Fairman v. Peck

87 Ill. 156
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 87 Ill. 156 (Fairman v. Peck) 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
Fairman v. Peck, 87 Ill. 156 (Ill. 1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

There are three grounds upon which the trustee’s sale is claimed by appellant to be irregular and void: 1. Because the amount of the secured indebtedness was greatly overstated in the notice of sale. 2. Because Downs and Van Wyck having warranted the title, the trustee had no right or power to make a sale of the premises during the existence of the incumbrance created by the Rich trust deed. 3. Because the premises were advertised for sale, and sold as a whole, and not in separate lots or parcels.

It requires - a very close criticism of language to discover that there was any over-statement of the indebtedness in the notice of sale. It did not profess to state the amount of the indebtedness then due, but to state that the contingency had happened upon which the power of sale might be exercised, viz: default in the payment of the notes. There had been default in the payment of the notes, as they had not been paid. The statement did not necessarily imply that no one, or no part, of the notes had been paid.

Perry, in his work on Trusts, in speaking upon this particular question, observes: “ If such statement (of the amount of the claim or debt) in the notice is required by the power or by a statute, the amount of the debt must be stated with substantial accuracy; or, if not being required, a greatly exaggerated claim should.be fraudulently stated in the notice, the sale would not bar the equity of redemption. So, if the sale is proposed to be made for more than is due to the creditor, equity will restrain the sale; and if actually made, it will be set aside.” 2 Perry on Trusts, sec. 602 s. No one of such circumstances exists in the present case, to bring it within the range of that rule.

No statement in the notice of the amount of the indebtedness was required by the power or by statute at that time. An act passed since, (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 713,) declares that it shall be sufficient to insert in the notice “ the amount of indebtedness the instrument was given to secure, the amount claimed to be due,” etc. No greatly exaggerated claim was fraudulently stated in the notice, nor was the sale proposed to be made, or actually made, for more than was due.

In the case of Shine v. Hill, 23 Iowa, 268, the objection to a trustee’s notice of sale was similar to the one made here. It was objected that the trustee’s sale was void, because the notice of sale stated “the whole amount mentioned in the trust deed, etc., was unpaid,” which was not true: it was held, that the objection was not available to set aside the sale of the property in the hands of the grantee of the purchaser.

This court passed upon this question in Hamilton v. Lubukee, 51 Ill. 415, where, upon the subject of an over-statement, in the notice of sale, of the amount of the debt, it was said: “ The first point made by appellant is, that the advertisement, or notice, of the sale describes a different and other or larger indebtedness than that secured by the mortgage, to-wit: an indebtedness of $1000 over and above the amount really due by the mortgage. Admit the fact to be so, it is not shown that the property was injuriously affected by it, or bidders deterred thereby from attending the sale; nor is it shown that it was so published for a fraudulent purpose,—and if it was, there is no evidence the defendants, or any of them, participated in it, or had any knowledge of it.”

All which may be affirmed respecting the case in hand; and to the like effect is Bush v. Sherman, 80 Ill. 175. There was no attempt on the part of appellant to prove that the property did not sell for its full value. The only proof upon that subject was made by the defendants, in the testimony of Van Wyck, who was at the sale and bought the property, and who says: “ The amount we bid for the property was its full value; it was then unimproved.” He states, further, that, about two years after the trustee’s sale, he succeeded in selling the property; that he saw Mrs. Fairman, and told her he would figure up how much they had made in the transaction, which he did, showing it to be only $300, which he paid over to her.

As respects the second ground, the existence of the prior incumbrance of $400, created by the Rich trust deed, quite a number of authorities have been cited by appellant’s counsel, to the purport that, in a suit to foreclose a purchase money mortgage, the mortgagor and grantee in the conveyance can claim deductions for incumbrances covenanted against in the deed from the mortgagee. However this may be, or however it might have been on an application to enjoin the sale under the trust deed until this incumbrance was removed, we view it as a- different question, whether, when a sale has actually taken place where there is such an outstanding incumbrance existing, the sale should be set aside for such a reason, and especially where, as in this case, no injury is shown to have resulted. The only suggestion of harm in this regard is, that the incumbrance would necessarily prejudice the sale, as no one would bid as much, taking the premises subject to a prior trust deed, as if receiving a clear title; but the proof is, that the property did bring its full value. If so, if the amount of the full value of the property was actually bid and paid for it, how could there be injury in the respect named? When such a sale has once been made, it should not be set aside by a court of equity without some sufficient equitable reason being shown. Hone such appears here in this respect, as, for aught that is shown, there might have been an adequate remedy upon the covenants in the deed to Fairman.

In Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. 519, Chancellor Kent, in considering the subject generally, and laying down the rule that a purchaser should resort to his covenants, remarked: “ Perhaps an outstanding incumbrance may form an exception in cases of covenants against incumbrance.” It does not appear that there was, here, any covenant against incumbrances. The deed from Downs and Van Wyck to Fairman was not. produced, and only an abstract of title was shown—the deeds and the records of Cook county having been destroyed by the great fire in Chicago, in 1871. The abstract merely shows the deed to be a warranty deed. Had the testimony of Van Wyck been received, it would have shown an assumption of this incumbrance by Fairman; but his evidence in this respect was excluded by the court below, and, we think, rightly, under the statute. There is no claim that Fairman did not have lull notice of this incumbrance when he purchased.

In Campbell v. Benjamin, 69 Ill.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gilbert v. Fosston Manufacturing Co.
216 N.W. 778 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
Hamilton v. Rhodes
83 S.W. 351 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1904)
Ward v. Ward
51 N.E. 806 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)
Kerfoot v. Billings
43 N.E. 804 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Stone v. Missouri Guarantee Savings & Building Ass'n
58 Ill. App. 78 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1895)
Bowman v. Ash
36 Ill. App. 115 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)
Jenkins v. Pierce
98 Ill. 646 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 Ill. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairman-v-peck-ill-1877.