Chicago & Great Western Railroad Land Co. v. Peck

112 Ill. 408, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 499
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 112 Ill. 408 (Chicago & Great Western Railroad Land Co. v. Peck) 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
Chicago & Great Western Railroad Land Co. v. Peck, 112 Ill. 408, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 499 (Ill. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

There are some preliminary questions, here, which may properly be first considered.

It is insisted that there is a freehold involved, and that the motion made 'in the Appellate Court to dismiss the writ of error there, on that ground, should have been sustained, under the provision of the statute requiring appeals and writs of error, in cases where a freehold is involved, to be prosecuted directly to and sued out from the Supreme Court. It is true that the decree does set aside certain deeds, and there may be found, perhaps, in one of the cross-bills, a prayer that they should be set aside; but the primary object was not the recovery, directly, of any freehold estate. The Peck bill, which was the main bill, was purely one to correct and foreclose the Jewett trust deed, making no attack upon titles. Sanders, Smith and Hurlbut filed cross-bills in this Peck suit, claiming the equity of redemption to certain lots covered by the Jewett trust deed, as subsequent grantees of the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Land Company, the makers of the trust deed, and claimed also to be holders of bonds secured by the trust deed, and to be entitled to have their lots released from the trust deed on surrender of their bonds, in accordance with a provision in the trust deed that on presentation of a deed of the equity of redemption of any lots, and bonds to the amount of the schedule price fixed upon such lots, the trustee should make release of them. We regard these cross-bills as essentially but bills to redeem,—to have released lots of which the equity of redemption was held, upon surrender of the bonds,—and any cross-bill in any of the cases which may ask to have these deeds set aside, we view but as a proceeding in opposition to the right of redemption. These deeds to Sanders, Smith and Hurlbut were set aside by the decree, which was in effect a denial of their right of redemption. We believe there was but one other deed set aside,—that to Stevens,—and his deed was but a mortgage. We regard the scope of the whole litigation as involving but the enforcement of liens on real estate, by mortgage or otherwise, the establishment of such liens, the release of and redemption from them, and the resistance of such redemption,—all on the part of creditors, there being no adverse claims of title arrayed against each other. In the determination of such questions no freehold is involved, as this court has frequently decided. (Carbine v. Fox, 98 Ill. 146; McIntyre v. Yates, 100 id. 475; Conkey v. Knight, 104 id. 337.) We said in Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Watson, 105 Ill. 222: “A freehold is never involved, within the meaning of the statute, except where the primary object of the suit is a recovery of a freehold estate the title whereof is directly put in issue, and where the suit, if prosecuted to a final determination, will, by virtue of the judgment or decree rendered therein, as between the parties, result in one gaining and the other losing the estate.” No such result follows here by virtue of the decree, but the effect is to subject the property to be sold, for the satisfaction of the liens upon it.

We do not regard the finding in the decree that the Chicago and Great Western Railroad Land Company, (the mortgagor,) at the execution of the Jewett trust deed, owned the lands therein described in fee simple, as involving any freehold, as is claimed. That is but a common- allegation in bills of foreclosure, and a common finding in foreclosure decrees. There being no claim of an adverse title, the allegation and finding amount really to no more than there was a valid mortgage of the lands made.'

There was a motion made in the Appellate Court to quash the writ of error because of misjoinder of causes and parties, in that it issued to bring up on. a single writ several distinct and separate causes, wherein the parties were not the same, the pleadings were different in the allegations and prayers for relief, and the decrees were separate, and granted different relief to different parties. The not granting of this motion is assigned for error. There were originally in the circuit court four original bills in chancery, called, after the complainants, respectively, the Peck suit, the Gage suit, the Badger suit, and the Page & Kimbark suit. In the Peek suit seven cross-bills were filed, and one in the Page & Kimbark suit. These bills and cross-bills were all filed by creditors and lienholders of the Riverside land companies, and involved the settlement of the various and conflicting claims and liens of these creditors upon lands in Riverside. The following agreement was made in open court, and entered of record in the common certificate of evidence: “Be it remembered, that on the hearing of these causes it was agreed between all the counsel representing the different parties, and each and every interest before the court, that all of said causes should be heard, tried and determined together, as one cause, with the agreement and understanding between counsel that all the testimony or evidence introduced or heard at the hearing, in any one or more of said causes, should apply to every other of said causes on hearing, so far as the same should be applicable, and should be considered in each case by the court. ” Separate decrees were entered in the several suits. One common certificate of evidence entitled in all the bills and cross-bills was signed, and filed, and made the common record of all. In at least two instances pleadings in one case were made a part of those in another, by reference. The causes having been in the circuit court all heard and determined together as one cause, and. having one common certificate of evidence, in order to a proper review of the decree of the circuit court in the Appellate Court we think the mode of review in the latter court should be the same as that of the hearing in the former,—that is, that all the causes should be reviewed and determined together as one cause in the Appellate Court, and that a single writ of error might properly remove the record of all the causes together, as done in this case.

It is assigned for error that the Appellate Court did not allow the motion made to strike out the errors assigned in that court, by Joshua C. Sanders. That motion was on the ground that the errors were assigned after the five years limited for suing out a writ of error. Sanders was not one of the original parties plaintiff in error, 'but upon the first day of the October term, 1882, of the Appellate Court, to which the writ of error was made returnable, he appeared in court and filed his motion for leave to assign cross-errors. He adopted and assigned certain of the errors previously assigned by plaintiffs in error, and in addition assigned four other errors relating to his own case. The limitation of the statute does not apply to the assignment of errors, but to suing out the writ. (Rev. Stat. chap. 110, sec. 86.) The errors are assigned on the record, which may not be filed until after the five years expire. Where the writ is sued out on .the last day of the five years, and is made returnable after the five years have expired, as in the present case, it seems plain that defendants in error may assign cross-errors after the expiration of the five years. The statute provides that in all eases of appeal or writ of error, defendant in error may assign cross-errors. Rev. Stat. chap. 110, sec. 79.

Complaint is made that all the causes were not determined as one, and one decree-entered.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. 408, 1885 Ill. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-great-western-railroad-land-co-v-peck-ill-1885.