Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Davis

129 N.E. 540, 295 Ill. 537
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1920
DocketNo. 13452
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 540 (Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Davis) 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
Hibernian Banking Ass'n v. Davis, 129 N.E. 540, 295 Ill. 537 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

On August 1, 1917, J. Wallace Wakem filed a bill in ■ the circuit court of Cook county to foreclose a first-lien trust deed upon the premises known as the Sprihger building, located in Chicago'. Some time thereafter the Hibernian Banking Association, a defendant in error here, was substituted as sole complainant and Wakem was made defendant. The bank filed its amended and substituted bill of complaint, in which all junior mortgagees, lien claimants and judgment creditors, including the plaintiffs in error and defendant in error Arthur R. Jones, were made parties defendant. The issues were made up and the cause referred to the master. Upon his report numerous exceptions were made, some of which were sustained by the chancellor, who entered a decree of foreclosure and sale of the premises, fixing the following liens in order of their priorities: (i) Hibernian Banking Association $356,035.89; (2) Union Bank of Chicago under trust deed to Charles E. Schlytern, trustee, $30,062.52; (3) Northern Trust Company, trustee under trust deed to John A. Earwell, trustee, $111,133.32. The correctness of the decree regarding these liens and their priority is not disputed. The decree as regards those liens was affirmed by the Appellate. Court, and the correctness of the judgment of the Appellate Court is not raised here, so these claims require no further consideration. Nine other liens, amounting to $227,529.75, were decreed. As liens 4 to 8, inclusive, are the only 'ones in controversy here, liens 9 to 13 need not be set out. Liens 4 to 8 were as follows:

(4) Amount due plaintiffs in error German-American State Bank of Gridley, 111.; City Bank of Portage, Wis.; Anna B. T. Overesch, as administratrix of the estate of Henry B. Overesch, deceased; Mercer Davis, individually; Ella H. Davis, David Davis and Mercer Davis, as executors of the estate of George Perrin Davis, deceased, and J. J. Kennell,—¿11 of whom were found by the 24th paragraph of the decree to have a fourth lien on a portion of the property by reason of the instrument dated January 5, 1916, recorded January 13, .1916, (known as Kennell Exhibit No. 2,) which was decreed to be a fourth lien in the nature of an equitable mortgage securing sundry notes of Marguerite Warren Springer, $39,506.

(5) Amount due Ella H. Davis, David Davis and Mercer Davis, as executors of the estate of George Perrin Davis, deceased, who by the 25th paragraph of the decree were found to have a fifth lien upon the entire premises by reason of the instrument dated January 31, 1916, (Davis Exhibit 42,) recorded February 2, 1916, which was decreed to be a fifth lien in the nature of an equitable mortgage securing sundry notes of Marguerite Warren Springer, $70,650.

(6) A mechanic’s lien in favor of the Wheeling Corrugating Company to the amount of $1115.37.

(7) To defendant in error Arthur R. Jones a seventh lien by reason of the so-called Angus mechanic’s lien assigned tO' Jones, to the amount of $33,708.02.

(8) To Arthur R. Jones, owner of notes secured by a trust deed to Frank Schoenfeld, trustee, executed and recorded some months after the recording of the two instruments above mentioned creating the fourth and fifth liens, respectively, $66,712.65.

The circuit court also- found that payments amounting to $8702 should be credited on lien 8, which was a trust deed originally for $80,000, and that Mrs. Springer had paid the sum of $5000 usury, which, together with interest, was likewise deducted from the $80,000 mortgage lien.

The judgment of the Appellate Court eliminated liens 4 and 5 and held that liens 7 and 8 of Arthur R. Jones should become fifth and sixth liens, advancing lien 6 in favor of the Wheeling Corrugating Company to the position of fourth lien, and reversed the finding of the circuit court allowing credits for payment of $8702 on said $80,000 lien and of $5000 as usury, and held that said lien should be decreed for the full amount and interest, less payments made by Mrs. Springer.

Plaintiffs in error assign as error here, first, that the Appellate Court erred in reversing the decree of the circuit court and eliminating the amounts found due as fourth and fifth liens by the circuit court; second, that it erred in reversing the finding of the circuity court as to the defense of usury against Jones’ trust deed for $80,000, it being contended by plaintiffs in error that the sum of $5000 had been paid to the defendant in error Jones by Mrs. Springer for the loan of the $80,000. The third assignment of error is to the judgment of the Appellate Court reversing the finding and decree of the circuit court that there was due but $66,712.65 on the trust deed of Jones for $80,000.

It appears from the evidence in relation to the controverted matters here, that Marguerite Warren Springer, a widow who later married a man named Oliver, was the owner of the property known as the Springer building, on Canal street, in Chicago. Prior to September, 1915, she' had incumbered it with three mortgages aggregating the principal sum of $475,000. In the fall of 1915 she met E. L. Coyle and told him she was contemplating selling said premises and that they were worth in excess of a million and a half dollars; that she valued the building at two million dollars. In the early part of December, 1915, she entered into negotiations with Coyle for the purchase of a farm in Minnesota. These negotiations were finally completed on the 5th of January, and Mrs. Springer executed seventeen notes in amounts varying from $1000 to $4000, sixteen of which notes were offered in evidence in the case, totaling the principal amount of $35,428. These notes later came into the hands of various parties, plaintiffs in error in this suit. One of the notes for $2000 appears to have been surrendered ti> Mrs. Springer. These notes were referred to and covered liy an instrument dated January 5, 1916, signed and sealed by Mrs. Springer, as follows:

“Chicago, Illinois, January 5, ipió.
“The undersigned, Marguerite Warren Springer, of Chicago, . Illinois, has this day executed her seventeen principal promissory notes, numbered 1 to 17, both inclusive, aggregating the principal of $35,428, payable to the order of herself and by her indorsed, with interest at six per cent per annum, payable at the Central Trust Company of Illinois, and she hereby declares that she is the owner of the said real estate premises known as 306-308-310-312-314-316 and 318 S. Canal street, Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, and hereby agrees with the holder or holders of said notes that in case or whenever she sells or otherwise disposes of said real estate premises she will cause the said notes to be paid out of the proceeds thereof.
Marguerite Warren Springer. (Seal)”

These notes, which with interest up to the time of. the decree entered in the circuit court amounted to' $39,506, were by the circuit court found to constitute a valid fourth lien in the nature of an equitable mortgage by reason of the writing of January 5. During the latter part of January, 1916, Mrs. Springer met Coyle in Bloomington, Illinois, and executed notes aggregating $60,000, three of the notes being for the sum of $10,000 each, one for $5000 “ and one for $25,000, which notes are held by plaintiffs in error Ella H.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 540, 295 Ill. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hibernian-banking-assn-v-davis-ill-1920.