Jackson v. May

28 Ill. App. 305, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 41
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 Ill. App. 305 (Jackson v. May) 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
Jackson v. May, 28 Ill. App. 305, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 41 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Lacey, P. J.

The appellee filed her bill in equity to foreclose her certain mortgage on certain real estate therein named, executed to her by Hiram Jackson and wife, William 8. Jackson, Z. Orlando Jackson, and James Jackson and wife, dated November 5, 1833, and acknowledged December 5, 18S3; made to secure three certain promissory notes, as follows: Two of said notes for a sum of §5,000 each, payable one year after date, to the appellee, with eight per cent, interest, dated October 1, 1883, and executed by Hiram Jackson, Z. Orlando Jackson, Wm. Dannell, Samuel J. Hayes, Noble 0. Baldwin, and Wm. S. Jackson; and one of the said notes payable to appellee, dated November 25,1883, for the sum of §10,887.50 drawing same rate of interest, and signed by Hiram Jackson and Z. Orlando Jackson, due October 1, 1885.

The defense made by all the signers of the first said men tioned notes as well as all the signers of the last mentioned notes, was only partial. It insists that subsequently to the execution of the notes and mortgage it was arranged between the appellee and respondents in the foreclosure proceeding, Hiram and W. S. Jackson and Wm. Dannell, that 240 acres of the land included in the mortgage should be sold to the son of Wm. Dannell, and that the purchase price thereof, which was §6,681.72, after outstanding incumbrances which were prior to said mortgage had been satisfied, should be applied as payment upon the said two §5,000 notes upon which the said Dannell was security; that, in pursuance of such agreement, Dannell purchased the land March 1, 1884, at said price, and paid therefor by giving his note and mortgage upon said land, but that appellee wrongfully applied the said amount, §6,681.72, upon the §10,867.50, instead of the first two mentioned notes.

The answer also sets up and insists on the defense of usury as against all the said notes, claiming that the loan was one entire transaction, and that the appellee reserved more than eight per cent, per annum interest on the amount, to wit, §1,720, by that amount being retained by H. N. Eyon, the agent and attorney of appellee, to procure the said loan of §20,867.50 as a bonus and charge for making the said loan over and above the rate of interest reserved in the notes, which was a device to evade the usury laws, and charges that appellee received a portion thereof and that Eyon advanced a portion of the money, to wit, §3,500. Hiram and W. S. Jackson were the principals on the said notes, and the other signers were only sureties. The original respondents, Wm. Dannell and Hiram Jackson, having died, Cephas D. Patterson, administrator of said Dannell, deceased, and Z. 0. Jackson, administrator oí Hiram Jackson, deceased, were made parties defendant. On March 4, 1887, final decree was rendered in the case, disallowing the claim of the wrongful entry-of the credit claimed and disallowing a claim for usury on the two first mentioned $5,000 notes, and allowing the claim of usury on the other note to the amount of $517.50. The court found due on the said two $5,000 notes the sum of $12,139.94, and on the other note $3,556.89, after deducting the usury and applying all payments, whether of principal or interest, in the principal, and also allowing $393.42 as attorney’s fee, as provided for by7 the mortgage.

The decree then ordered the sale of the premises to satisfy the decree rendered for the above amounts and costs of suit, and in case of deficiency in payment of the said note dated November 25,1883, W. S. Jackson and Z. O. Jackson, and the latter as administrator, etc., to pay the amount of the defi- . ciency of said note to appellee and for execution; and the court rendered a similar decree against the signers of the other notes for any deficiency remaining thereon, but against all the administrators to be paid in due course of administration.

From this decree Z. O. Jackson, administrator of the estate of Hiram Jackson, deceased, prosecutes this appeal, and the other respondents a writ of error, which two suits in this court have been consolidated.

The above appellant and plaintiffs in error assign several causes for error, and among them, and relied on in their brief, are, that the court erred in not making the credit on the two $5,000 notes, instead of the $10i,867.50 note, and in not ordering the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises to be first applied in the payment of the said two first named notes> and in not allowing the claim of usury as against all the notes, and rejecting all the interest retained in the several notes from their date till the time that, they respectively became due, and only computing interest on the balance due, after deducting all payments, whether for usury or otherwise, out of the principal of the first two notes of §5,000 each, on the several notes from the times they respectively fall due, and this court is asked to reverse the decree with directions to the court below to render a new decree on the principle above announced.

The only two questions, then, for us to pass upon here, are the questions of usury and the application of the payment of the proceeds of the land sold. Inasmuch as both questions depend to some extent upon the facts in the case as detailed in the evidence, we can more conveniently consider them together, and will do so.

How, first, as to the manner and circumstances of the negotiations and payment of the money borrowed, as represented in the mortgage. We will not undertake to go over the evidence in detail, but we have examined it with care, and are satisfied that substantially the following state of facts concerning the matter is correct: Hiram and W. S. Jackson were insolvent and had made an assignment for the benefit of their creditors, and were indebted to the amount of about $60,000, and having an opportunity to settle with their creditors for fifty cents on the dollar, wanted to borrow of the appellee about $24,000, and made this proposition to H. K. Ryon, an attorney residing in La Salle county, Illinois, to borrow such sum of appellee. Ryon had usually acted for the appellee, who resided in Kalamazoo, Michigan, in regard to her legal business, and sometimes concerning her loans, though as a rule she negotiated them herself.

This was some time prior to October 1, 1883, but at that time he could not give them any definite answer.

. In a few days, about the first of October of said year, or two or three days after, appellee came from her home in Michigan to La Salle county, Illinois, and there met one of the Jacksons personally, perhaps the father, as one was the father and the other the son, and refused to make the loan for the amount required, but agreed to loan them $10,000 on personal security named, the appellees who signed as sureties afterward being the ones agreed on. The notes of §5,000 now in question were drawn up by Ryon for appellee, and were given over to Jackson to procure the secuaity, who afterward procured the names to be attached.

The note was then placed in the hands of Ryon to hold till the money was sent by appellee. At this time only the rate of eight per cent, interest mentioned in the nóte was reserved or taken.

Some days afterward one of the Jacksons came to Ryon and made an earnest appeal to him to make an effort to obtain the balance of the desired amount, or at least $10,000 more, of appellee, she then having returned to Kalamazoo.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ill. App. 305, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-may-illappct-1888.