. Lawrence, 116 Ill. 11, our Supreme Court holds that a lease of the character of the one involved is a chattel real, and as such should be recorded in order to give notice of a leasehold interest in an estate. To the same effect is the case of Vombrack v. Wavra, 331 Ill. 508, page 512, in which the court says:

“The public records of conveyances and instruments affecting the title to real estate are established by statute to furnish evidence of such title, and a purchaser may rely upon such records in security unless he has notice, or is chargeable in some way with notice, of some title, conveyance or claim inconsistent therewith.” See also Lennartz v. Quilty, 191 Ill. 174; Holbrook v. Dickenson, 56 Ill. 497.

Appellee insists that the rule is that unless the purchaser (in the instant case the mortgagee) had actual notice of the assignment of the lease in question and the rents and profits arising therefrom, the assignment not having been recorded, he had the legal right to assume that no such instrument existed.

In the case of Willoughby v.

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Related

MacAulay v. Dorian
147 N.E. 793 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1925)
Vombrack v. Wavra
163 N.E. 340 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1928)
Reed v. Kemp
16 Ill. 445 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1855)
Holbrook v. Dickenson
56 Ill. 497 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Smith v. Heirs of Jackson
76 Ill. 254 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Willoughby v. Lawrence
4 N.E. 356 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
Lennartz v. Quilty
60 N.E. 913 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1901)
Gallagher v. Northrup
74 N.E. 711 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1905)
Dickey v. Lyon
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Bluebook (online)
269 Ill. App. 369, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullard-v-turner-illappct-1933.