Lidster v. Poole

122 Ill. App. 227, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 491
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,504
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 Ill. App. 227 (Lidster v. Poole) 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
Lidster v. Poole, 122 Ill. App. 227, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 491 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justioe Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the County Court of Lee county, authorizing and directing Mina Poole, administratrix of the estate of James Poole, deceased, to sell certain real estate for the payment of debts of said deceased. The legal title to the real estate, which consisted of farm lands in Lee county, was in Ralph E. Lidster, who held them in trust for James Poole. Hovember 12, 1897, Mary L. Sanders, then owner of said lands, exchanged them for certain Chicago properties which Lidster held in trust for Poole. Lidster executed to her a deed to the Chicago properties and she conveyed the Lee county lands to him. The Lee county lands were subject to a mortgage of $10,000 and the taxes of 1897, which by the terms of the deed to Lidster he assumed and agreed to pay. Poole was then a single man and so remained until May following, when he married. His widow is the administratrix and appellee here. On the 19th day of February, 1898, an agreement called a declaration of trust was executed^ by Lidster and Poole wherein after reciting the conveyance by Mary L. Sanders to Lidster of the property in controversy, subject to a mortgage of $10,000 which Lidster had assumed and agreed to pay, it was recited that, “ it is herby agreed by and between said R. E. Lidster and James Poole that the above mentioned and described premises is the property of James Poole, subject to an indebtedness of six hundred sixty-two and 45-100 dollars due and owing from said Poole to said Lidster, and it further being hereby agreed that said Poole is the actual owner of said property, subject only to said indebtedness: How, therefore, it is hereby agreed by and between said Lidster and Poole that as soon as the said James Poole, his administrators, executors, heirs or assigns, shall pay to the said Lidster, or cause to be paid to him, said sum of six hundred sixty-two and 45-100 dollars as also any and all other obligations assumed or to be assumed by said Lidster for said Poole, together with accrued . interest, that then said E. E. Lidster will, upon demand, convey by a good and sufficient warranty deed said above described property to the said Jas. Poole, or to his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns.” Lidster was made a party defendant to the petition in the County Court and answered, claiming that under and by virtue of this agreement, he had advanced for. and paid out to Poole large sums of money, in addition to the $662.45 mentioned in the agreement. A stipulation of facts was agreed to which in substance is as follows: That' the $10,000mortgage was paid off by Lidster procuring a new. loan on the same premises for $7,500, the notes and mortgage for which were signed by him, Poole and wife, and the payment by Lidster out of his own money of $2,815.54 on March 6, 1900, the date of the $7,500 loan. This loan bore interest at the rate .of six per cent., payable semi-annually, all of which Lidster paid up to and including the interest due March 1, 1904, a total of eight payments of $225 each. He also paid certain expenses in connection with the new loan, such as attorney’s fees, expenses of extending abstract and commissions for procuring the loan, also insurance on farm buildings, several years taxes on the land, recording fees. etc. He also guaranteed a note of Poole for $24.14, paid $18.81 freight on cattle shipped to the farm, furnished Poole $200 cash at one time, $315 at another time to buy horses for use on the farm, paid a Mrs. Lonergan $260 for chicken houses on the farm, at another time gave Poole $25 cash, at another time $5, and for all of the moneys so paid out by Lidster he claimed to be entitled to a lien on the real estate by virtue of the above mentioned agreement, that his lien was in effect a mortgage and was prior to the claims of the widow and entitled to be first paid out of the proceeds of the sale. The County Court found Lidster had a mortgage lien on the premises for the $662.45 and the interest thereon at five per cent, from the date of the agreement, but denied his claim for a lien for any other sum and decreed that the widow was entitled to homestead and dower in the premises, subject only to the $7,500 mortgage and the $662.45 to Lidster. In the disallowance of Lidster’s claim for liens on account of some of the amounts paid by him, we think the court erred.'

•It is argued by appellee that the only money secured by the agreement and for which a lien can be declared is the $662.45 and that as to all other payments made by Lidster, the agreement, if valid between the parties to it, amounted to a mortgage for future advances and is subject to the rights of the widow; that these payments were optional advances and that if the agreement was effective to create a lien upon the lands for their payment, such lien could only take effect from the date the payments were made. From the evidence it appears that at the time this declaration of trust or agreement was made, Lidster had no other interest in the land than the $662.45 Poole owed him, and the fact also that he had become personally responsible for the payment of the $10,000 mortgage on the premises. It is not denied, and the court found that as to the $662.45 he had a lien which was in effect a mortgage. The only interest or purpose he could have had then in paying the interest on the mortgage and the taxes on the land was to protect his lien on and interest in the property. Such payments could have been of no other benefit to him whatever. We regard the law as well settled that the holder of a mortgage on real estate may, if the mortgagor fails to do so, pay the taxes on the mortgaged premises and cQmpel the mortgagor to refund it by adding it to the amount of the mortgage indebtedness, but Lidster’s right to charge money thus paid out against the land does not rest alone upon the laxv but we think is authorized by the agreement above mentioned as is also the right to a lien for the pai^ment of interest. As we have before stated, the only benefit Lidster could derive from the payment of any part of the mortgage or the interest and taxes was to protect the land from sale, and thereby preserve his lien. Poole received the benefit of these payments, and the agreement, in addition to making the land subject to the payment of the $662.45, further recites that this was the only interest Lidster then had in the land, that Poole was the aqtual owner of it subject to that indebtedness, and that as soon as he paid Lidster that sum “as also any and all other obligations assumed or to be assumed by said Lidster for said Poole, together with the accrued interest,’3 that then Lidster will, upon demand, convey the property subject to the incumbrances existing upon said property at the time said conveyance is made.

This agreement besides being in effect a mortgage to secure the $662.45' was also a mortgage to secure future advances in the nature of debts of Poole paid or assumed by Lidster, and that it was valid for that purpose as between the parties, is not questioned. The contention of appellee is that upon the marriage of Poole to her, which occurred May 21, 1898, her right to have dower assigned her in the lands in the event she survived her husband, attached in the nature of an incumbrance in her favor, and took priority over any advances made after the marriage. The evidence shows that all payments made by Lidster to or on account of Poole, except the $662.45, were made after his marriage to appellee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 Ill. App. 227, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lidster-v-poole-illappct-1905.