Ingram v. Ingram

71 Ill. App. 497, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 71
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 Ill. App. 497 (Ingram v. Ingram) 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
Ingram v. Ingram, 71 Ill. App. 497, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 71 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. J ustioe Dibell

delivered the opinion oe the Court.

Seth Ingram died testate June 12, 1895, leaving a number of children, among whom are appellant and appellee. This suit originated in the Probate Court of La Salle County by the filing of a petition by said' Samuel R. Ingram in the estate of said Seth Ingram, deceased, asking that the executors be ordered to pay two certain mortgage debts, which it was alleged deceased in his lifetime had assumed and agreed to pay, and to refund to petitioner certain interest he had paid thereon. All parties in interest, including the holders of said mortgage debts, were made defendants to the proceeding and were duly summoned, and George Ingram and others answered. There was a hearing and an order directing said executor to pay one of said mortgages, and to refund to petitioner interest ■ paid by him thereon, and disallowing the prayer of the petition as to the other mortgage. George Ingram appealed to the Circuit Court, where there was another hearing and a like order, from which he appeals to this court. JSTo cross-errors are assigned, and as the mortgage disallowed had no important connection with the transaction hereinafter set forth, it will not be further mentioned.

The facts are not disputed and are as follows: On and prior to February 3, 1894, Samuel R. Ingram owned a farm of one hundred and seven acres, being those parts of the southwest quarter of section 6, and of the northwest quarter of section 7, which lie west of the Illinois Central Railroad in Groveland township, La Salle county, Illinois. Upon said lands was an unpaid mortgage, executed by Samuel and his wife to Lewis J. Hodge, of Wenona, Ill., given in March, 1892, securing a note of Samuel for the principal sum of $6,000, with interest at seven per cent per annum, payable five years from date, and on which note the interest for 1893 had not been paid. Samuel was also owing his father, Seth, a note, dated October 22, 1892, due one year after date, for the principal sum of $3,500, with interest at six per cent per annum. Whether there was any interest due and unpaid on this note does not appear. On February 3, 1894, Samuel sold and conveyed said farm to his father by warranty deed for the sum of $10,700, which consideration was made up of the Hodge note, principal and back interest for 1893, all of which the father assumed and agreed to pay, and for the balance the father agreed to turn over all notes and accounts he had against Samuel. The deed from Samuel contained this provision: “ This deed is made subject to a certain mortgage, dated in 1892, wherein Lewis J. Hodge is mortgagee, for the sum of $6,000, at seven per cent interest, said sum being due in five years after date, and being part of said consideration.” The parties also at the same time signed a separate written agreement, wherein they recited that Samuel had sold to Seth one hundred and seven acres, more or less, for $100 per acre; that Seth was to assume the mortgage of $6,000, given to L. J. Hodge, of Wenona, Illinois, and that for the remainder of said payment, Seth was to turn over all notes and accounts he had against Samuel, in full to date. The agreement then described the land, and Seth therein further agreed to pay the interest on the $6,000 mortgage for 1893. The principal sums of said assumed mortgage and surrendered note amounted to $9,500. The back interest on said notes would nearly bring the total up to the $10,700 called for by the deed, and the written agreement implies there were other notes and accounts held by the father against Samuel, which were to complete the consideration for the deed. On the same day Seth gave Samuel another paper, bearing that date and signed by Seth, the body of which reads as follows: “ This is to certify that I have received of Samuel E. Ingram all moneys and accounts in full to date.” On the same day Seth and his son, Samuel, also executed another written instrument, by which Seth leased said lands to Samuel for five years, beginning March 1,1894, and ending March 1, 1899. As rent, Samuel agreed to deliver two-fifths of the corn and oats, and also to pay $50 a year for the grass land, orchard, garden and building. No proof was introduced that in any way attacked these transactions. The consideration was adequate; both parties were competent to transact the business, and great pains was taken to have the papers fully express their agreements. By those papers Samuel parted with his land, and then leased it from his father for five years for an adequate rent. In return for his land his debts to his father were canceled, and provision was made that his father should pay the $6,000 Hodge note and mortgage, with the back interest overdue thereon.

The law is well settled in this State that where a grantee in a deed conveying lands upon which there is a mortgage securing a debt, assumes and agrees to pay said debt as a part of the consideration for which the lands are conveyed to him, he thereby becomes personally liable to the mortgagee for the payment of said debt, and may be sued at law for said debt by the mortgagee, and may also be held responsible for any deficiency upon a foreclosure of the mortgage and sale of the premises. Dean v. Walker, 107 Ill. 540; Daub v. Englebach, 109 Ill. 267; Bay v. Williams, 112 Ill. 91; Schmidt v. Glade, 126 Ill. 485; Fish v. Glover, 154 Ill. 86; Hume v. Brower, 25 Ill. App. 130; Way v. Both, 58 Ill. App. 198. Hpon the completion of said transactions of February 3, 1894, Seth Ingram became personally liable to Hodge to pay him at once the back interest, and to pay him the future installments of interest and the principal debt as each should become due. This did not interfere with Samuel Ingram’s liability to Hodge. Hodge thereafter had the right to hold both Samuel and Seth liable to him as principal debtors; but as between Seth and Samuel, Seth became the principal debtor, and Samuel a surety, and as between them the mortgaged property became the primary fund. If in this state of the case Seth had died, Hodge could have secured the allowance of the claim against Seth’s estate; he could have sued Samuel at law and collected from him; he could have foreclosed the mortgage and had a deficiency decree against Samuel and also a deficiency decree against the executor to be paid in due course of administration. If Samuel had paid all or any part of the debt, either voluntarily or by compulsion, he could have filed a claim therefor against his father’s estate and secured its allowance. In no way could Samuel have been compelled' to relieve the estate of his father from the final payment of the debt. It was only in the event that the land mortgaged and his father’s other estate should prove inadequate to pay the debt, that any final loss could fall upon Samuel because of said mortgage debt.

But before Seth’s death another transaction occurred between them. By a warranty deed dated and acknowledged November 30, 1894, and duly filed for record, Seth Ingram conveyed to his son, Samuel, this one hundred and seven acres in La Salle county, and eighty acres in Marshall county, for the expressed consideration of one dollar, said grantor therein reserving to himself the coal underlying said real estate, and the right to mine and remove the same, and reserving to himself and to his estate in case of his death the possession of said real estate for the period of five years from the date of said deed, and so long thereafter as said Seth should live. Nothing in the evidence assails the validity of this instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ill. App. 497, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-ingram-illappct-1897.