Elwell v. Hicks

180 Ill. App. 554, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 821
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 26, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,602
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 Ill. App. 554 (Elwell v. Hicks) 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
Elwell v. Hicks, 180 Ill. App. 554, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 821 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

In March, 1894, Mark K. Collins sold real estate in Chicago to Thomas P. Hicks and took notes for a portion (amounting to $3,300) of the purchase money, secured by a trust deed mortgage from said Thomas P. Hicks to one Edward F. Elwell as trustee.

In August, 1903, there being a default in the payment of the principal and interest of the notes, Mary K. Collins, the holder of the notes, and Edward F. Elwell as trustee, filed their bill in the circuit court to foreclose the trust deed, making Thomas P. Hicks, Stephen P. Hicks and Frederick S. Baird and their wives defendants, as holders of the equity of redemption in possession of said premises.

Although the argument of appellant in this case asserts that the bill was filed to foreclose the said trust deed “for the non-payment of interest,” this is placing a construction on the somewhat unartificial language of the bill which it does not properly bear. There is nothing anywhere in this record to show any extension of the principal notes or any of them beyond the time of the filing of this bill, and although the bill unnecessarily alleged that Mary K. Collins had elected to declare and had declared due the whole of said principal sum described in said notes, the bill itself, without this statement, would show that according to the tenor of the notes there was $3,300 and certain interest thereon dne. Nor is there any contention that this principal amount, or any part thereof, has ever been paid. But the attempt to enforce the apparently simple security furnished by this trust deed for a sum of-money beyond all question due has been a laborious and prolonged affair, which has reached its final stage only after almost ten years of litigation.

The opportunity for this prolongation of what might have been expected to be a simple matter arose from the following situation: After purchasing the property and giving the notes and trust deed, Thomas P. Hicks, according to the allegations of the bill, at once conveyed a one-third interest in it to • Stephen P. Hicks and one-third to Frederick S. Baird, who each “assumed and agreed to pay one-third of said thirty-three hundred dollars encumbrance.”

In a joint answer to this bill filed by Thomas P. Hicks and wife, Stephen P. Hicks and wife and Frederick S. Baird and wife, they denied that Thomas P. Hicks had conveyed to Stephen P. Hicks or Frederick S. Baird any right, title or interest in or to said premises, or that either of them had ever assumed any portion of said incumbrance. Said conveyances and assumptions were proved, however, on the hearing before the master by the deeds themselves. The answer, however, set up as a substantive defense that in July, 1903, Mary K. Collins agreed with the defendants to exchange the three $1,100 notes for $33 in cash and a quitclaim deed of the premises in question, and this agreement the defendants were ready to carry out. Contemporaneously the defendants filed a cross-bill, setting up this alleged agreement, representing that since filing her bill Mary K. Collins had departed this life and that Amy E. Hatch had been appointed administratrix with the will annexed of her estate, and praying that the agreement be carried out, and the said Amy E. Hatch, administratrix, be ordered to turn over the notes canceled to the defendants, and Elwell as trustee be ordered to release the trust deed. The cross-defendants, Hatch and Elwell, answered and denied all knowledge of any such agreement, but alleged that if there was any such agreement it was entirely verbal, and claimed the benefit of the Statute of Frauds.

The Circuit Court after a hearing entered a decree in June, 1905, finding there was due Hatch as administratrix $4,148.37 and interest from the date of the master’s report, and $200 as a reasonable solicitor’s fees and ..ordering a foreclosure sale in default of payment. The decree also provided that after the coming in and confirmation of the master’s report of sale, in case any deficiency should be shown in the amount due Hatch, administratrix, she should be entitled to execution against the defendants Thomas P. Hicks, Frederick g. Baird and gtephen P. Hicks, “personally liable therefor.” The cross-bill was dismissed.

From this decree the defendants Thomas P. Hicks, Stephen P. Hicks and Frederick S. Baird appealed to this court. The cause was assigned to the Branch Appellate Court which on November 23, 1906, reversed the decree and remanded the cause to the circuit court. The only point, however, decided adversely to the complainants in the opinion (Hicks v. Elwell, 129 Ill. App. 561) is the one which the judge delivering it says was the principal objection urged to the decree, namely, that following the master’s recommendations the court below, in its decree, provided for a possible deficiency decree against Stephen P. Hicks and Frederick S. Baird $390.49 in excess of what a correct computation of interest would make it. The master and circuit court were held to have erred in not giving these two defendants the benefit of a reduction of the rate of interest from May 1, 1897, up to the time of hearing. The court expressly says that the conditional provision of the decree for a deficiency was proper except as to amount. “Such decree,” it says, “may be rendered conditionally at the time of foreclosure or after sale and ascertainment of the balance due. * * * In the case at bar the decree for deficiency and for execution was entered as it properly might be at the time of foreclosure.”

On the remandment of the cause to the circuit court, however, the cause was again sent to a master and a determined effort made by the defendants to establish the defense against foreclosure alleged in the answer and cross-bill to exist by reason of the alleged agreement by Mrs. Collins in June or July, 1903, to take cash and quitclaim deeds from the defendants and cancel the notes.

The master held, and the court confirmed the holding, by overruling all objections and confirming the master’s report, that as the defendants (cross-complainants) were practically seeking a specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of real estate, the Statute of Frauds was a bar to their claim, inasmuch as the only written memorandum referring to the agreement-contended for, was insufficient to avoid said statute. This memorandum was as follows:

“July 20, 1903.
Received of F. S. Baird Abstract L. 1, Blk. 4 Gage & McKay’s Sub. B. 9, Wright & Webster Sub. of N. E. 1/4-12-39-13, from Government to June 30/92 on exchange note for deed.
Mrs. Mart K. Collins.”

The master also held that, inasmuch as Amy E. Hatch was suing and defending in the capacity of administratrix and objected to the testimony of Baird and Hicks on the ground of interest, their oral testimony was inóompetent. He therefore recommended that the cross-bill be dismissed for want of equity and a decree for foreclosure entered. The sum due was computed according to the rule laid down in the opinion of the Branch Appellate Court and amounted to $3,965.20. The circuit court, by a decree May 31, 1907, overruled all exceptions to the master’s report, confirmed the same, dismissed the cross-bill and found that there was due Amy E.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Ill. App. 554, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elwell-v-hicks-illappct-1913.