Chicago Trust Co. v. 12-14 West Washington Street Building Corp.

278 Ill. App. 117, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 16
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 19, 1934
DocketGen. No. 37,405
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 278 Ill. App. 117 (Chicago Trust Co. v. 12-14 West Washington Street Building Corp.) 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
Chicago Trust Co. v. 12-14 West Washington Street Building Corp., 278 Ill. App. 117, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 16 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered. the opinion of the court.

The Chicago Trust Company, as trustee", filed its hill to foreclose a trust deed on certain premises known as 12-14 West Washington street. Thé" trust deed was given to secure an issue of $375,000 worth of bonds on a leasehold of the premises in question. The lease was executed February 13, 1920 and was for a term of 99 'years. May 6, 1930, an order was entered in the foreclosure proceedings appointing one Arthur Dean receiver, with directions to apply the income from the building to the payment of the expenses and charges of operating and maintaining the mortgaged property, including taxes, rents, etc.

The premises at the time of the execution of the lease were improved with a 10-story building of permanent construction containing a store on the gTound floor and offices above. The leasehold rental was $25,000 a year, payable in quarterly instalments of $6,250. No rent was due at the time the foreclosure proceedings were instituted and the first default after the receivership was for the quarter beginning September 1, 1932, and none was thereafter paid. The general taxes also became in default and on October 31, 1932, the owners, Stanley Field, individually, and Stanley Field, James Simpson and the Northern Trust Company, as trustees under the last will of Joseph N. Field, deceased, gave notice of default at the expiration of the 60-day period, and the default not having been made good, declared the term ended.

April 6, 1933, the owners filed their intervening petition, asking for possession of the premises and an order was entered in the cause December 20, 1933, granting the prayer of the intervenors and giving them possession. At the same time the court entered a supplemental decree finding that the sum of $100,000, paid by the lessees at the time of the execution of the lease, Was, in fact, a cash deposit in trust to secure the payment of the rent, and that on account of the default by the lessees, the owners should account for said deposit. The supplemental decree then found that the default in rent and taxes amounted to $73,891.01, and that the, balance of the $100,000 in the hands of the intervenors amounting to $26,108.99, should be paid by the owners to the complainant for the benefit of the bondholders. The decree also provided that the receiver should pay to complainant for the benefit of the bondholders, all of the rents collected by him from the premises on or before April 6, 1933 (the date upon which the lessors intervened), after deducting all the costs, charges and expenses of operation and the pro rata part of the fees of the receiver and his solicitor, the intervenors to receive rents collected after April 6,1933, but after the deduction of costs of operation and a pro rata part of the fees. The receiver’s last account which was for the period from November 1, 1932 to September 30, 1933, showed a previous balance of $6,376.78. The receipts for this period were for $41,159.69. Disbursements for the period (including no ground rent) were $34,113.23. The balance (including $4,158.81 in closed bank) was $13,423.24. Rents accrued and uncollected, $39,921.47, of which $19,921.47, was estimated as uncollectible.

Intervenors assign as error the action of the chancellor in construing the original payment of $100,000 at the time the lease was procured as a trust fund to secure the payment of the rent and urge that the lease is not open to construction but clearly indicates that tills amount was paid for the building for the purpose of obtaining the lease and that the lease was to be construed as though the tenant had, himself, erected the building upon the premises. The intervenors further contend that they are entitled to the full amount in the hands of the receiver because there was not sufficient in his hands to pay intervenors all of the defaulted rent and taxes and that nothing should be paid to the owners of the leasehold or the bondholders while the lease was not kept alive. This last contention is based upon the theory that the law provides that the lessee shall pay the rent to keep the lease alive, as well as the taxes, and that, moreover, the order appointing the receiver directed him to pay the rents and taxes and that these are part of the operating expense.

Cross error is assigned on behalf of the bondholders ’ protective committee on the ground that the taxes for 1931 and 1932 should be disallowed as a charge against the $100,000 deposit. This, upon the ground that they were neither delinquent nor ripe for a protest and should not be estimated. To this assignment of cross error intervenors reply by stating that the lease provides that these taxes became due and payable by the lessees when levied or assessed and that these taxes had already been levied prior to the date of the decree. Furthermore, that the original decree provided for the payment of these taxes and it was the duty of the receiver to have followed the instructions in the decree.

The principal question before us is the action of the chancellor in finding the $100,000 payment a deposit, as security for the rents. The only other question is as to whether or not the balance in the hands of the receiver should go to the intervener because of unpaid taxes and defaulted rent.

Article IV of the lease relates to the sale of the building and involves the sum of $100,000 paid upon its execution. In view of the importance of this particular clause we set it out in full:

“In consideration of the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and of the covenants and agreements of the lessees herein, said lessors hereby sell and assign to the said lessees the buildings and improvements now situated on said demised premises, subject, however, to the covenants herein contained on the part of said lessees to be kept, observed and performed, the interests and rights of the lessees in said buildings and improvements to be the same as though said buildings and improvements had been placed on said demised premises by said lessees subsequent to the execution of this lease.
“It is understood and agreed that said premises are demised subject to all existing leases thereon, and said lessees hereby expressly covenant and agree to be bound by and to fully observe and perform all the conditions, undertakings and agreements in said existing leases contained which extend to and bind the lessors therein.”

Article XX of said lease should also be read and considered in connection with Article IV. Article XX reads as follows:

“The said lessees covenant and agree to and with the said lessors that upon the termination of this lease by forfeiture or lapse of time the said lessees will at once surrender and deliver up to the lessors the above described premises, together with all the improvements thereon, and that all buildings, fixtures and improvements then standing upon the said demised Ipremises, shall belong to the said lessors, and that no compensation shall be allowed or paid therefor.”

The language of Article IY of the lease is not ambiguous. It specifically provides that the building has been sold to the lessees for the sum of $100,000.

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Bluebook (online)
278 Ill. App. 117, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-trust-co-v-12-14-west-washington-street-building-corp-illappct-1934.