Lawn View Building Corp. v. Weinstock

6 N.E.2d 276, 288 Ill. App. 320, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 539
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 1937
DocketGen. No. 38,794
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 276 (Lawn View Building Corp. v. Weinstock) 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
Lawn View Building Corp. v. Weinstock, 6 N.E.2d 276, 288 Ill. App. 320, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 539 (Ill. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Jacob Weinstoek, one of the defendants, from a decree entered upon findings by the court which held invalid, as a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to real estate, the lien of a judgment, which had been entered in the municipal court of Chicago, in favor of the defendant herein, and thereby removing as a cloud the lien of this judgment and the bailiff’s certificate of sale issued after the real estate had been sold to satisfy the judgment. The cause was heard upon the bill of complaint to remove the cloud upon plaintiff’s title, the answer of the defendant, also of the bailiff of the municipal court, and the evidence offered.

From the decree it appears that in 1925, Sam Cohen, Harry Pollack and Isadore Holzman owned certain real estate in the city of Chicago and executed a bond issue of $65,000, secured by a trust deed on the real estate therein described. The defendant Weinstock became the holder of two $500 bonds, numbered 100 and 101.

Certain defaults having occurred in 1931, in the payment of principal and interest on the bonds, the trustee, under the terms of the trust deed securing the bond issue filed a bill to foreclose in the superior court of Cook county, making all the bondholders of unpaid bonds numbered 31 to 198, parties defendant as “unknown owners.”

On October 5, 1932, Cohen, Pollack and Holzman were the owners of record of the real estate. The defendant instituted suit in the municipal court of Chicago, and obtained a judgment against them for $1,072.50 upon two $500 bonds issued by them and owned by Jacob Weinstock, the defendant here on appeal. On the same day judgment was entered and an execution issued and delivered to the bailiff of the municipal court of Chicago. On October 8, 1932, a decree was entered in the foreclosure proceeding, finding that bonds Nos. 31 to 198 were unpaid, and directing a sale for the amount found due by the court. On February 10, 1932, Cohen, Pollack and Holzman, with their respective wives, executed and delivered a quitclaim deed of the real estate involved in this foreclosure proceeding to the Liberty Bank of Chicago, as trustee, under its trust No. 1003, but this quitclaim deed was not recorded until January 16, 1933, 11 months after the same had been executed and delivered to the Liberty Bank of Chicago, as trustee.

The foreclosure sale was held in February, 1933, Milton A. G-ordon, being the purchaser at the sale, and within a few days thereafter the Liberty'Bank of Chicago, as trustee under its trust agreement, being the then owner of the title to the real estate, redeemed the real estate from the foreclosure sale, and thereafter conveyed it to the plaintiff herein.

The defendant caused a pluries execution to be issued on his judgment against Cohen, Pollack and Holzman, which had been entered on October 5, 1932, while they were the owners of record of the real estate, delivered the execution to the bailiff of the municipal court of Chicago, who levied upon and sold the real estate involved in the foreclosure proceeding to satisfy the judgment, and the bailiff issued his certificate of sale to the purchaser, and thereafter the plaintiff filed its bill of complaint to remove the judgment, and the bailiff’s certificate of sale as a cloud upon its title.

It is the theory of defendant Weinstock that when the defendant obtained a judgment on his bonds against Sam Cohen, et ah, the makers of the bonds, they were the owners of record of the real estate, and his judgment immediately became a lien on the real estate, and the Liberty Bank of Chicago took title subject to the lien of defendant’s judgment.

The plaintiff has admitted that if the defendant’s judgment were based upon any cause of action other than upon a bond secured by the trust deed, which was in the process of foreclosure, defendant’s judgment and the bailiff’s certificate of sale would have been a valid lien and plaintiff could not have maintained this action, for the reason that redemption by the owner of the equity would have satisfied the trust deed and foreclosure decree.

The plaintiff contends, however, that there can be only one sale of real estate to satisfy a specific lien thereon, and argues that the foreclosure sale was for the purpose of satisfying and did satisfy the lien of defendant’s judgment entered in his separate suit.

It will be seen upon an examination of plaintiff’s brief that the contention is made that the sale of the premises under the foreclosure decree removed the lien of the trust deed; that the lien no longer existed, as the trustee for and in behalf of all the bondholders had secured for them all benefit possible under the lien of the trust deed when a sale was had, as provided for in the foreclosure decree. The plaintiff admits that the debt was not extinguished. A portion of it remained unsatisfied by reason of the failure of the property to sell for the full amount of the indebtedness, and further admits that the defendant had the right to sue on the bond and secure payment, or the trustee for him, had the right to obtain a deficiency judgment; that this judgment is not based upon the lien of the mortgage but upon the personal liability of the mortgagor to pay the full amount of the indebtedness secured by the mortgage. The plaintiff contends however that the property in question is exonerated from the defendant’s lien because the property cannot be subject to two sales to satisfy the same debt.

The pertinent question involved in this litigation is whether there may be a number of sales of the same property to satisfy one debt.

The defendant undoubtedly had the right to the judgment entered in the municipal court of Chicago in his action upon the two bonds, which were also secured by the trust deed, the subject of the foreclosure proceeding, and upon the entry of the judgment it became a lien upon the property decreed in the foreclosure proceeding to be sold. The existence of this lien is not questioned by the plaintiff.

When the property was conveyed by deed and recorded on January 16, 1933, to the Liberty Bank of Chicago, trustee, the real estate was subject to the lien of this judgment at the time the trustee redeemed from the foreclosure sale. The plaintiff in this action in the acceptance of the deed from the trustee, accepted delivery subject to such liens as were not adjudicated in the foreclosure proceeding. The lien of the trust deed securing the payment of the bonds, was satisfied when the foreclosure decree was entered and the sale had. The title of the purchaser was not subject to the lien of the trust deed. Where, as in this case, there is a redemption by the owner of the equity from the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, the premises become subject to the lien of the defendant’s judgment.

In the case of Hack v. Snow, 338 Ill. 28, the court passed upon a somewhat similar question, where redemption from a foreclosure sale was had by the owner of the equity of redemption. The court said:

“Such redemption from the foreclosure sale defeated the title of the purchaser under it and left the premises subject to the lien of Liesik’s judgment in the same way as if the redemption had been made by the mortgagor himself. (Burgett v. Paxton, 99 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 276, 288 Ill. App. 320, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawn-view-building-corp-v-weinstock-illappct-1937.