Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.

217 Ill. App. 36, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 25
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1920
DocketGen. No. 25,361
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 217 Ill. App. 36 (Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.) 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
Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 217 Ill. App. 36, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 25 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding in chancery to foreclose a certain trust deed in which all the junior incumbrancers and lien claimants appearing of record are made defendants.

The cause proceeded to hearing upon the amendéd and substituted bill of complaint, answers of certain of the defendants, who set forth in such answers their several liens and claimed their several priorities, and replications of complainant to such answers. . The defendant Arthur E. Jones filed a. cross-bill seeking affirmative relief as to the claims and liens set out in his answer to complainant’s amended and substituted bill, and the defendant Ella H. Davis and others also filed their cross-bill praying for affirmative relief on the several claims and liens set .up in their respective answers, which involve two so-called equitable' mortgage liens on the real estate, the subject of the original foreclosure proceeding. Issues were joined on these cross-bills. However, the pleadings as such are not in controversy; therefore no further reference thereto will be made except as may hereafter be necessary to an understanding of the contentions projected into the writ of error before us.

Complainant’s bill was to foreclose a trust deed of what is known as the “Springer Building,” executed on June 5, 1913, by Marguerite Warren Springer (who subsequently intermarried with one Ed. Oliver and who will be hereinafter referred to as Mrs. Oliver) „to.the Chicago Title & Trust Company as trustee; conveying lots 3, 5, 6, 7 and 8 and the south 15 feet in width of lot 4 and the north 7y2 feet of lots 9 and 10, all in block 52; in School Section Addition to Chicago, etc., with the improvements thereon and everything therein contained, including the rents, issues and profits thereof.

The cause was referred to a master to take the proofs and report his findings of fact and law to the court, which he did, and a decree was° entered by the chancellor varying in some important particulars the recommendations of the master.

The decree ordered the mortgaged Springer property to be sold by the master in default of the payment of $356,035.89, the amount found due complainant, with directions to the master to pay certain other liens, hereinafter enumerated, in the chronological order of their enumeration, and if after so doing there should be a surplus from the proceeds of such sale still remaining in the master’s hands, he shall report the same to the court to abide its further order.

In the decree the priorities were fixed in the order enumerated as follows, the amounts found due being as of January 15, 1919, with interest thereon at 5 per cent per annum thereafter:

1. The amount found due complainant for unpaid principal and interest, including solicitors’ fees and moneys advanced for tax redemption, etc... $356,035.89

2. Amount due defendant Union Bank of Chicago under its trust deed...................... 30,062.50

3. Northern Trust Company as trustee under a trust deed securing a certain indebtedness. . 111,133.32

There is no dispute by any party in interest as to the correctness of the decree regarding the foregoing three items, either in amounts or priorities.

4. An amount due to certain parties, holders of certain notes of Mrs. Oliver, decreed to be secured by a so-called equitable mortgage upon the Springer property............................... 39,506.09

5. Amount due Ella H. Davis and others, also adjudged to be secured by a so-called equitable mortgage upon the Springer property................ 70,650

6. A subsisting lien in favor of Wheeling Corrugating Company to the amount of........... 1,115.37

7. To Arthur - R. Jones a valid and subsisting lien upon the Springer property to the amount of ..................................... 33,708.02

8. To Arthur R. Jones, owner of an indebtedness secured by a trust deed to Frank Schoenfeld, trustee, conveying the Springer property; amount found due thereon ................................ 66,712.65

9. That Samuel A. Albrecht as assignee of the First State Bank of Benson, in virtue of a judgment against Mrs. Oliver, entered in the superior court of Cook county, had a lien ujpon the Springer property to the amount of........................ 4.322.57

10. That the defendant Arthur R. Jones, and John T. Hetherington had a valid and subsisting lien upon the mortgaged premises ratably without priority of either over the other—

as to Arthur R. Jones in the sum of..... 1,758.16

as to John T. Hetherington in the sum of 1,062.41

11. That defendant Mercer Davis, as assignee of a judgment obtained by Frank Sullivan against Mrs. Oliver in the circuit court of DeWitt county, Illinois, has a valid lien upon the mortgaged premises, to the amount of .........'....................... 2,597

12. That the defendant W. A. Rowe had a valid and subsisting lien upon said mortgaged premises as assignee of a judgment obtained by the First State Bank of Benson against Mrs. Oliver et al., in the circuit court of Woodford county, Illinois, amounting to.................................. 6,097.48

13. That the defendants Ella H. Davis et al, as executors of the estate of George Perrin Davis, deceased, had a valid and subsisting lien upon said mortgaged premises as assignees of a judgment obtained by the German-American Bank of Bloomington in the circuit court of Cook county against Mrs. Oliver, amounting to........................... 3,857.98

Arthur R. Jones alone assigns errors on this record; they are ninety-three in number, but counsel have argued them under seven points, to which points we shall confine this opinion.

The first two points relate to and challenge the fourth and fifth liens, which are the so-called equitable morgage liens.

The third point questions the giving of an eighth lien to Jones for an item of $3,002.50 interest said to have been paid on Farwell notes.

The fourth point involves the item of $8,702 claimed to have been paid by Mrs. Oliver to Jones on the notes secured by trust deed to Frank Schoenfeld.

The fifth point relates to the holding that one of the sixteen $5,000 notes was for usurious interest.

The sixth point is a claim that it was error to deduct $2,400 paid by Jones on a lien claim for $5,832.93.

The seventh point complains of error in awarding a sixth lien to the Wheeling Corrugating Company claim. In the light of the conclusions at which we have arrived, it will be unnecessary to discuss this phase of the case.

We will first pass upon the priorities of the so-called equitable mortgages given priority in the decree, numbered 4 and 5 as aboye recited.

As to number 4, it appears that January 5, 1916, Mrs.

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217 Ill. App. 36, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hibernian-banking-assn-v-chicago-title-trust-co-illappct-1920.