Jackson v. Horton

21 N.E. 490, 126 Ill. 566
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 490 (Jackson v. Horton) 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
Jackson v. Horton, 21 N.E. 490, 126 Ill. 566 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a bill filed in the Superior Court of Cook County by Huntington W. Jackson Receiver of the Third National Bank of Chicago, against Oliver H. Horton Receiver of the German Savings Bank of Chicago, Luther K. Tucker, William B. Gates, J. Young Scammon, J. Irving Pearce and Thomas M. Hoyne. The original bill was filed on March 13,1884, and an amended bill was afterwards filed on May 7, 1885. The amended bill alleges that Horton as Receiver made a deed to Tucker, which had the effect of conveying seventy acres of land when it was intended to convey only sixty acres, and that ten acres of the seventy equitably belonged to Jackson as Receiver and to Pearce and Scammon, and were held in trust for them by Horton. The prayer of the bill is for a reformation of the deed to Tucker so that it shall not pass the title to the ten acres, for a conveyance of the ten acres by Horton to the complainant, for a partition etc., and for “such other and further relief as equity may require.” The Court below dismissed the bill for want of equity and the ease is brought here by appeal.

Horton was appointed receiver in 1877 of the German Savings’ Bank by the Superior Court of Cook County in the case of Berls et al. v. The German Savings Bank, and found among its assets a note dated July 17, 1873, for $50,000.00 signed by George H. Ward and secured by a trust deed to Henry Greenebaum, the President óf the Bank, upon W. J S. W. J S. 35, T. 39, N. R. 13 E. in Cook County, containing 70 acres after deducting about 10 acres that were subject to Canal and Bailway rights. On February 6, 1878, he filed a bill in the Superior Court to foreclose this trust deed and made Jaekson as receiver, Scammon, Pearce, John H. Brown, Joseph T. Brown and Edgar F. Brown defendants thereto. . These defendants answered the bill and set up that, they owned an equitable -interest in the premises, which was alleged to be superior to the lien of the trust deed, and of which the Savings’ Bank was alleged to have had notice before it became the owner of the trust deed. The Browns were the original owners of this equitable interest and had assigned it as security for an indebtedness they owed to the Third National Bank of Chicago and to J. T. Scammon. The Third National Bank, in which Pearce was a stockholder to the amount of $200,000:00, had failed and Jackson was appointed Beceiver of it by the Comptroller of the Currency. He found among its assets the. claim against the Browns and the assignment of their interest in these premises, made to secure that claim.

It thus appears that, in the foreclosure suit, there was a controversy between Horton as Beceiver of the Savings’ Bank, on the one side, and Jackson as Beceiver of the National Bank, Scammon, Pearce and the Browns, on the other side. Negotiations were entered into between the-parties for a settlement of this controversy. Joseph T. Brown offered to procure conveyances to Horton of. the interests of Jackson as Receiver and of Pearce, Scammon, Ward, and the Browns in said premises, so as to vest in Horton a fee simple title thereto free of incumbrance, on condition that Horton, upon acquiring such title, should convey ten acres of the ■'property to Joseph T. Brown. On June 19, 1878, Horton, as Receiver, filed his petition in the Superior Court in the case of Berls et al. v. The German Savings Bank, recommending a compromise upon the terms thus stated and asking for authority to carry it out. Accordingly, on July 3, 1878, an order was entered hy the Court directing him, upon receiving the conveyances aforesaid together with releases of such dower interests as might exist, and upon becoming vested with an absolute title free of incumbrance on or before October 1,1878 to the premises in question, to convey ten acres thereof to the said Joseph T. Brown.

In pursuance of this order and in consummation of the settlement authorized hy it, Horton had obtained before December 21, 1878, an unencumbered title to the seventy acres subject to the rights of Pearce, Scammon and Jackson Receiver, as shown by the petitions and orders hereafter mentioned. The three Browns released to him all their interests in the property; it does not appear that the assignment they made to the Third National Bank was ever put on record. Jackson as receiver and Pearce and Horton as receiver signed a written stipulation, which was filed in the foreclosure suit on October 11, 1878, and is in the following words: “We hereby stipulate and consent that the answer of the defendants * * * Jackson as receiver and * * * Pearce be and the same are hereby withdrawn; all matters in difference with said defendants having been adjusted.” . Scammon testifies :• “I filed an answer in the'case of Horton v. Ward et al. I have never taken the answer off the files, although I consented that it should be withdrawn.” On October 12, 1878 the foreclosure suit was dismissed.

It is not shown that Ward, the maker of the trust deed, executed to the Eeceiver of the Savings Bank the conveyance contemplated by the order of July 3, 1878. But “acting upon the faith of such negotiations” for settlement, the parties in interest made no opposition to a. sale under the power contained in the trust deed. Accordingly the premises were advertised for sale and sold on October 14th 1878 by Greenebaum, the trustee, to Horton, as Eeceiver, for $54,186.00, the amount of the debt and interest. The usual trustee’s deed was executed by the trustee to the purchaser and recorded on February 25, 1879.

The receiver of the Savings’ Bank had not before December 21, 1878, and has not at any time since then conveyed to Joseph T. Brown or to any of the defendants in the foreclosure suit either ten acres or any other part of the premises in controversy. On that day he filed another petition in the Superior Court stating that he had obtained releases from the Browns; that he had foreclosed the deed of trust by advertisement and sale; that such “foreclosure was, however, subject to the alleged equities of the said Jackson as receiver and said Pearce and Scammon and upon the understanding and agreement that they should severally release all claims to the residue of said land on receiving a conveyance from your petitioner for ten acres thereof” etc.; that “it was impossible to accomplish the whole of said compromise * * * by October 1, 1878;” that, “by the conveyance of ten acres of said land, he can procure the release of all claims and equities of said Jackson as receiver * * * and of said Pearce and Scammon in all the remaining portions thereof” etc.; that it is for the interest of the estate “that he be again authorized to convey ten acres of said land to procure releases of said parties and perfect his said title in the remainder thereof,-” and praying that he may be directed “as such receiver to convey * * * his * *■ * interest in ten acres of said land, such ten acres to be selected by your petitioner” etc., * * * upon your petitioner receiving from said Jackson * * * and * * * Pearce and J. Y. Scammon a full release * * * of all estate, right, claim or equity * * * with release of all dower right in * * * the said remaining portion of the said lands included in said deed of trust” etc.

In accordance with the prayer of this petition an order was entered by the Court on January 2, 1879, which, after “finding the facts stated in said petition to be true,” proceeds as follows: “It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that Oliver H.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 490, 126 Ill. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-horton-ill-1888.