Cobe v. Bartlett

191 Ill. App. 242, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 963
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1915
DocketGen. No. 20,332
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 Ill. App. 242 (Cobe v. Bartlett) 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
Cobe v. Bartlett, 191 Ill. App. 242, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 963 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by Ira M. Cobe against Frederick H. Bartlett and Clinton S. Woolfolk to recover the alleged loss and damages suffered by the plaintiff by reason of the failure on the part of defendants to perform their obligations under a written contract between the parties. Woolfolk died during the trial and the suit proceeded against Bartlett alone.

The action was tried before the court without a jury. The court found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and entered judgment against Bartlett for $25,144.14.

The parties will be referred to in this opinion as p1a.irit.iff and defendant, as known in the trial court.

A stipulation covering the material and controlling facts was made in the trial court and hence only questions of law are presented and argued on this appeal.

The contract which forms the basis of the action was in writing as follows:

‘‘ This Agreement, made and entered into; this 27th day of November, A. D. 1905, by and between Frederick H. Bartlett and Clinton S. Woolfolk, parties of the first part, and Ira M. Cobe, party of the second part, WitNESSETH:

That Whereas, the parties of the first part have sold to the party of the second part a certain principal note of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) dated April 3, 1905, payable on or before five (5) years after date, with interest at the rate of five (5) per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, together with nine (9) interest coupons for the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) each; all executed by Benjamin H. Wallace to the order of himself and by him endorsed, and secured by trust deed dated April 3, 1905, from the .said Benjamin H. Wallace and Dollie F. Wallace, his wife, to the Chicago Title & Trust Company, trustee, conveying lot nine (9) in Whitbeck’s Subdivision of the east half (%) of block seventy-nine (79) in the Canal Trustees’ Subdivision of the west half (y2) of section twenty-seven (27), township thirty-nine (39) north, range fourteen (14), east of the Third Principal Meridian, Cook County, Illinois; said trust deed having been recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook County, Illinois, on July 6,1905, as Document No. 3,720,530.

Now Therefore, in consideration of the sum of thirty-three thousand five hundred dollars ($33,500), .and as one of the terms of the above mentioned sale, the said parties of the first part agree, in the event of the foreclosure of the said trust deed and the said party of the second part acquiring the said premises, as described therein, through foreclosure for the sum not exceeding the actual amount due under said notes and trust deed, as found by the decree, to purchase the said premises from the said party of the second part immediately upon the expiration of the period of redemption under said foreclosure, apd to pay the said party of the second part for said premises the amount which would be required to redeem the said premises under said foreclosure on the last day of said period of redemption, together with any additional charge for master’s deed, etc., but excluding any sum which may be allowed in said foreclosure proceeding for attorneys’ or solicitors’ fees.

In Witness Whereof, the said parties have hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above written,

Clinton S. Woolfolk, [Seal.]

Frederick H. Bartlett, [Seal.]

Northern Liquidation Company, [Seal.]

By Wm. B. Walrath, President.”

From the uncontroverted facts it appears that in 1905 the Northern Liquidation Company purchased the premises described in the above contract, known as Beveridge building property, from the Prudential Life Insurance Company of America, then owner of the - property. The sale was negotiated through the defendant, Bartlett. The title was taken in the name of Benjamin H. Wallace.' Wallace gave his note to the Prudential Life Insurance Company of America, secured by a mortgage on the above described premises, for $60,000, the unpaid part of the purchase price.

On the same date Wallace made another note for $20,000 with interest notes, payable to his order and by him indorsed, and to secure the same he, with his wife, executed a trust deed on the premises to the Chicago Title & Trust Company as trustee, and subject to the above mentioned $60,000 first mortgage. Each of the principal notes was due in five years from date.

The Prudential Life Insurance Company held its paper until it matured, and on May 21, 1910, filed its bill in the Circuit Court of Cook county to foreclose, making defendants all parties having any interest as owners of the equity of redemption, or subsequent incumbrancers, including the Assets Realization Company, the then owner of the $20,000 note and trust deed securing it. In that proceeding Samuel R. Jenkins was appointed receiver, November 19,1910, under an order directing him, among other things, to pay out of the proceeds of rents, etc., “expense of the receiver theretofore appointed in the cause entitled Assets Realization Company v. Benjamin H. Wallace, et al.,” a foreclosure suit then pending to foreclose the second mortgage above mentioned for $20,000.

A decree of foreclosure was entered in the foreclosure proceeding under the first mortgage of $60,000, and on November 26, 1910, the master sold the prop-

erty and the Prudential Life Insurance Company purchased it at the master’s sale for $65,500. On the same day a deficiency decree for $2,266.14 was entered for the balance due under the first mortgage. No redemption having been made by the. defendants in the foreclosure proceedings or others, the master made a deed of the premises to the Prudential Life Insuranee Company February 28, 1912.

It appears that the note and trust deed securing the $20,000 was held by the Northern Liquidation Company until November 27, 1905, at which time the note with some other property was sold to plaintiff, Ira M. Cobe, and the $20,000 proceeds of the sale went to the Northern Liquidation Company. At that date the contract sued on was executed, evidencing the sale of the $20,000 note and was signed by Woolfollc and Bartlett individually, and by the Northern Liquidation Company by W. B. Walrath, its President. The purchase price for the note and other property was paid by the Assets Realization Company’s check, and no other payment was made by Cobe. As one of the terms of the sale of the note and trust deed, Cobe, Woolf oik and Bartlett agreed on certain conditions to purchase the real estate described in the trust deed from Cobe in accordance with the terms of the written contract above set forth.

Cobe transferred the $20,000 note to the Assets Realization Company, and on April 12, 1910, that company filed its bill to foreclose the trust deed. On May 10, 1910, Jenkins was appointed receiver under that bill, and the taxes for the year 1909, not having been paid, .under an order of court September 2, 1910, he, as receiver, issued a receiver’s certificate, of date September 10,1910, for $1,118.82, and with the proceeds of the-sale of the certificate, paid the taxes.

The Assets Realization Company obtained a decree September 30,1910, and on October 28,1910, the premises were sold by the master to Hugo M.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Ill. App. 242, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobe-v-bartlett-illappct-1915.