CNB Bank & Trust, N.A. v. Rosentreter

2015 IL App (4th) 140141
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 14, 2015
Docket4-14-0141
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (4th) 140141 (CNB Bank & Trust, N.A. v. Rosentreter) 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
CNB Bank & Trust, N.A. v. Rosentreter, 2015 IL App (4th) 140141 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Illinois Official Reports

Appellate Court

CNB Bank & Trust, N.A. v. Rosentreter, 2015 IL App (4th) 140141

Appellate Court CNB BANK & TRUST, N.A., f/k/a CARLINVILLE NATIONAL Caption BANK, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. FRANCES A. ROSENTRETER, RICK E. ROSENTRETER, and DOUGLAS G. ROSENTRETER, as Cotrustees of the Gerald E. Rosentreter Trust B, Defendants- Appellants.

District & No. Fourth District Docket No. 4-14-0141

Filed September 3, 2015

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Macoupin County, No. 11-CH-175; Review the Hon. Patrick J. Londrigan, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Reversed and remanded.

Counsel on Jason T.H. Germeraad (argued), of Scott & Scott, P.C., of Springfield, Appeal for appellants.

Richard L. Heavner (argued), of Heavner, Scott, Beyers & Mihlar, LLC, of Decatur, for appellee. Panel JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pope and Justice Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.1

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, CNB Bank & Trust, N.A., formerly known as Carlinville National Bank, won a summary judgment on all the counts of its amended complaint, including counts IV, XIII, XIV, and XV. Count IV sought to foreclose a mortgage on tracts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, and counts XIII, XIV, and XV sought replevin of some grain bins on tracts 1 and 7. (These seven tracts, all of which are located in Macoupin County, have the following permanent index numbers: 12-000-177-00 (tract 1), 12-000-179-00 (tract 2), 12-000-183-02 (tract 3), 12-000-186-00 (tract 4), 11-000-238-01 (tract 5), 11-000-406-01 (tract 6), and 12-000-177-01 (tract 7).) ¶2 Defendants, Frances A. Rosentreter, Rick E. Rosentreter, and Douglas G. Rosentreter, in their capacities as cotrustees of the Gerald E. Rosentreter Trust B, appeal from the summary judgment in plaintiff’s favor on counts IV, XIII, XIV, and XV and from the denial of their own motion for summary judgment on those counts. They also challenge other parts of the court’s judgment, but let us begin with counts IV, XIII, XIV, and XV. ¶3 The cross-motions for summary judgment on count IV raised the question of whether the mortgagor, Frances A. Rosentreter, in her individual capacity, owned more than an undivided 50% of tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 so as to be able to mortgage those tracts in their entirety. Defendants claim that when Frances A. Rosentreter, in her individual capacity, signed the mortgage in count IV, defendants themselves, in their capacities as cotrustees of the Gerald E. Rosentreter Trust B, owned an undivided 50% of tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 and that Frances A. Rosentreter therefore succeeded in mortgaging no more than her own undivided 50% of those tracts. (It is undisputed that she personally owned 100% of tract 4 and therefore succeeded in mortgaging all of that tract.) Plaintiff, on the other hand, takes the position that Frances A. Rosentreter, in her individual capacity, owned 100% of tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 and that she consequently mortgaged all the ownership interest in those tracts by signing the mortgage in count IV. In our de novo review, we do not find it to be clear and free from doubt that either plaintiff or defendants were entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on this question of the ownership of tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6.

Oral arguments on plaintiff’s petition for rehearing began earlier than scheduled, and by mistake, 1

Justice Steigmann sat on the panel during these oral arguments, instead of Justice Harris, who actually was assigned to this case. Nevertheless, Justice Harris arrived just as the oral arguments were beginning, and via the audio-video system in the courthouse, he heard the oral arguments in their entirety. Immediately afterward, we informed the attorneys of the mix-up, and they stated they had no objection.

-2- ¶4 As for the replevin counts, counts XIII, XIV, and XV, it is a moot question whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in plaintiff’s favor on those counts, considering that subsequently, in its written judgment of July 26, 2013, the court held the grain bins were fixtures and that, as such, they were to be sold as components of the real estate. This was the very holding that defendants had sought in their motion for summary judgment on counts XIII, XIV, and XV. ¶5 In the original version of this opinion, we reached the foregoing conclusions regarding counts IV, XIII, XIV, and XV, and we stopped short of the remaining issues in this appeal because we did not want to fall into the error of addressing premature issues. See Steel City Bank v. Village of Orland Hills, 224 Ill. App. 3d 412, 416 (1991) (“[C]ourts do not sit to render advisory opinions on abstract questions of law to guide potential future litigation.”). However, after considering the arguments for and against plaintiff’s petition for rehearing, we have come to appreciate that count IV is intertwined with an additional issue in this appeal, the apportionment of the sale price between tracts 1 and 7, in that it is a moot point whether defendants have an ownership interest in tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 unless a surplus is created by a reapportionment of the sale proceeds between tracts 1 and 7. ¶6 In the foreclosure sales, tracts 1 and 7 were sold together, as one unit, because a grain elevator facility straddled those two tracts. But the owners of tracts 1 and 7 were not all the same, and the two tracts were subject to different mortgages. Therefore, the trial court had to decide how to apportion the sale proceeds between the two tracts after they were sold en masse. In this appeal, defendants contend that although tracts 1 and 7 were sold en masse for a fair price, the amount of the sale proceeds the court apportioned to tract 1 was unconscionably low. ¶7 The apportionment of the sale proceeds between tracts 1 and 7 matters for purposes of count IV because unless a substantially greater amount of the sale proceeds is reapportioned to tract 1 and less to tract 7, the controversy over count IV is academic and of no practical significance. The reason is that plaintiff also won a summary judgment on counts I, II, and III of the amended complaint–deservedly so, defendants agree–and the mortgages in counts I, II, and III pledge the same six parcels of land (tracts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6) as the mortgage in count IV, which is junior to the mortgages in counts I, II, and III. The total amount owed on the mortgages in counts I, II, and III exceeds, by $2,770,903.43, the total amount that tracts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 fetched in the foreclosure sale–unless, out of the $9.1 million that tracts 1 and 7 fetched together, quite a bit more is reapportioned to tract 1, as defendants request. ¶8 Because it would be pointless to address count IV in isolation, we have granted plaintiff’s petition for rehearing insomuch as it urges us to address the apportionment of sale proceeds between tracts 1 and 7. We agree with defendants that the trial court’s apportionment of only $151,666.67 of the sale proceeds to tract 1, out of the $9.1 million for which tracts 1 and 7 sold together, is unconscionably low. This apportionment rested on a misconception of the law, i.e., that a forced sale was “at arm’s length” and that consequently the bid for tract 1 could not be regarded as “grossly inadequate.” The court ordered that, in the public auction, tracts 1 and 7 first would be offered separately and then together and that how they ultimately would be sold–separately or together–would depend on which method generated the higher sale proceeds. As it turned out, the sale en masse did. After confirming the sale en masse, the court used the separate bids as indicia of the proportional fair market values of the two tracts. A

-3- foreclosure sale, however, is a forced sale (Deutsche Bank National v. Burtley, 371 Ill. App.

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2015 IL App (4th) 140141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cnb-bank-trust-na-v-rosentreter-illappct-2015.