Frye v. President of the Bank ex rel. Hardin

11 Ill. 367
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 11 Ill. 367 (Frye v. President of the Bank ex rel. Hardin) 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
Frye v. President of the Bank ex rel. Hardin, 11 Ill. 367 (Ill. 1849).

Opinion

Opinion by Mr. Justice Trumbull :

The appellees, who were complainants in the Court below, filed their bill against John Shaw and William Frye, alleging that Shaw, for the purpose of securing various sums of money which he owed them, being chiefly borrowed monej', executed two mortgages, one to Atchison and the insurance companies, dated January 21, 1839, and recorded June 15, 1839; the other to the Bank of Illinois, dated April ”21, 1840, and recorded June 3, 1840 ; both mortgages being upon lands lying in Calhoun county. That a large amount of the indebtedness, to secure which said mortgages were given, remained unpaid; that there was a mistake in the description of one of the tracts of land included in the mortgage to Atchison and the insurance companies; that William Frj'e, the appellee, claimed to hold all of the lands included in the aforesaid mortgages, except one tract, under a mortgage purporting to have been executed to him by John Shaw, May 3, 1836, to have been acknowledged the same day, and recorded June 3, 1836—said mortgage to Frye, purporting to have been given to secure a note of $ 3,400, due January 1, 1840, drawn by Shaw in favor of Frye; that Frye foreclosed said mortgage without making the appellees parties, and wrongfully holds all of said lands, except two tracts, by purchase under his foreclosure ; that the mortgage to Frye was made subsequent to those made to the complainants, and so recorded as to appear to be recorded four years before it actually was ; that Frye, who was the recorder at the time, had annexed a false certificate of record ; that the mortgage to Frye was fraudulent and void, and given to hinder and delay the complainants in the collection of their just debts; that it w'as, in fact, made after the execution and delivery of the mortgages to the complainants ; that Frye obtained from Shaw a tax certificate to a portion of the lands mortgaged, to aid his defective title, which lands Shaw fraudulently permitted to be sold in 1840, for taxes of 1839, bought them in, in his own name, and subsequently, in 1844, transferred the same to Frye; that Frye afterwards obtained a deed for the same from the collector, and that the assignees of the Bank of Illinois, before the fraud of Frye was discovered, redeemed from him one of the tracts of land included in his mortgage, and obtained a quit claim deed for the same to David A. Smith, which deed they bring into Court and ask to have cancelled, and the sum paid Frye therefor refunded. The bill waives answers under oath, asks for the appointment of a receiver, to take charge of the lands, rent them out, &c., and prays that all the conveyances named in the bill as having been made to Frye, be set aside and annulled; that the lands respectively mortgaged to complainants be sold to satisfy the debts due them, and that Shaw be foreclosed of all equity of redemption in said lands; that the rents and profits go to complainants, and for general relief.

A receiver was appointed, and at the May term, 1847, of the Calhoun Circuit Court, a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The case was subsequently brought to this Court by writ of error, the decree of the Circuit Court reversed, and the cause remanded, with leave to the complainants to amend their bill. 5 Gilm., 332. In their amended bill, the complainants supply all the allegations which were wanting in the original bill, and aver that the deed from Frye to Smith, which had been cancelled by the former decree while it was in force, was properly cancelled, and the purchase money and interest rightfully recovered and received from said Frye; or, if not, the complainant, Smith, offers to return the money and interest, and asks to have another deed made. Shaw answered the original bill, admitting the execution of the mortgages to complainants, but claiming certain credits thereon, and Frye answered both the original and amended bills, admitting the execution of the notes and mortgages by the defendant, Shaw, as alleged in the bill, but denying any and all fraud in the execution and recording of the mortgage to himself, and alleging that it was honestly made and executed at the time it bears date.

The Circuit Court entered a pro forma decree, granting the relief prayed for, and the rendition of that decree is now assigned for error.

It is objected by appellant, in the first place, that those persons who are shown by the answers and evidence to have purchased portions of the property mortgaged to complainants, prior to the date of their mortgages, should have been made parties. Had they been made parties no decree could have been rendered against them; and it is a general rule, that no one need be made a party against whom, if brought to a hearing, the complainant could have no decree. Story’s Eq. Pl., sec. 234. No person who claims under a title paramount or prior to that sought to be enforced by the bill, and whose interests and title are not affected by the relief prayed for, need be made a party to a bill. Story’s Eq. Pl., sec. 230; Rose vs. Page, 2 Simons, 471; Lewis vs. Lord Zouche, ibid, 388; 1 Russell and Mylne, 656. The purchasers in this case were not, therefore, necessary-parties.

In support of the decree, the appellees rely upon three points: 1. That the mortgage to Frye was antedated and fraudulently recorded, as of a date some years before it was executed. 2. That it was for an inadequate consideration, and given to secure Frye in an ostensible sum, amounting to much more than Shaw really owed him. 3. That it was not bona fide, but made with the intent to delay, hinder and defraud the creditors of Shaw. The first and third points may be considered together, for if the mortgage to Frye was really executed and recorded in 1836, as it purports to have been, it can hardly be insisted that it was made to delay and hinder the complainants, as creditors, who did not become such till several years after-wards. The question of consideration will be considered in disposing of the second point. Was the mortgage to Frye, then, antedated and fraudulently recorded, as alleged ? This is the great question in the case, to settle which the parties have referred to many exhibits, and taken numerous depositions, which, with the pleadings, cover more than two hundred and ninety closely written pages. To refer in detail to all this mass of evidence, with a view of either reconciling or pointing out its inconsistencies, would swell this opinion to an unreasonable length, and be attended with little practical benefit, as the questions to be determined are chiefly questions of fact, and could not, therefore, be referred to as forming rules of decision in other cases. All the testimony has been carefully examined and considered, but in this opinion we shall only advert to more prominent and important parts of the evidence.

First, then, when was the mortgage executed? Upon its face it purports to have been executed May 3, 1836, and it is regularly acknowledged before John McDonald, a justice of the peace of Calhoun county, on the same day it bears date. The date of the acknowledgment is written out at length in the certificate. It is not pretended that there are any erasures, interlineations or other appearances upon the face of the mortgage and acknowledgment, to indicate that they were not really executed at the time they bear date. John McDonald, who took the acknowledgment, died in 1846, several years after all parties admit the mortgage was executed. No attempt is made to impeach his character for integrity, nor is it pretended that he was a man who would have affixed a false date to an official act.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ill. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frye-v-president-of-the-bank-ex-rel-hardin-ill-1849.