Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Prendergast

167 N.E. 769, 335 Ill. 646
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19435. Appellate Court reversed; circuit court affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 769 (Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Prendergast) 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 Title & Trust Co. v. Prendergast, 167 N.E. 769, 335 Ill. 646 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, the Chicago Title and Trust Company, filed its bill in the circuit court of Cook county against defendant in error, Walter B. Prendergast, for the foreclosure of a trust deed in the nature of a mortgage. After hearing, a decree for foreclosure was entered. Upon appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District the decree was reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to dismiss the bill for want of equity. The cause is now before this court upon certiorari.

On April 7, 1921, John L. Metzen and Beulah V. Met-zen, his wife, being indebted in the sum of $3500, executed, endorsed and delivered their three notes of that date payable to the order of themselves, notes A and B being for $500 each, due, respectively, one and two years after date, and note C being for $2500, due five years after date, with interest at six and one-half per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and sixteen coupon notes evidencing their liability for interest at six and one-half per cent, payable semi-annually, on the principal notes, respectively. To secure the payment thereof Metzen and his wife made to plaintiff in error their trust deed, dated April 7, 1921, on the premises in question. The trust deed was on April 8, 1921, recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county. It was afterwards agreed by the owners of the notes that the lien of the trust deed for the security of note C and its coupons should be superior to the lien for the other notes. Such agreement was thereupon endorsed on notes A and B and their coupons by the owners thereof. Subsequently Edgar A. Russell became the owner of notes A and B, and thereafter, default having occurred in the payment thereof, Russell instituted his suit for foreclosure in the superior court of Cook county, making the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as trustee under the trust deed, and others, defendants. Prior to the institution of the suit the Chicago Title and Trust Company had become the owner and holder of note C and its unpaid coupons, and as such owner and holder was a defendant in said cause. The Chicago Title and Trust Company thereafter filed its answer, and alleged, in substance, its ownership of note C and certain unpaid coupons, and claimed, as such owner and by virtue of the aforesaid agreement for subordination to the lien of note C and interest coupons owned by it of all the remaining indebtedness secured by the trust deed, that it was entitled to a first and prior lien under the trust deed for the payment of the indebtedness so held by it. Thereafter the cause was referred by the court to a master in chancery to take and report testimony, with his conclusions. At the hearing before the master it was stipulated by Russell, the complainant therein, and the Chicago Title and Trust Company as owner and holder of note C and accompanying coupons described in its answer, by their respective counsel then present, as a part of the record in the cause, that the lien of the complainant, Russell, for the payment of the indebtedness claimed by him, was subject to the lien claimed by the Chicago Title and Trust Company as the owner of note C and accompanying coupons described in the answer. Thereafter the master duly reported his findings and conclusions to the superior court, and in his report found, among other things, that at the hearing before him the parties had expressly stipulated that all the indebtedness due to complainant in said cause was subordinate to the prior lien of the Chicago Title and Trust Company as to the principal and interest notes so owned by it, and accordingly that $1796.03 therein found to be due to said complainant constituted a lien in favor of said complainant, subject, however, to a prior lien in favor of the Chicago Title and Trust Company as the owner of note C and interest coupons described in its answer. The master found and reported as to note C and the interest coupons, “that the same are not being foreclosed in this proceeding;” that the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as trustee, had paid out $12.30 for stenographer’s fees in and about the foreclosure of the trust deed, and that the fair and customary fee for the services of counsel who had been employed by the Chicago Title and Trust Company to protect its interest under the trust deed in said proceeding was $150 and that said amounts should be allowed to it, and that by reason of its being made a party to said proceeding it was entitled to priority out of the proceeds of sale, if any, of the mortgaged property to the extent of $162.30, and that it had a good lien upon the premises for that sum in addition to the lien of note C and interest notes so held by it. Thereafter a decree of foreclosure was entered in the cause, wherein, after reciting that the cause had duly come on to be heard upon the pleadings and the master’s report, it was ordered, adjudged and decreed “that the said master’s report be and the same is hereby in all things approved and confirmed,” and by its decree the court found that $1796.03 was due to Russell, the complainant, and that $162.30 was due to the Chicago Title and Trust Company, trustee, for the payment of which John L. Metzen and Beulah V. Metzen, two of the defendants in said cause, were personally liable; and it was decreed that the master make and deliver certificates of indebtedness to Russell and to the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as trustee, each for the respective amounts so found due; and it was further decreed, inter alia, in substance, that if the amounts due under said certificates should not be satisfied as provided by law, then that said real estate should be sold to satisfy the amounts due under the aforesaid certificates of indebtedness and that public notice of such sale be given, and that upon the making of such sale the master should report his acts and doings to the court, and upon confirmation thereof should execute and deliver to the purchaser a deed of conveyance; that out of the proceeds the master should first retain his fees, commissions and disbursements and then pay to the legal holder of said certificates the amount due, with interest, costs and advancements, if the proceeds were sufficient, and if there were a surplus, that the same should be brought into court to abide a further order. The decree further provided as follows: “It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that upon the sale of said real estate as hereinbefore provided for, the defendants to this cause, and all persons claiming by, through or under them or any of them, shall be forever barred and foreclosed of and from any and all equity of redemption and claim of, in and to said premises and every part thereof.” Thereafter, the amount due under said certificates not having been paid, the master, pursuant to the decree, duly advertised the premises for sale at public auction at one o’clock P. M. of June 4, 1926, at the judicial salesroom of the Chicago Real Estate Board, in said city. Knowledge of said intended sale having come to defendant in error, he prior to such sale examined or caused to be examined all of the proceedings theretofore had in the suit in the superior court, and thereby acquainted himself with the contents of the various pleadings, master’s report, decree, etc., as hereinabove set forth, and thereby acquired knowledge that it was not the intention of the parties to foreclose the lien of the trust deed so far as it was security for the payment of note C and interest coupons owned by the Chicago Title and Trust Company, and that Russell neither had nor claimed any lien in said premises except subject to the prior lien of the Chicago Title and Trust Company.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 769, 335 Ill. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-title-trust-co-v-prendergast-ill-1929.