Kozien v. Vikidal

276 Ill. App. 9, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 254
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 20, 1934
DocketGen. No. 36,790
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 276 Ill. App. 9 (Kozien v. Vikidal) 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
Kozien v. Vikidal, 276 Ill. App. 9, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 254 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainant, Alexandra Kozien, filed her bill in the superior court of Cook county to foreclose a trust deed given to secure a note for the sum of $6,000, dated May 30, 1928, due and payable three years after the date thereof, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, evidenced by interest notes. Both principal and interest notes were made payable at the office of Konrad Ricker who made the loan. The principal note and a trust deed to Konrad Ricker, trustee, together with the interest notes, were executed by the defendants, Jozef Vikidal and Katerina Vikidal, his wife. Defendants filed a plea in which it was alleged that the principal and interest notes had been paid in full to Konrad Ricker, the trustee in the trust deed, who, the plea alleges, was the agent of the legal holder and owner of the trust deed and notes, and authorized and empowered to receive the payments so made for and on behalf of the legal holder and owner of the trust deed and notes, who did not appoint any other place of payment, or request defendants to make payment to her, and that Konrad Ricker, as such trustee in the trust deed, had executed and delivered to the defendants ,a deed releasing all rights under such trust deed.

The cause was referred to a master on the issues raised by the plea. The master heard the evidence and reported and found that the note for $6,000 remained wholly unpaid and recommended that the plea of payment be overruled and a decree of foreclosure entered. Upon a hearing on exceptions filed to the master’s report, the court sustained the exceptions and entered a decree finding that the note had been paid in full, and dismissed the bill for want of equity.

There seems to be little dispute about the facts in the case. The note for $6,000, secured by the trust deed, was executed, as alleged, and, by its terms, matured on May 30, 1931. The note and trust deed were purchased from Ricker by the complainant in May, 1928. On July 3, 1930, the defendants paid Ricker, the trustee, $3,000, on November 29, 1930, $1,000, and on July 10, 1931, $2,000 on account of principal, the first two payments having been made before the maturity of the note. All instalments of interest were paid by the defendant to Ricker, and by him paid to the complainant. The interest notes were surrendered by the complainant to Ricker upon the receipt of payments thereof from him. The interest was paid to the complainant by Ricker for a year after the note became due, but the complainant had no knowledge of any of the payments having been made on account of the principal. Complainant was in possession and control of the principal note and trust deed during all of the time after they were purchased by her. On June 2, 1932, without knowledge of the complainant, Ricker executed and delivered to defendants a release deed, releasing the lien of the trust deed. This deed was recorded by Ricker. Complainant and defendants never met until after all of the payments had been made to Ricker. It is the contention of the complainant that Ricker had no authority to receive payment of any part of the principal of the $6,000 note secured by the trust deed, or to release the trust deed. It is the contention of defendants that Ricker was the agent of the complainant in making the collections and that .payment of the money to Ricker constituted payment of the notes, and that complainant was negligent in that she did not, after the purchase of the trust deed and notes, give notice to the defendants that she had made such purchase and give defendants direction as to future .payments.

There was no answer filed .to the bill here. Defendants’ plea is “that such payments made by the defendants were made to Ricker, who was then and there the agent of the legal holder and owner of the trust deed and notes, and who was then and there authorized and empowered to receive for and on behalf of the legal holder and owner of the said trust deed and notes the aforesaid payments made by the defendants, who did not appoint any other place of payment; that the complainant never informed or requested defendants to make their payments at any other place, and that the defendants received their interest coupons marked paid by said Konrad Ricker at his office; that in and by said release deed and payments, said indebtedness sued upon by complainant is wholly paid, discharged and satisfied.”

In Straley v. House of Good Shepherd, 281 Ill. 604, the Supreme Court said concerning a plea to a bill in chancery: “In order to be a good plea it must be either an allegation or a denial of some leading fact, or of matters which, taken collectively, make out some general fact which is a complete defense. (Story’s Eq. Pl. — 10th ed. — sec. 652.)”

In Spangler v. Spangler, 19 Ill. App. 28, this court said: “A plea to a bill in chancery is proper whenever the defendant wishes to reduce the cause, or some part of it, to a single point, and from thence to create a bar to the suit. Smith’s Chancery Practice, Vol. 1, page 216; Story’s Equity Pleading, sec. 652. Pleas in chancery are pure pleas and pleas not pure. Pleas not pure are sometimes called negative pleas— Ibid. Sec. '651. It was formerly doubted whether a purely negative plea was a legitimate mode of defense in equity; but that doubt has been dissipated, and it is now firmly established that such a plea is good — Ibid. 668. In sec. 652, supra, the author says: ‘The true end of a plea is to save to the parties the expense of an examination of witnesses at large. ’ ”

Defendants cite the case of McAuliffe v. Reuter, 166 Ill. 491, and many other cases as authority for the proposition that an assignment of a chose in action, other than a negotiable instrument, does not protect the assignee as against the equities between the original parties, without notice of the assignment to the debtor, and that in the event of a foreclosure by the assignee of a trust deed without such notice the mortgagor may interpose any defense arising out of the transaction with the mortgagee which he could set up against the mortgagee in case the bill were filed by the mortgagee. In McAuliffe v. Reuter, supra, McAuliffe had borrowed $600 from one Niehoff, giving a mortgage on real estate as security, and had paid the debt in instalments which were entered in a passbook, and when the debt was paid, the note and mortgage were returned to McAuliffe. Thereafter, McAuliffe borrowed a further sum of $1,000 from Niehoff, evidenced by a note for that amount due in three years from date, payable to McAuliffe and indorsed by him in blank. McAuliffe at the same time and in the same manner executed six interest notes payable semiannually and delivered all of them to Niehoff, together with a trust deed on his home, such trust deed being made to secure the loan, in which Niehoff was named as trustee. McAuliffe and Niehoff had an agreement that McAuliffe should pay this loan in instalments in the same manner as the $600 loan had been paid. Niehoff was a private banker, and as McAuliffe made his instalment payments at Niehoff’s bank, these payments were not credited on McAuliffe’s note, but were entered to McAuliffe’s credit in a passbook which he carried. The evidence in that case indicated that neither McAuliffe nor certain members of his family, who at times made these payments, ever saw the note or mortgage at the time the payments were made. It developed that shortly after the note and mortgage had been given to Niehoff, Niehoff had sold and delivered them to Beuter, who filed the bill to foreclose the mortgage.

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Related

Feitl v. Ricker
4 N.E.2d 907 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1936)

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276 Ill. App. 9, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kozien-v-vikidal-illappct-1934.