First-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Hickok

10 N.E.2d 646, 367 Ill. 144
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1937
DocketNo. 24114. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 N.E.2d 646 (First-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Hickok) 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
First-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Hickok, 10 N.E.2d 646, 367 Ill. 144 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause is here on leave to appeal granted to review the judgment of the Appellate Court reversing the decree of the circuit court of LaSalle county, which foreclosed a mortgage upon a certain tract of land in that county.

The facts are as follows: In 1921, appellee Horace A. Hickok, and his wife, borrowed from his mother, Martha Hickok, the sum of $6000 and gave their note, secured by a mortgage on 80 acres of land in LaSalle county, for the sum of $6000. This mortgage was made subject to another mortgage referred to in this record as the Hummer mortgage. A short time after the execution of the Hickok mortgage appellee Ethel Hickok, sister of Horace, purchased an interest in the said mortgage note to the extent of $1000. This mortgage was not paid and on February 29, 1928, a new note for $6000 was executed and a trust deed to secure the same was made to James W. Weldon, as trustee. This trust deed gave prepayment privileges at interest-paying dates in the sum of $500 or multiples thereof. This was a renewal of the previous mortgage and was made subordinate to the Hummer mortgage on which there remained unpaid the sum of $500.

During the summer of 1928 Horace negotiated, through Weldon as his agent, with the appellant in this case for a loan of $8000, and on August 18, 1928, he and his wife executed a mortgage to the appellant covering the same 80 acres covered by the Hickok trust deed and an additional 40 acres adjacent thereto, which Horace Hickok was then contemplating buying. It appears that one of Horace Hickok’s reasons for seeking the loan from appellant was to buy this land. Another appears to have been to pay off a sum of over $2100 which he owed the Troy Grove State Bank of which Weldon was an officer. The mortgage to the appellant was recorded on September 25, 1928, but the money ivas not paid over until March 2, 1929, at which time the additional 40 acres was paid for by Horace and the balance of the Hummer mortgage loan was paid, as was the indebtedness to the Troy Grove State Bank, all out of the receipts of this loan.

On March 4, 1929, Weldon, as trustee under the Hickok trust deed of February, 1928, executed a release of that trust deed and on the same day Horace Hickok and his wife executed a new note due March 1, 1934, secured by a trust deed to Weldon, as trustee, conveying the original 80 acres owned by Horace and the 40-acre tract newly purchased by him. This mortgage was recorded on March 4, 1929. On April 8, 1929, appellant caused its mortgage dated August 18, 1928, to be re-recorded and on May 23, 1929, Weldon, as trustee, signed an agreement reciting that it was the intention of the parties that the mortgage of the appellant dated August 18, 1928, be a first lien on the premises described therein and superior to the lien of the Hickok trust deed made to Weldon, as trustee, on March 4, 1929. This subordination agreement was not signed by Martha Hickok, the holder of the $6000 note, nor by Ethel Hickok, who had a one-sixth interest therein.

Martha Hickok died in 1932 and the subordination agreement was found among her private papers in a safety deposit box which stood in the name of Ethel Hickok. It appears that Horace Hickok at all times paid the interest on the Hickok trust deed to Weldon, who was confidential adviser of Martha Hickok. He, in turn, paid her the interest by check, and also drew a check at the same time, for $60 to pay interest accruing to Ethel. This check was signed by Martha and in this manner the business was transacted. Ethel testified that her mother had possession of the papers and transacted all of the business in connection with them; that while the safety deposit box was in her (Ethel’s) name and she alone had a key, she always went with her mother when the box was opened in the latter’s presence. Ethel also testified she did not know of the existence of the subordination agreement or the execution of the note and trust deed of March 4, 1929, until after her mother’s death. A default in the semi-annual interest payment due November 1, 1932, brought about the bill by appellant to foreclose the mortgage in this case as a first lien. On October 28, 1932, Horace Hickok was adjudged a bankrupt, and, thereafter, the trustee of his estate disclaimed any interest in the real estate.

Appellee Dean, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Martha Hickok, and Ethel Hickok, answered the bill, denying that the appellant’s trust deed constituted a first lien and alleged that the release deed executed by Weldon, as trustee, on March 4, 1929, and the subordination agreement, were fraudulently executed and without authority. They filed a cross-bill in which they sought to have the trust deed of February 29, 1928, declared in full force and effect and that it be declared to be a first lien on the 80-acre tract. A decree was entered holding the trust deed of February 29, 1928, was a first lien on the 80 acres, as it secured the indebtedness to Ethel Hickok, but that the appellant’s mortgage was a first lien on said tract in so far as against the indebtedness to Dean as administrator of the estate of Martha Hickok. Both parties appealed to the Appellate Court which, in effect, held that the trust deed of February 29, 1928, should be restored and Ethel Hickok and Dean, as the administrator of the estate of Martha Hickok, should be declared to have a prior lien on the 80 acres to the amount due on the $6000 mortgage, and that appellant have a second lien thereon. No complaint is made of the rulings concerning the lien on the 40 acres.

The question involved in this case is, which trust deed takes priority. Appellees argue that the release of the trust deed of February 29, 1928, is not, prima facie, a discharge of the security and does not give an opportunity for the intervention of another lien, for the reason that the indebtedness was not paid and the trust deed of March 4, 1929, was taken merely to renew the original mortgage. They rely upon cases holding that, where the new mortgage is shown by the surrounding circumstances to have been but an extension of an old mortgage and nothing more, the later mortgage retains the position of the first in the priority of liens. Of such cases are Campbell v. Trotter, 100 Ill. 281, Shaver v. Williams, 87 id. 469, and Christie v. Hale, 46 id. 117. Counsel for appellant argue, however, that those cases are not applicable here, because in this record the evidence shows an intention on the part of Martha Hickok, through the trustee, to postpone the priority of her trust deed to that of the appellant: They argue that it was evidently a family arrangement whereby Horace Hickok was enabled to borrow the money from appellant.

It is a general rule that a trustee is presumed to have acted in good faith and to have performed his duties under the trust. The burden of proving his breach of trust rests upon one asserting it. The 1928 trust deed contained a prepayment privilege. Where, under such a trust deed, payment of the principal is made at interest-bearing dates, or at the time it may become due, the rule is, that the trustee’s release is prima facie valid and can be overcome only by showing fraud, accident or mistake, or that the party did not intend to release. This rule has been announced in Kennell v. Herbert, 342 Ill. 464; Lennartz v. Quilty, 191 id. 174, and Flower v. Elwood, 66 id. 438.

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