Martin v. Sixty-Third & Halsted State Savings Bank

19 N.E.2d 634, 299 Ill. App. 123, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 708
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 27, 1939
DocketGen. No. 40,315
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 N.E.2d 634 (Martin v. Sixty-Third & Halsted State Savings Bank) 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
Martin v. Sixty-Third & Halsted State Savings Bank, 19 N.E.2d 634, 299 Ill. App. 123, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 708 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the conclusion of all the evidence in the trial of an action seeking damages for fraud and deceit defendants moved for a directed verdict in their favor; the court, acting under section 68 of the Civil Practice Act, reserved its ruling and permitted the case to go to the jury; a verdict was returned against these two defendants for $10,800; the court then entered its judgment against plaintiff, notwithstanding the verdict, and plaintiff appeals to this court.

Plaintiff’s claim is based upon the sale to him by defendants of a note for $8,000, secured by a mortgage on certain real estate, which he asserts he was induced to purchase by designed misrepresentations by defendants of material facts, and that relying on such representations he purchased the note and mortgage, but subsequently ascertaining that these representations were untrue he tendered back the papers, which were refused; the note was not paid upon maturity; he alleged damages and was sustained in his claim by the jury.

The jury could properly believe that plaintiff had for upward of 15 years dealt with defendant bank and its cashier, Lenz, a defendant; he was a customer of the bank and his relation with its officers was friendly; he had occasionally purchased mortgages from the bank which had been satisfactory; he considered Mr. Lenz a man of good reputation for honesty and integrity.

Plaintiff testified that in September, 1930, he told Mr. Lenz he had about $8,000 and wished to purchase a mortgage on Chicago real estate, but Lenz dissuaded him and recommended a mortgage for $8,000 which he said was secured on property worth at least $25,000 in the village of Goodenow, in Will county; Lenz assured plaintiff the property was a very good piece of land, that the mortgagors were responsible, that they had spent $6,000 or $7,000 in improving the property, having graded it, laid out streets, installed sidewalks and placed water pipes; that the property was right in the town of Coodenow; that when plaintiff suggested he would go to look at it Lenz dissuaded him from doing so, saying he had a second mortgage on it for $5,000. Belying on these representations plaintiff gave his check, payable to defendant bank, for $8,000, with accumulated interest, and received the note and mortgage which he put away in his vault at the bank.

In July, 1931, plaintiff was told by Lenz that the mortgagors could not pay the note when it came due. Constant inquiries by plaintiff at the bank were fruitless, Lenz reporting that the mortgagors could not pay. Plaintiff learned there was no second mortgage on the property; attempts were made by the officers of defendant bank to have plaintiff extend payment of the mortgage note, which he declined to do; when he told one of the officers of the bank he was going to Goodenow to investigate he was assured that everything was all right, that he would get his money, but his reply was that he needed the money at once, but no money was paid; in October, 1931, he visited Goodenow and inspected the mortgaged property.

A well informed witness testified that Goodenow was a tract of 20 acres, platted about the time the C. & E. I. railway was constructed in 1869 or 1870; it is not an incorporated village; there is one general store and post office, an elevator and a tavern; there are about 20 houses altogether.

The 50 acre tract described in the mortgage in question is not in Goodenow but lies to the north. The witness Ferris Gaines was thorougly familiar with the property and described it as the drainage basin of three or four sections of nearby farmland. This property had been sold in 1926 by Ferris Gaines to Henry Thies,. vice president of defendant bank, for $8,000, who had at once sold it to Alice Schneider and Bertha H. Smith for $13,000, taking from them the $8,000 mortgage in question as part of the purchase price; the bank took this $8,000 mortgage and provided the funds for the purchase of the property by Thies, who kept the $5,000 profit on the transaction without any investment by him.

Gaines, the seller of the land to Thies, gave as his opinion that the value of the land when he sold it in 1926 was $8,000, and that in his opinion it was of the same value in September, 1930. Other informed witnesses valued the land at about the same amount. The witness Gaines also testified that they had an awful time getting the thistles out from the land. The note first matured in September, 1929, but was extended by the bank from time to time.

Under the new Practice Act section 68 (3)a, [Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, ch. 110, § 192; Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 104.068], either party may request the court for a directed verdict in his favor and the court may reserve his decision, submit the case to the jury and pass upon the motion after verdict is rendered. In Capelle v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 280 Ill. App. 471, it was held that in passing upon such a. motion the trial court has no more power to weigh and determine controverted questions of fact under the present Practice Act than it had under the old act. See also McNeill v. Harrison & Sons, Inc., 286 Ill. App. 120; Gardiner v. Richardson, 293 Ill. App. 40. In Wolever v. Curtiss Candy Co., 293 Ill. App. 586, 600, 601, it was held that it was only where there was no evidence as a matter of law to sustain either a plaintiff’s or a defendant’s claim that a judgment may be rendered notwithstanding the verdict. Farmer v. Alton Building & Loan Ass’n, 294 Ill. App. 206; Synwolt v. Klank, 296 Ill. App. 79. Other-cases to the same effect might be cited.

The essential elements of a cause of action in a case for fraud and deceit are a representation, falsity, scienter, deception and injury. Foster v. Oberreich, 230 Ill. 525, 527. And in other cases it is said that the representations must be shown to be false and known to be false by the defendant making them, or made as a positive assertion, recklessly, and made to deceive the plaintiff, who believed such representations to be true and, relying on them, was induced to part with his money and has suffered damages thereby.

The jury could reasonably find that there was evidence of all these elements in the instant case. Lenz represented to plaintiff that the property securing the note was available subdivision property located in the town or village of Groodenow; that the land was worth from $450 to $500 an acre; that the makers of the note had invested $6,000 to $7,000 in improvements upon the land; that the officers of the bank thought so highly of the land that Lenz had personally lent $5,000, secured by a second mortgage on the land. All these statements were known to defendants to be untrue and were made for the purpose of having plaintiff part with his money.

Defendants cite cases involving a different state of facts. In Malewski v. Mackiewich, 282 Ill. App. 593, the purchasers of a mortgage note for $6,000 claimed they were deceived by the representation that this was the entire indebtedness secured by the trust deed; the note for $6,000 which they purchased was in fact one of a series of 6 notes aggregating $13,000, all secured by the same trust deed.

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19 N.E.2d 634, 299 Ill. App. 123, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-sixty-third-halsted-state-savings-bank-illappct-1939.