Dawson v. Vickery

37 N.E. 910, 150 Ill. 398
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 910 (Dawson v. Vickery) 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
Dawson v. Vickery, 37 N.E. 910, 150 Ill. 398 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bakeb

delivered the opinion of the Court:

To the March term, 1890, of the circuit court of Clay county, J. M. and J. B. Tanner filed their bill in chancery against E. D. Vickery, and Kate Vickery, his wife, to foreclose a mortgage on the south-west quarter of the south-east quarter of section 12, township 4, north, range 7, east of the third principal meridian, alleged to have been executed by said Vickery and wife on the 12th day of March, 1888, to secure the payment of a promissory note of that date for $225. Joe PL Dawson and Joe Britton, plaintiffs in error, were also made defendants, with the allegation that they claimed some interest in the land, which, if any, was subject to the mortgage of complainants. They answered the bill, setting.up that E. D. Vickery and wife, on the 9th of April, 1889, had conveyed the lands to them by warranty deed, which was duly recorded in the recorder’s office of Clay county two days thereafter ; that the mortgage mentioned in complainants’ bill also conveyed an eighty-acre tract of land, which the complainants, with full knowledge of the rights of plaintiffs in error in said forty acres, had released, and alleging. that the said eighty-acre tract should be first exhausted in the satisfaction of complainants’ mortgage debt, and the said forty acres released therefrom. They also filed a cross-bill against complainants in the original bill and E. D. Vickery and wife, alleging the facts set up in the answer, and praying the same relief. To this cross-bill a demurrer was sustained, and the complainants therein elected to stand by the cross-bill.

E. D. Vickery answered the original bill, admitting the facts therein alleged, and filed a cross-bill against plaintiffs in error, setting up that he had conveyed the land to them in exchange for a stallion, upon their false and fraudulent representations that the stallion was a sure foal-getter and not over eleven years old, when, in truth, he was over twenty years old, and impotent; that immediately, upon learning these facts he had notified them of the same, and also notified them that the horse was subject to their order, hut they had refused to take him; that they well knew of the worthless character of the horse when they made such representations to him; and that the horse, by reason of his age and impotency, was wholly worthless. It also alleged that the keeping of the horse was reasonably worth three dollars per week, etc. The prayer of this cross-hill was, that the said deed from the complainants therein, to said Dawson and Britton, be set aside and canceled, and for an accounting as to damages, etc.

Plaintiffs in error answered, admitting that the sale of a stallion was the consideration for the conveyance of the land to them, but denying that he was not as represented by them, and averring that he was a valuable horse, etc.

Upon the hearing, the court entered a decree of foreclosure on the original hill as therein prayed, dismissed the cross-hill of plaintiffs in error, but found the cross-hill of said Vickery to he true, finding and setting forth in the decree the following facts: “That on the 9th day of April, A. D. 1889, said E. D. Vickery and wife, Kate, conveyed, by warranty deed, to Dawson and Britton, defendants in said cross-bill, said south-west quarter of south-east quarter of section 12, aforesaid, which deed was properly acknowledged, and recorded in volume 31 of deed records, at page 360, in the recorder’s office of said county, the express consideration of said deed being $800, but the real consideration was the sale and delivery by said Dawson and Britton, to said Vickery, of one Clydesdale stallion, named ‘Border Chieftain, No. 87,5 of the American Stud Book, valued by said parties at the sum of $800. And the court further finds, that defendants Dawson and Britton represented to said Vickery that said horse was about eleven years old, etc., and a sure foal-getter; that said Vickery, relying upon said representations, and believing them to be true, executed and delivered said deed to said Dawson and Britton for said premises in payment for said horse, when, in truth and in fact, said horse was more than nineteen years old, and was entirely worthless as a doer and foal-getter, and of no value for any purpose; that the said Dawson and Britton made the said representations knowing them to be false at the time, and for the purpose of misleading said Vickery, and cheating him out of his said real estate by reason of said false and fraudulent representations, as aforesaid, and that said deed by Vickery and wife, having been made and delivered to-said Dawson and Britton upon such false and fraudulent representations, is without consideration, and ought to be canceled on the record and the title to said premises vested in Vickery, subject to said mortgage of Tanner Bros. And the-court further finds, that said Vickery, immediately on learning that said horse was worthless for stud purposes, notified said Dawson and Britton of such fact, and that said horse was at his stable subject to their order, and that said Dawson and Britton refused and failed to take said horse away or to cancel said deed; that said Vickery kept said horse from the 10th day of May, 1889, until the 10th day of July, 1890, when he-died; that the care and expense of keeping said horse for said period is reasonably worth $222.50.” It was then ordered and decreed that said deed be set aside and canceled, and the-court rendered a judgment in favor of said E. D. Vickery upon his cross-bill, and against Joe H. Dawson and Joe Britton, for $222.50 damages, and awarded execution therefor.

Dawson and Britton alone prosecute this writ of error, to-which complainants in the original bill are not made parties. The only questions, therefore, which can be raised here, are such as arise upon the cross-bill of Vickery, and the answer thereto of plaintiffs in error, and those questions are, did the circuit court err in setting aside said deed and in rendering said judgment for damages.

It is first contended that the cross-bill of Vickery was not germane to the original bill, and therefore no relief could properly be granted under it. The object of this cross-bill was to have determined who had the equity of redemption in the mortgaged premises described in the original bill. It may be true that the complainants in the original bill had no interest in that question, but it does not follow that the cross-bill was not germane to the original bill. (Chicago Artesian Well Co. v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. et al. 57 Ill. 424; Hurd et al. v. Case, 32 id. 45.) The equity of redemption being a question pertinent to the relief sought by the original bill, and these parties to the cross-bill being proper parties and interested in that question, we are unable to see why the controversy between them was not the proper subject matter of a cross-bill. While it is true that a cross-bill must relate to the subject matter of the original bill, it is not essential that the facts showing the relief sought by one defendant against another should appear from the original bill. Robins v. Swain, 68 Ill. 197.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error insist in their argument that the cross-bill should have been dismissed on the ground of the laches of the complainant therein. A sufficient answer to this contention is, no such defense was set up in the court below, by plea or answer.

It is also contended that the decree was not authorized by the proofs.

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37 N.E. 910, 150 Ill. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-vickery-ill-1894.