Central Life Insurance v. Sawiak

262 Ill. App. 569, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 227
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1931
DocketGen. No. 35,159
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 262 Ill. App. 569 (Central Life Insurance v. Sawiak) 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
Central Life Insurance v. Sawiak, 262 Ill. App. 569, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 227 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a foreclosure decree, entered February 6,1931, wherein the superior court, following the master’s report, found that there was due to complainant on January 7, 1931, the sum of /$1,912.50, and adjudged that the premises be sold if said sum, including interest and costs, be not paid, etc.

In complainant’s bill, filed August 27, 1930, it is alleged.that on September 7, 1926, George M. Sawiak, a bachelor, being indebted in the sum of $1,500, executed and delivered his promissory note in that sum, payable to bearer five years after date at the office of the Ridgeway State Bank, Chicago, with interest , at seven (7) per cent per annum, as evidenced by ten interest coupon notes, each for $52.50, payable to bearer on March 7 and September 7 in each year; that to secure the payment thereof Sawiak, on September 7, 1926, and as owner, executed and delivered a trust deed (containing usual covenants) conveying to the Chicago Title & Trust Co., as trustee, “lot sixteen (16) in block twelve (12) in Sawiak & Co.’s first addition to Addison Heights” in Cook county, Illinois, which trust deed was recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county on September 9, 1926, and is a first mortgage on the premises; that the interest coupon notes Nos. 1 to 6 inclusive have been paid; that complainant is the owner and holder of the principal note and of the remaining interest coupon notes, Nos. 7 to 10 inclusive; that default has been made in the payment of interest coupon note No. 7, for $52.50, due on March 7, 1930; that by reason thereof complainant elected to declare the principal note due and payable (as it had the right to do under the trust deed); that there is now due to complainant said principal sum, accrued interest due on March 7, 1930, and other accrued interest; that Sawiak conveyed his equity in the premises to Pioneer Trust and Savings Bank, as trustee, under the provisions of a trust agreement, dated February 14, 1928, and known as trust number 1820; and that said bank now claims to be the legal owner of the premises, subject» to complainant’s lien. The bill claimed reasonable solicitor’s fees and other expenses incident to a foreclosure, and concluded with the usual prayer.

In the joint and several answer of Sawiak and the Pioneer Trust & Savings Bank, as trustee, filed October 29,1930, they denied that complainant was entitled to have said principal note declared to be due because of the non-payment of interest note No. 7, and alleged that “said loan of $1,500, as represented by the note and trust deed described in the bill, is usurious,” etc. Defendants further alleged that, at the time of the making of the loan, “the Ridgeway State Bank, in addition to the seven (7) per cent interest reserved to be paid on said loan as represented by the note and trust deed being foreclosed, and in addition to the proper charges for recording fees, guaranty title policy and fire insurance premium, wrongfully and illegally charged and retained five per cent of the loan, or $75, as a commission for making said loan”; that the $75, so withheld by said bank, in addition to the interest on said loan of 7 per cent and said proper charges, “is usury, and unlawful and contrary to the statutes of Illinois”; and that complainant “is not entitled to recover any sum as interest,” and is “only entitled to a lien on said real estate for the legal amount found to be due, after deducting the usurious payments of interest and any moneys retained by the Ridgeway State Bank as a commission.”

After defaults had been taken of other defendants including Norman Gilbert and Myrtle Gilbert, his wife, and after the cause had been put at issue, there was a reference to a master, and hearings were had before him during November and December, 1930. Early in January, 1931, he drafted a report in which, after making numerous findings, he recommended the entry of a decree of foreclosure in the sum of $1,912.30, including the sum of $200 as complainant’s solicitor’s fees. Among the findings of the master are:

Fifth. That on and prior to March 7, 1930, complainant was the owner of the principal note for $1,500; that by reason of the default in the payment of interest note No. 7, due on March 7, 1930, complainant, as the legal holder and owner of the unpaid indebtedness, became entitled to declare the whole of said indebtedness due and payable and to foreclose the trust deed.

Thirteenth. That there is now due to -complainant, for principal, interest, cash advanced, stenographer’s charges and solicitor’s fees, the sum of $1,912.30, as shown by the following itemized statement:

Interest Coupon No. 7 due March 7, 1930. $52.50
Interest thereon at seven per cent from March 7, 1930, to date hereof......... 3.07
Interest Coupon No. 8 due September 7, 1930 ............................... 52.50
Interest thereon at seven per cent from September 7, 1930, to date........... 1.23
Principal note........................ 1,500.00
Interest at seven per cent from September 7, 1930, to date.................. 35.00
Amount paid to Chicago Title & Trust Co................................ 43.00
Amount paid for photostatic copies..... 2.10
Amount paid stenographer’s charges.... 22.90
$1,712.30
Amount allowed to complainant for solicitor’s fees.......................... 200.00
Total...........$1,912.30

which amount the master finds to be a valid, existing indebtedness due to complainant from defendant, Sawiak, and for which amount complainant is entitled to a valid, existing, first lien on said real estate.

To these two findings the defendant, Sawiak, filed objections with the master, to the effect that the master in making them had erred, and should have found that the loan of $1,500, made by the Ridgeway State Bank to defendant, as well as the note and trust deed evidencing the loan, “were usurious, and that complainant was not entitled to any sum for interest, and that defendant was entitled to have credit for all the interest paid on account of the loan, and also for the five per cent commission ($75) paid to said Ridgeway State Bank.” Thereafter, on January 14, 1931, the master drafted a supplemental report, in which he stated that, after giving “due consideration” to the objections, he overruled them. He gave no reasons why he did so; nor did he discuss defendant’s “usury” contention at all. Nor did the superior court in the decree appealed from make any finding's concerning said “usury” contention. The objections were ordered to stand as exceptions, and the court in the decree, after overruling the exceptions, confirmed the master’s report, and fixed the master’s fees at the sum of $56 to be taxed as costs.

Some of the other findings of the master, sustained by the evidence, are as follows:

Sixth.

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

Related

Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Kearney
282 Ill. App. 279 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 Ill. App. 569, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-life-insurance-v-sawiak-illappct-1931.