Fleisher v. Flick

80 N.E.2d 81, 334 Ill. App. 461, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 341
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 4, 1948
DocketGen. No. 43,382
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 N.E.2d 81 (Fleisher v. Flick) 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
Fleisher v. Flick, 80 N.E.2d 81, 334 Ill. App. 461, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 341 (Ill. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 2,1932, Samuel W. Fleisher filed a bill in the superior court of Cook county to foreclose a first mortgage on property located at 6906-12 Lakewood avenue, Chicago, Illinois, which is improved with a twenty-four apartment building. Said bill named, among others, as defendants, Katherine Levy Grolclman, Ruth Levy Ettelson and Julia Levy Dry, the owners of the equity of redemption of the property, Louis Samkovitz and others, who held third and fourth mortgage notes delivered to them in 1916 to secure payment for labor and materials furnished by them for the constizuction of the building on the premises in question, and Frank C. Rathje, individually and as trustee. A receiver was appointed to manage the property and collect the rents therefrom. This foreclosure was a friendly proceeding, so far as it concerned the interests of Katherine Levy G-oldman, Ruth Levy Ettelson and Julia Levy Dry, because Fleisher was procured to purchase the outstanding first mortgage bonds with $20,000 ostensibly loaned to him by the husband of Katherine Levy Goldman. More than five and one-half years after the foreclosure suit was instituted, Fleisher voluntarily dismissed same oh July 8, 1937, claiming that he had entered into an extension agreement with the owners of the equity of redemption for the payment of his first mortgage bonds, and the receiver was ordered to continue in possession of the premises. Shortly after said dismissal Samkovitz filed a petition on his own behalf and on behalf of certain other owners of third and fourth mortgage notes claiming the net rents which had accumulated in the hands of the receiver. Petitions wore also filed by Katherine Levy Goldman, Buth Levy Ettelson and Julia Levy Dry (hereinafter for convenience sometimes referred to as the Levy heirs) and Fleisher claiming said rents. The three petitions and the answers thereto were referred to a master in chancery, who, after protracted hearings, filed his report finding that the equities were with the Levy heirs and recommending that the receiver be directed to pay them the net rents which had accumulated in his hands. The chancellor entered a decree, which overruled all exceptions to the master’s report, approved said report and directed the receiver to pay said rents, which then amounted to $29,068.64, to the Levy heirs. The decree also directed that the costs of the reference, amounting to $761.55, be paid by the Levy heirs. Samkovitz appeals from that portion of the decree awarding the Levy heirs the accumulated rents in the hands of the receiver. The Levy heirs have filed a cross-appeal from that portion of the decree taxing the costs of the reference against them. Fleisher filed a notice of appeal from the decree in the trial court but since he filed no appearance in this court, it must be considered that he has abandoned his appeal.

For a proper understanding of the claimed right of Samkovitz and the Levy heirs respectively to receive the rents involved herein it is necessary to set forth the history of the litigation concerning the premises in question since 1916.

The property was vacant when Emanuel Levy and his wife, Sarah Levy, became the owners thereof in joint tenancy in 1915. In order to construct the apartment building on said property Levy and his wife made the following mortgages thereon:

1st mortgage, Heitman Bond & Mortgage Co......... $55,000.00
2nd mortgage, F. B. Odell............. 8,400.00
3rd mortgage, material supply companies ........................ 3,968.47
4th mortgage, Samkovitz and other mechanics......................... 10,000.00

In each instance the property was conveyed by a trust deed to the Chicago Title & Trust Company as security for the mortgage indebtedness. All four trust deeds were recorded on January 10, 1916. To further secure the holders of the third and fourth mortgage notes Emanuel Levy and Sarah Levy conveyed the property by warranty deed on January 20, 1916 to Frank C. Rathje as trustee, subject to the aforesaid trust deed encumbrances. On the same day Rathje executed a declaration of trust which was agreed to and signed by Emanuel and Sarah Levy. Said declaration of trust provides in part as follows:

“Frank C. Rathje, Trustee . . . hereby declares that he holds the same [the property in question] upon the following trusts, that is to say, to hold the same in trust for the benefit of the said Emanuel Levy and Sarah Levy, his wife, and of the lawful owners of the notes described in the third and fourth trust deeds on said premises from the said Emanuel Levy and Sarah Levy, his wife, and to manage the building upon the said premises, to run the same and to collect the rents therefrom and apply the rentals, issues and income from the said building and premises” as thereinafter indicated. The declaration of trust went on to provide that rentals collected by the trustee should be applied first to pay taxes, expenses and the insurance on the said premises and then to the payment of interest and principal on the bonds and notes secured by the four mortgages in the order of their priority, the surplus, if any, “when all of these payments shall have been made,” to be paid to Emanuel Levy. -

Emanuel Levy died intestate on May 24, 1916, leaving him surviving his widow, Sarah Levy, and three daughters, hereinbefore referred to as the Levy heirs. On July 24, 1916, F. B. Odell filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county to foreclose his second mortgage. A receiver was appointed July 26, 1916. The bill alleged that the heirs of Levy were unknown. The following persons, among others, were made parties defendant: Sarah Levy, “the unknown heirs and next of kin of Emanuel Levy, deceased,” Frank 0. Rathje, individually and as trustee, and the unknown owners and holders of the third and fourth mortgage notes. Thereafter, on complainant’s motion, the bill was dismissed as to the unknown heirs and next of kin of Emanuel Levy and it was amended by adding the averment that the title to the mortgaged property had been held in joint tenancy by Emanuel Levy and Sarah Levy and therefore passed to Sarah Levy upon Emanuel Levy’s death. On May 21,1917, a decree of foreclosure was entered which directed the sale of the property subject to the first mortgage. Pursuant to a sale made by him on June 26, 1917, a master in chancery issued a certificate of sale to Orra W. Russell.

On April 22, 1918, almost ten months after the sale was had, Odell and Orra W. Russell filed a so-called supplemental bill alleging the filing of the original bill against Sarah Levy and the unknown heirs, the dismissal of the unknown heirs of Emanuel Levy and the subsequent proceedings resulting in the decree of foreclosure and the sale to Orra W. Russell. The supplemental bill also alleged that the three daughters of Emanuel Levy (naming them) “were the heirs of Emanuel Levy. ’ ’ They were made parties to the supplemental bill and appeared and answered same. The prayer of the supplemental bill was that the Levy heirs should be bound by the decree entered in the original second mortgage foreclosure proceeding and that their right to redeem should be limited to the period of redemption fixed by the master in the sale made pursuant to said decree.

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Related

Downstate National Bank v. Elmore
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82 N.E.2d 209 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.E.2d 81, 334 Ill. App. 461, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleisher-v-flick-illappct-1948.