Foreman Trust & Savings Bank v. Cohn

253 Ill. App. 469, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 55
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 24, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,474
StatusPublished

This text of 253 Ill. App. 469 (Foreman Trust & Savings Bank v. Cohn) 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
Foreman Trust & Savings Bank v. Cohn, 253 Ill. App. 469, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 55 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is brought by the principal defendants to reverse a decree granting the prayer of complainant in a bill to foreclose a mortgage. The defense set up in the answer is that complainant’s testator, Harry Feder, and one Samuel J. Hachtman obtained a trust deed and notes in suit from defendants without giving money or any other consideration therefor by representing to defendants that Feder and Hachtman would use the trust deed for the purpose of exhibiting the same; that it was never to be recorded and that they would destroy it, but that fraudulently, falsely and contrary to their promise they recorded the trust deed; that Hachtman informed defendants the mortgage was destroyed; that they never knew until after the death of Feder that the trust deed 'was recorded, and that they were then for the first time requested to pay the notes secured by the trust deed.

Averring the same facts, defendants, Herman and Theresa Cohn, filed a cross-bill in and by which they prayed that the unpaid notes and the trust deed might be delivered over to them. The decree dismissed the cross-bill for want of equity.

The cause was heard by the master upon exceptions to the master ?s report, which were overruled. The report was approved and a decree entered in conformity with the report. Defendants testified upon the hearing to matters occurring prior to the death of Harry Feder. The master received the evidence subject to objection, but in preparing his report disregarded this evidence upon the theory that defendants were incompetent witnesses under the statute. The evidence of Samuel J. Hachtman was also received as to similar occurrences. His evidence was also held to be incompetent under the statute by the master. However, the parties have stipulated that the evidence of Hachtman shall be regarded as free from this objection.

An examination of the record leaves little doubt as to the facts. Samuel J. Hachtman was a lawyer who dealt in securities. At the time in question he had an office with Harry Feder. He is the son-in-law of Herman and Theresa Cohn, the principal defendants, who executed these notes and trust deed on June 3, 1926. Louis L. Kahn is named as trustee in the trust deed. Herman Cohn is a bond broker at 640 North Clark street, and he has been engaged in business at that address for 15 years and has lived in Chicago for 37 years. There is nothing in the record to indicate that" he is now or ever has been on unfriendly terms with his son-in-law Hachtman. When Hachtman was about to engage in business and needed credit, his father-in-law became his guarantor at banks to the total amount of $50,000. The trust deed in question was acknowledged before Hachtman as a notary public, and the evidence is uncontradicted that he procured the execution of the notes and trust deed by Herman and Theresa Cohn on June 3 and the delivery of the same to himself. He testifies that he did not give any money or anything of value to Herman or Theresa Cohn for the execution and delivery of these papers. He further testifies:

“I told Mr. Cohn that these papers were necessary in order to help out Mr. Feder and incidentally to help out myself. I told him Mr. Feder wanted these papers just to exhibit and that he was not going to put them on record and that they would be returned to Cohn.”

He further says that Mrs. Cohn did not want to sign the papers; that she said she could not see why Hachtman had to have the papers as long as there was not any money going into the business; that she did not know that the business warranted borrowing any money from Harry Feder, and that if it was just to help him out she did not see why they should jeopardize their property or take any chance with real estate in order to help Hachtman out. He says:

“I told her that Mr. Feder and myself — that Feder asked me to get this mortgage to help him out and that incidentally it would help me out due to the fact that I was doing so much business with him, and I had to have these papers to present, that he would not put them on record: — just a matter of showing somebody that he had these papers. I was present at the time she signed this instrument.”

He further testifies that after he received the mortgage he turned it over to Feder. He says that Feder took the mortgage, and he does not know what he did with it. As a matter of fact, we think the preponderance of the evidence shows, as the master finds, that the notes and mortgage were executed as an accommodation to Hachtman and that he delivered the same to Feder in consideration of money which Feder loaned to him about this time. Seven of the notes which matured prior to the death of Feder were paid by checks from Samuel J. Hachtman, and the evidence leaves no doubt that about this time Feder actually loaned to Hachtman a sum of money which, with the commission, amounted to the exact amount of the notes secured by this mortgage.

Theré is no dispute as to the general rule which obtains in this State that in equity the purchaser of notes secured by a trust deed or mortgage is an assignee only and takes the deed and mortgage subject to all the defenses which might have been interposed by the mortgagor. That rule is laid down in the well-known case of Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188, and has been consistently followed ever since. Miller v. Larned, 103 Ill. 562; Naef v. Potter, 226 Ill. 628; Ridings v. Hynds, 154 Ill. App. 429, and many other cases might be cited. As an examination of the opinions filed in these cases discloses, the basis for the doctrine is found in that maxim of equity which declares that where the equities are equal, the first in order of time must prevail — a principle which, it is perfectly apparent, must give way where the original maker of the notes and mortgage has made and delivered the same as accommodation paper to a third person. To apply the maxim under such circumstances would amount .to a judicial approval of the perpetration of a fraud— always abhorent to a court of equity. As was said in Miller v. Larned, supra:

“To allow the equities existing between the original parties to accommodation paper secured by mortgage to prevail over the equities of the assignee of the note would be to carry the doctrine of Olds v. Cummings to such an unreasonable extent as would ensnare honest dealers in such securities.”

The master found that this note and trust deed were turned over to Feder by Hachtman as collateral or in payment of a principal existing indebtedness and that this was a valid consideration for the note and mortgage. McIntire v. Yates, 104 Ill. 491; First Nat. Bank of Crown Point v. Davis, 146 Ill. App. 462; McLeish v. Hanson, 157 Ill. App. 605.

These facts are found by the master and have been approved by the chancellor, and we have no right to set them aside unless they are clearly and manifestly against the weight of the evidence. Cahill v. Lauf, 133 Ill. App. 607; Nimmons v. Lyon & Healy, 197 Ill. App. 376; Klekamp v. Klekamp, 275 Ill. 98. We cannot so find.

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Related

Olds v. Cummings
31 Ill. 188 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
Miller v. Larned
103 Ill. 562 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1882)
McIntire v. Yates
104 Ill. 491 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1882)
Lang v. Metzger
69 N.E. 493 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)
Naef v. Potter
80 N.E. 1084 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1907)
Stearns v. Glos
85 N.E. 335 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
James H. Rice Co. v. McJohn
91 N.E. 448 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Burr v. Beckler
264 Ill. 230 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1914)
Klekamp v. Klekamp
275 Ill. 98 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1916)
Cahill v. Lauf
133 Ill. App. 607 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1907)
First National Bank of Crown Point v. Davis
146 Ill. App. 462 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1909)
Ridings v. Hynds
154 Ill. App. 429 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)
McLeish v. Hanson
157 Ill. App. 605 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)
Nimmons v. Lyon & Healy
197 Ill. App. 376 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
253 Ill. App. 469, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foreman-trust-savings-bank-v-cohn-illappct-1929.