In the Matter of Estates of Lalla

1 N.E.2d 50, 362 Ill. 621
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1936
DocketNos. 23199, 23200, 23201. Orders affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 N.E.2d 50 (In the Matter of Estates of Lalla) 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
In the Matter of Estates of Lalla, 1 N.E.2d 50, 362 Ill. 621 (Ill. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

Three cases originating in the probate court of Cook county are here by appeal from the Appellate Court for the First District. For the purpose of consideration they were consolidated. The question in each case relates to the right of a conservator or guardian to invest the funds of his ward in notes or bonds which are a part of an issue of similar instruments, secured by a first real estate mortgage or trust deed, the remaining notes or bonds being held by other parties. Such securities, when so sold and distributed, are ordinarily called “split mortgage” securities. The funds in each case were derived from the United States Veterans’ Administration or its predecessor. The administrator of veterans’ affairs and the guardian ad litem of the several wards objected to the approval of the respective final accounts of the conservator of Joseph Lalla, the guardian of Elizabeth G. Waterbury and the sureties on the bond of the guardian of the Kellogg minors. For convenience the three cases will be referred to as the Lalla case, the Waterbury case and the Kellogg case.

The investments were made by purchases of the securities from different banks. In the Lalla case the conservator purchased a note for $1000, being one of a series of seventeen notes aggregating $16,000, made by William and Leah Fine. Lie also purchased a note for $500,- being one of forty-five first mortgage gold bonds aggregating $35,000, issued by the Hawthorne Roofing and Tile Company.

In the Waterbury case the guardian purchased two $500 first mortgage gold bonds of the Enterprise Parlor Furniture Company out of a total issue of $30,000. The notes and mortgages in both the Lalla case and the Waterbury case expressly provided they were payable without priority or preference. Each purchase was made by the conservator or guardian under the authority of a prior order of the probate court.

In the Kellogg case, pursuant to authority previously obtained from the probate court, the guardian purchased for his wards two $1000 first mortgage gold bonds executed by Eric and Esther L. Linn, out of eleven bonds aggregating $10,000, due serially on different dates. The two bonds purchased were a part of $9000 due on the last maturity date. The guardian also purchased for one of her wards, without a prior order of the court, a $250 first mortgage gold note executed by James P. and Mary McGee, being one of sixty-one notes amounting to $35,000, due serially on different dates. The $250 note was due on the next to the last maturity date. The guardian afterwards procured an order purporting to authorize the purchase of said note. She made purchases of the Anderson and the Schmitz notes without prior orders of the court, but such purchases were approved in her subsequent current accounts. The Anderson note was a first mortgage gold note for $500 made by Nils and Olga Anderson, belonging to an issue of sixteen notes aggregating $16,000, due serially on different dates, the first $5000 of which was paid before the guardian made his purchase. By a prior extension of all the unpaid notes the one purchased by the guardian and another note had first maturity in the series and were not in default. The Schmitz note was for $750 and was a part of a total of $21,000 represented by thirty-one notes, due serially on different dates. At the time of the hearing all of the notes purchased by this guardian, except the Anderson note, were in default. Unlike the notes in the Lalla and Waterbury cases, the trust deeds in the Kellogg case contained no parity clause, but each provided for acceleration of the whole debt in case of any default or breach.

The probate court overruled the objections in the Lalla case and in the Waterbury case but sustained them in the Kellogg case. On appeal to the circuit court the matters were submitted as agreed cases, and' the orders of that court were the same as in the probate court, except the objection to the purchase of the Anderson note in the Kellogg estate was overruled. On appeal to the Appellate Court the order of the circuit court in each case was affirmed. The appeal to this court is prosecuted by the guardian ad litem, H. R. Pool, and the administrator of veterans’ affairs, Frank T. Hines. The sureties of the guardian in the Kellogg case have a cross-appeal challenging the correctness of the order in that case except as to the Anderson note.

The powers and duties of conservators and guardians relating to the investment of the funds of their wards are governed by separate statutes substantially alike. Each statute imposes the duty of placing and keeping the ward’s money at interest upon securities to be approved by the court. The Guardian act (Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 64, sec. 22,) provides: “Loans upon real estate shall be secured by first mortgage thereon and not to exceed one-half the value thereof. No mortgage loan shall be made for a longer time than five years nor beyond the minority of the ward: Provided, the same may be extended from year to year without the approval of the court.” The act relating to conservators (Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 86, sec. 18,) provides: “Loans upon real estate shall be secured by first mortgage or trust deed thereon and not to exceed one-half the value thereof. All loans shall be subject to the approval of the court.” The parties are agreed that there is no substantial difference between the provisions of the two statutes.

The Conveyances act (Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 30, sec. 61, p. 829,) provides, and this court has held, that a trust deed in the nature of a mortgage is a mortgage in its legal effect. (Ware v. Schintz, 190 Ill. 189; Union Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. White, 106 id. 67.) The statutory requirements relating to investments by guardians and conservators are mandatory. (Chapman v. American Surety Co. 261 Ill. 594; Hughes v. People, 111 id. 457; McIntyre v. People, 103 id. 142.) They specify the securities upon which funds of a ward may be loaned, and in that regard they supersede the common law. (Gits v. Foreman, 360 Ill. 461; Hayes v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. 125 id. 626.) It is therefore unnecessary to consider the common law powers of guardians with respect to the kind of securities which can be accepted for loans. The issue narrows itself to the question of whether or not the several notes and bonds in controversy are secured by first mortgages approved by the court.

Appellants claim that the word “loans,” as used in the statute, embraces only the money advanced by the fiduciary, directly or indirectly, to the principal debtor; that the acquiring of existing notes secured by a first mortgage is not a loan but is an unauthorized investment; that the statute contemplates the mortgage must be first only as to a loan made by the fiduciary and excludes divided securities, and that its terms are plain and not subject to judicial construction. It is true that where language is unambiguous and conveys a clear meaning there is neither necessity nor authority for resorting to judicial construction. (Sup v. Cervenka, 331 Ill. 459.) The converse of that proposition is equally true. The statute does not define the term “loan.” According to the circumstances under which it is used it has been variously defined. Webster’s New International Dictionary gives several definitions of the term. Among them are: “That which one lends or borrows, esp. a sum of money lent at interest; as, he re-paid the loan.” (Beebe v. Kirkpatrick, 321 Ill.

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