Dunlap v. Peirce

260 Ill. App. 149, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1160
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1931
DocketGen. No. 8,447
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 260 Ill. App. 149 (Dunlap v. Peirce) 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
Dunlap v. Peirce, 260 Ill. App. 149, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1160 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shurtleff

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case originally M. P. Dunlap, defendant in error, filed a bill in the circuit court of Pike county, Illinois, to foreclose a mortgage against the plaintiffs in error. Plaintiffs in error answered the bill and filed a cross-bill, making M. F. Dunlap, William Pete-fish, Otis E. Taylor and Claude C. Petefish defendants to the cross-bill. Answers and replications were filed, evidence taken, and a decree rendered by the circuit court of Pike county in favor of M. F. Dunlap, defendant in error, for the foreclosure of his mortgage. The plaintiffs in error removed that cause to this court and upon hearing this court reversed the decree of the circuit court of Pike county, with directions to dismiss the bill of M. F. Dunlap for want of equity. M. F. Dunlap, together with his codefendants in the said cross-bill, removed the cause to the Supreme Court of this State, and upon hearing in that court the court reversed the judgment of the Appellate Court and reversed the decree of the circuit court of Pike county, and remanded the cause to the circuit court of Pike county, using the following language: “As such assignee, Dunlap is entitled to foreclosure of this mortgage in the sum of $20,000 with interest from January 1, 1925, less such credits, if any there be, as may be shown by the report of the receiver appointed by the court. •

“The decree of the circuit court and the judgment of the Appellate Court are reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree for the foreclosure and. sale in accordance with the views herein expressed.”

Defendant in error M. F. Dunlap; obtained the, mandate from the Supreme Court and upon proper notice to the plaintiffs in error, the mandate was filed, together with a motion by Dunlap to reinstate the cause. Plaintiffs in error filed objections to the reinstatement of the cause, which upon hearing in the circuit court were overruled and the mandate ordered filed and the cause reinstated. Thereupon plaintiffs in error filed a petition and later, by leave of court, filed an amended petition. M. P. Dunlap, defendant in error, filed his motion to strike the petition of the plaintiffs in error from the files on the ground that the petition prayed the circuit court to enter a decree different from the decree directed to be entered by the Supreme Court, and after the amended petition was filed amended his motion to apply to all that portion of the amended petition which set up facts and prayed the circuit court to enter a decree other than the decree directed to be entered by the mandate of the Supreme Court, and answered the' other parts of the petition. The petition did not waive the answer under oath, hence Dunlap’s answer to the amended petition was under oath.

The circuit court sustained the motion to strike the amended petition so far as it prayed for a decree different from the decree authorized by the mandate of the Supreme Court and upon a final hearing the circuit court dismissed the petition of the plaintiffs in error for want of equity.

The mandate of the Supreme Court required that the circuit court should ascertain what, if any, credits should be given to the plaintiffs in error as shown by the report of the receiver. The receiver filed his report and afterwards, by leave of court, filed unamended report. The plaintiffs in error filed objections to the report of the receiver and evidence was heard upon said objections. Upon hearing the objections and the evidence, the circuit court overruled the objections and approved the amended report and entered a decree of foreclosure in favor of M. F. Dunlap for $20,000 with interest from January 1, 1925, and the court found that there was no credit to be allowed as shown by the report of the receiver.

A further statement of the facts is to be found in Dunlap v. Peirce, 253 Ill. App. 1, and Dunlap v. Peirce, 336 Ill. 178.

It is further shown by the petition filed by the plaintiffs in error in the court below, after the remanding order was entered in that court, that no supersedeas having been obtained in the Pike county circuit court when the original proceedings were brought to this court that the master in chancery, in accordance with the decree of the circuit court of Pike county, advertised the lands described in the bill of complaint for sale, and sold the same on August 13, 1927; that M. F. Dunlap at said sale bid off the property described in the bill of complaint, subject to a first mortgage of $60,000 in favor- of the Prudential Life Insurance Company, for the sum of $66,000; that the original bill of complaint to foreclose was in the name of M. F. Dunlap, sole complainant, who sought to foreclose indebtedness evidenced by notes amounting to $90,000 principal and interest thereon, secured by second mortgage on the tract of land described in the original bill of complaint; that the original decree in said foreclosure suit which came by writ of error to this court fixed the amount of the indebtedness0 in favor of complainant at $88,379.69 and directed the sale of the land to satisfy the decree, subject to the first mortgage of $60,000. The amended petition filed by plaintiffs in error in this cause when the cause was reinstated after the decision by the Supreme Court, sets out the various steps of litigation and the fact that the master sold the land in the bill described on August 13, 1927, to M. F. Dunlap for $66,000, subject to the first mortgage; that the said master made settlement with the purchaser, M. F. Dunlap, by the said M. F. Dunlap paying cash to the master in the sum of $719.50, being the costs taxed by the master in said foreclosure suit and by receipting to said master for the residue, amounting to $65,280.50, and the master made a report of sale; that immediately after said settlement the master issued to the purchaser, M. F. Dunlap, a certificate of sale and recorded a duplicate certificate with the recorder of Pike county in due form; that at the June term, 1927, of the circuit court of Pike county, the purchaser, M. F. Dunlap, procured an order and judgment of said court confirming the master’s report of sale vesting title of the premises so conveyed by certificate of purchase in M. F. Dunlap, subject only to the statutory right of redemption and that the judgment of the circuit court confirming the sale was filed September 9, 1927.

It is now contended by plaintiffs in error that the period of redemption having expired and defendant in error Dunlap, having purchased the lands under the former decree, which has been reversed, for the sum of $66,000, subject to the first mortgage, that defendant in error should be decreed the owner of said lands and be required to pay back to the plaintiffs in error, Charles M. Peirce and Ella B. Peirce, the owners of the equity in redemption, the difference between the sale price of the lands under the former decree, amounting to $66,000, and the amount of the indebtedness found against plaintiffs in error by this decree, amounting to the sum of $20,000, with interest thereon to the date of the decree, principal and interest amounting to the sum of $26,100.

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Bluebook (online)
260 Ill. App. 149, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-peirce-illappct-1931.