Grigaitis v. Gaidauskis

214 Ill. App. 111, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 200
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 30, 1919
DocketGen. No. 24,118
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 214 Ill. App. 111 (Grigaitis v. Gaidauskis) 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
Grigaitis v. Gaidauskis, 214 Ill. App. 111, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 200 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by defendants Gaidauslds from a decree of the Superior Court of Cook county finding that the complainant is entitled to an equitable lien on certain real estate which was purchased by them— in part at least—with money he advanced.

The bill of complaint and amendments allege that complainant loaned to the defendants on or about July 3, 1912, the sum of $1,500, with the express understanding and agreement that the defendants would use said sum in the purchase of certain real estate, which is described as follows:

“Lot twelve (12) in Block five (5) in Gage, LeMoyne Hubbard and others subdivision of the east half (E. %) of the southeast quarter (S. E. 14) of Section thirty-two (See. 32) Township thirty-nine (T. 39) north, Range fourteen east of the Third Principal Meridian.”

That the defendants would thereafter execute and deliver a mortgage thereon to fully secure the repayment to the complainant of said loan together with interest; that the money so loaned was, pursuant to the “original understanding and agreement,” invested by the defendants in said property and constituted part of the purchase price; that he had requested the defendants to either repay the sum loaned or else execute and deliver the mortgage provided for in the agreement. The bill concludes with a prayer for a lien on the real estate and that a mortgage be executed thereon by defendants and delivered to complainant, and for general relief.

In their answer the defendants deny the alleged loan of $1,500, or any part of such a, sum, but admit buying the property on July 29,1912, from one August Barz for the sum of $3,000 cash, subject to an incumbrance of $2,500; that the money paid was accumulated from their savings, rents, and the proceeds of the sale of other real estate.

On March 24, 1917, the matter was referred to a master in chancery, and subsequently his report and the evidence were filed in court. It was then ordered that the objections to the master’s report stand as exceptions before the court. On March 26, 1917, the defendants executed and delivered to William H. Jamagan their trust deed of the above described real estate and also certain notes to secure the payment of the sum of $3,000. Thereupon complainant filed his supplemental bill against the Central Manufacturing District Bank and William H. Jamagan, defendants, charging them, among other matters, with conspiring with the defendants to incumber the property in question. The Central Manufacturing Bank and Jamagan filed their answer and, among other things, deny that they conspired to defraud complainant or to cloud the real estate described in the amended bill, but state that they received the notes described for a good and valuable consideration.

The master’s report finds that on July 3, 1909, the complainant loaned the defendants the sum of $300, and on July 3, 1912, loaned them the sum of $1,200, and that it was agreed then and there that the loans should bear 4 per cent interest; that these amounts were “to be invested in the purchase of the real estate described in complainant’s amended bill”; that the defendants did thereafter on July 29, 1912, so invest said money; “that it was further agreed at the time the loan was so made that they would repay it at the expiration of one year; that it was further agreed that they would give complainant a trust deed or mortgage on the said real estate described to secure said loan”; that the amount due the complainant from defendants on July 9, 1917 (the date of the report) was the sum of $1,801.15; that the defendant Central Manufacturing District Bank, during the pendency of the suit, loaned the defendants $2,432 secured by trust deed to William H. Jarnagan as trustee on the property in question; that the complainant is entitled to an equitable lien on the property to the extent of his claim with interest; that the defendants should repay said amount within 30 or 60 days or the property be sold to satisfy the lien; that the trust deed to Jarnagan is subject to the lien of the complainant.

Defendants filed objections to each finding of the master, all of which were overruled. The court ordered that all exceptions to the master’s report be overruled and the report approved and confirmed in all things. A decree was entered on October 22, 1917, in conformity with the master’s findings of fact and law, ordering that the complainant be given an equitable lien upon the real estate described in the amended bill of complainant and the master’s report, as security for the payment to him by the defendants of his claim, by reason of his loan to them, amounting to the sum of $1,826.92, together with the master’s and stenographer’s fees, and that unless payment be made in full within 40 days, the property be sold, etc.

The complainant and defendants are Lithuanians, and testified through an interpreter.. Mrs. Gaidauskis is the daughter of complainant’s sister. The men when they first came to the United States were laborers. The complainant got employment in a street car shop in the repair gang fixing cars, and for seven years was paid $3 a day up to the time he made the loan to the defendants. His board and lodging cost him $12 a month. Gaidauskis made $2.20 a day, with $3 to $5 extra time each month, for about 6 years. It cost him about $6 a week to live prior to his marriage in 1907, and as another source of income, his wife kept roomers at the rate of $3.50 a month each.

The complainant testified that on July 3, 1912, the defendants asked him to lend them $1,500; that he told them he would let them have $1,200, and that, with the former loan of $300 which he had made them, it would make $1,500; that the same morning he went to get the money out of the three banks in which he had it deposited; that he handed the money to the defendants and said he could lend it for one year; that the interest should be 4 per cent; that they promised that if they did not pay the loan within the year they would give him a mortgage. It was admitted by defendants ’ counsel at the trial that he examined the bank books and found that the complainant had on deposit in the Peoples’ Stock Yards State Bank $921, which was withdrawn by complainant on July 3, 1912; that complainant'also had on deposit $210 in Melschavicz’s bank, which was withdrawn by complainant on July 3, 1912; that the complainant also withdrew $100 from Olzewski’s bank on the same day.

Melschavicz testified that he was a banker and real estate man and handled the deal in question for the defendants; that defendant Kazimiers Gaidauskis deposited in his bank, according to the entries in his books, on July 3, 1912, the sum of $1,100. The evidence shows that the defendants bought the property in question on July 29,1912, and paid the sum of $3,000 in cash and assumed an incumbrance, then on the property, amounting to the sum of $2,500.

The defendants, after the purchase of the property, took possession and were occupying it at the time of the trial. Some time during the following 2 years they paid off the $2,500 incumbrance, but failed to pay the complainant. On November 19, 1914, the complainant asked them to execute a note for $1,500 payable to him and a trust deed on the property to secure the same. This they refused to do.

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143 B.R. 118 (N.D. Illinois, 1992)
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128 N.E.2d 616 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1955)
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Bluebook (online)
214 Ill. App. 111, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigaitis-v-gaidauskis-illappct-1919.