FIDELITY FEDERAL S. & L. ASS'N v. Pioneer Nat. Title Ins. Co.

428 F. Supp. 1382
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 7, 1977
DocketP-CIV-76-36
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 428 F. Supp. 1382 (FIDELITY FEDERAL S. & L. ASS'N v. Pioneer Nat. Title Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FIDELITY FEDERAL S. & L. ASS'N v. Pioneer Nat. Title Ins. Co., 428 F. Supp. 1382 (S.D. Ill. 1977).

Opinion

428 F.Supp. 1382 (1977)

FIDELITY FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION, a corporation, and Home Savings & Loan Association, a corporation, Plaintiffs,
v.
PIONEER NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, a California Corporation, Defendant.

No. P-CIV-76-36.

United States District Court, S. D. Illinois, N. D.

April 7, 1977.

*1383 John J. Blake, Richard J. Neagle, Jr., Galesburg, Ill., Lyle W. Allen, Peoria, Ill., for plaintiffs.

Eugene L. White, Peoria, Ill., R. Richard Straub, St. Louis, Mo., for defendant.

DECISION AND ORDER

ROBERT D. MORGAN, Chief Judge.

The plaintiffs are two savings and loan associations, doing business at Galesburg, Illinois, in this district. The defendant is a title insurance company, incorporated under the laws of the State of California. The cause is now before the court on cross-motions *1384 for summary judgment. It is necessary, at the outset, to frame a proper context of the complaint to see both what the suit is and is not.

The complaint makes reference to several contractual relationships which were created at about the same time, although the defendant is a party to only one of such contracts.

On July 31, 1974, the plaintiffs concluded loan agreements under which each of them agreed to loan to Galesburg Motor Lodge, Inc., a corporation, hereinafter GML, the sum of $862,500 for the construction in downtown Galesburg, Illinois, of a Howard Johnson Motor Lodge. Such loans were evidenced by promissory notes secured by mortgages upon the real estate involved and the proposed improvements. Those notes and mortgages were executed by GML. The notes were also executed, individually, by divers persons who were associated with that corporation. The defendant was not a party to any of such notes or mortgages.

At about the same time, GML had entered into a construction contract with Galesburg Construction Co., Inc. for the construction of the contemplated structure. The defendant was not a party to the construction agreement.

On July 31, 1974, defendant entered into a construction and disbursing escrow agreement with the plaintiffs and GML. Pursuant to that agreement, in which GML, as owner, covenanted to complete construction on or before December 31, 1975, defendant assumed certain obligations, including that of escrowee and disbursing agent for funds for the contemplated construction. That agreement further provided that in the event the owner should fail to complete construction as contemplated, defendant might "either" complete the improvements substantially in accordance with the agreement "or, at its election," purchase the outstanding notes and mortgages from the plaintiffs.[1]

Construction of the motel premises was halted about October 14, 1975, when certain subcontractors and suppliers abandoned the project. By early December 1975, mechanics' liens aggregating in excess of $800,000 were filed against the premises. Thereafter, agents of defendant met with agents of the plaintiffs and agents of the prime contractor. Such contacts culminated in a determination by defendant to settle the outstanding lien claims and to complete construction. Accordingly, it entered into a contract with Galesburg Construction for completion of the project. Completion, as contemplated by the provisions of the latter contract, was substantially accomplished by about September 15, 1976.

In the interim period, on April 21, 1976, this complaint was filed. Count I of the complaint, after alleging the corporate identities of the parties, and the fact that the mortgage notes are unpaid and in default, seeks a judgment against defendant for the principal balance of said notes, plus plaintiffs' accrued interest, expenses, and costs and attorneys' fees. The theory of that count is that the defendant, under the *1385 CDE Agreement, became obligated, upon the default of GML, to either complete the structure "substantially" in accordance with the plans and specifications therefor, or to purchase the mortgage notes and mortgages from the plaintiffs; that defendant has breached the CDE Agreement in certain alleged particulars; that, implicitly, defendant became obligated upon the mortgage notes in the premises; and that plaintiffs are entitled "pursuant to the terms of the notes" to recover their costs, expenses and attorneys' fees.

Count II realleges the material allegations of Count I, adding only the allegation that defendant is a foreign corporation which has no assets "known to the plaintiffs" in Illinois, and that, therefore, plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law. The count prays a judgment requiring defendant to purchase the notes and mortgages for the amount remaining due thereunder, including "attorneys' fees, costs, charges and disbursements."

Patently, breach of contract is not the theory of either count of the complaint. To the contrary, the theory of the complaint is that alleged breaches of the CDE Agreement by defendant would act either to obligate defendant on the mortgage notes themselves or to permit plaintiff to elect under the CDE Agreement to compel defendant to purchase the mortgage notes. The motions for summary judgment must be considered in that context.

The court is constrained to agree with the defendant's conclusion that plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment is, in fact, a device to defeat defendant's motion, not a serious assertion that plaintiffs are entitled to summary judgment. Thus, plaintiffs' motion and their arguments thereon are pointed to their positions that defendant permitted the misapplication of funds entrusted to it under the CDE Agreement, that in other particulars defendant did not perform its obligations under that agreement, and that there are some thirty-four respects in which the improvements as constructed do not comply with the plans and specifications in the original construction contract. Were this a suit for breach of a contract, which it is not, the premises stated for plaintiffs' motion clearly demonstrate that very substantial genuine issues of material fact would remain in the suit. In like measure, if the alleged breach of the CDE Agreement by defendant could have the effect of creating the legal and equitable rights for which plaintiffs contend in this complaint, those same questions of material fact would remain for decision. Plaintiffs' motion must, therefore, be summarily denied.

Defendant predicates its motion for summary judgment upon Count I, upon the admitted facts that defendant is not a signatory of the mortgage notes, and that it did not undertake under the CDE Agreement to become a guarantor of those notes. It urges that it cannot be held, as a matter of law, to be obligated to the plaintiffs upon the notes under the facts alleged in Count I.

Count I can only be construed as an attempt by plaintiffs to recover from the defendant upon the mortgage notes themselves.[2] It is a fundamental principle that no person is liable upon a written instrument unless his signature appears thereon. Ill.Rev.Stat.1975, c. 26, § 3-401(1); 12 Illinois Law and Practice Contracts § 261. Thus, defendant is not obligated upon those instruments, in the absence of some other written agreement to which it is a party and under which it assumed the obligation to become the guarantor of the payment of those instruments. Plaintiffs do not contend that defendant is a signatory upon any related instrument except the CDE Agreement. Plaintiffs concede, as they must, that defendant did not assume any obligation as guarantor of the notes under that agreement. As a matter of law, defendant is entitled to summary judgment on that count.

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Bluebook (online)
428 F. Supp. 1382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-federal-s-l-assn-v-pioneer-nat-title-ins-co-ilsd-1977.