Hong Sik In v. Kiyoko Cheng

232 Ill. App. 3d 165
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 8, 1991
DocketNo. 1—90—0516
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 232 Ill. App. 3d 165 (Hong Sik In v. Kiyoko Cheng) 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
Hong Sik In v. Kiyoko Cheng, 232 Ill. App. 3d 165 (Ill. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE LORENZ

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Hong Sik In, filed an action to quiet title to resolve a dispute over the parties’ competing rights in a parcel of commercial property. At trial, the parties entered an agreed statement of facts pursuant to which the trial judge, after assessing the various transactions through which the parties claimed their rights, held that plaintiff had no real property rights in the subject property. Therefore, the trial judge dismissed defendants-appellees Affiliated Bank, North Shore National and Hicks, Burton & Associates, Ltd. The trial judge also entered a finding under Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (134 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)), and further ordered that the plaintiff could pursue a claim for money damages in the law division against the remaining defendant, Kiyoko Cheng. Plaintiff appealed. In our initial opinion we held that plaintiff, who acquired her rights through one of the beneficiaries of the land trust, could not prevail over the rights of a holder of a subsequently acquired interest in the real property. In reaching our disposition, we refrained from applying an exception to the rule which precludes beneficiaries of a land trust from effectively conveying the real property held in the trust. We have reconsidered this case in light of the inequities to plaintiff and the peculiar facts contained in the record. We now believe that the proper course is to reverse and remand this case for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.

We begin with a statement of the facts as they appeared in our initial opinion. The subject property is located at 3342-44 West Foster Avenue in Chicago. In 1976, defendant Kiyoko Cheng and her husband, as legal title holders, conveyed the subject property to an Illinois land trust, naming the La Salle National Bank as trustee and reserving to themselves the sole beneficial interest in the trust. The trust agreement provided, among other things, that the trustee had full power and authority to sell and convey the trust property.

In 1981, Kiyoko Cheng as seller and plaintiff (Hong Sik In) as buyer entered into an installment contract for the sale of the property for $100,000. Cheng was represented by an attorney, Philip Igoe. The plaintiff, who had just arrived in this country from Korea, had someone assist her but she did not know if he was an attorney. The signed installment contract did not account for the interests of Cheng’s husband or their trustee.

The installment contract was recorded in the office of the Cook County recorder of deeds on July 28, 1981. The contract required plaintiff to pay Cheng $30,000 as down payment, $771 per month for two years, and the balance of $70,000 on or before September 1, 1984. Plaintiff paid the $30,000 down payment.

In 1982, Cheng and plaintiff drafted a novation to the contract because Cheng was “in need of additional money which [was] not presently due.” The novation provided that, if plaintiff paid another $20,000 toward the balance, the due date for the final payment would be extended beyond 1984. Plaintiff paid the $20,000. However, the novation was not recorded. In the trial court, two versions of the novation were produced thereby creating a factual dispute whether the due date was extended to 1986 or 1991.

In 1986, plaintiff leased the premises to Lee Shin (tenant), who renovated the property into a Korean restaurant with an adjacent apartment. Tenant continued to pay rent to the plaintiff until the time of this litigation.

Defendant-appellee Hicks, Burton & Associates, Ltd. (Hicks Corporation), a real estate investment company, consisted of three principals: George Hicks, Ben Burton, and Darryl Wilkes. The three men incorporated their business in 1986 with the assistance of the above-mentioned attorney, Philip Igoe.

In 1987, Hicks Corporation arranged for the purchase of the subject property from Cheng for $60,000. Even though George Hicks, Igoe and Cheng were all social acquaintances, in his deposition Hicks denied that he knew that Igoe represented Cheng in her 1981 installment contract with plaintiff. Hicks testified that he approached Cheng about buying the property and she proposed a $60,000 sale price. Cheng also told Hicks that she had sold the property to the plaintiff by an installment contract but plaintiff was not making the required payments. Cheng explained to Hicks that she could not afford to foreclose on the contract and wanted to sell the property quickly. She gave Hicks a copy of the installment contract and the novation. After reading the novation, Hicks concluded that plaintiff’s contract had expired because the original due date had passed and because the novation was not enforceable.

However, Hicks further testified that he spoke with the plaintiff and the tenant prior to purchasing the property from Cheng. In his deposition, Hicks admitted that plaintiff told him that she owned the building. Plaintiff’s tenant also told him that the plaintiff owned the building and that the building was paid for.

Nonetheless, Hicks contacted Igoe to discuss the prospect of Hicks Corporation purchasing the property. Igoe told him that he had represented Cheng in the past; that another party (plaintiff) claimed an interest in the property; but that Hicks Corporation could still obtain possession to the property. Hicks admitted that while planning for the purchase of the property he and his partners considered the possible litigation costs in view of plaintiff’s adverse claim.

Hicks next contacted defendant-appellee Affiliated Bank, North Shore National (Affiliated Bank). Hicks testified that he gave Joan Bas-sak, an officer with Affiliated Bank, a copy of the installment contract and novation that he received from Cheng. Affiliated Bank agreed to extend to Hicks Corporation a $45,000 mortgage loan for the purchase of the property.

Igoe supervised the closing on the property and another attorney from Igoe’s office suite represented Cheng. Hicks Corporation made an $18,000 down payment to Cheng and paid the balance of tlie purchase price with a check from Affiliated Bank. La Salle National Bank as trustee of the 1976 Illinois land trust then conveyed the property to another trust with Affiliated Bank as trustee and with Hicks Corporation as beneficiary. Igoe was designated legal counsel for Affiliated Bank as trustee. The trust agreement provided, however, that the beneficiary had full power and authority to sell and convey the trust property.

After completing the transaction, Hicks Corporation served a five-day notice on plaintiff’s tenant and then filed an eviction action based on the tenant’s failure to pay Hicks Corporation rent. Plaintiff filed motions to enjoin the eviction action and to quiet title to the property. Then, Hicks Corporation negotiated a contract with a third party for the sale of the property for $95,000. Plaintiff, in turn, filed motions requesting the court to enjoin the sale of the property and to remove Igoe as attorney for both Hicks Corporation and Affiliated Bank as trustee. Igoe withdrew as counsel in both capacities.

In March 1988, Affiliated Bank as mortgagor filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s motion to quiet title. There is no indication that Hicks Corporation joined this motion.

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Bluebook (online)
232 Ill. App. 3d 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hong-sik-in-v-kiyoko-cheng-illappct-1991.