McClain v. Weise

22 Ill. App. 272, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 337
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 Ill. App. 272 (McClain v. Weise) 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
McClain v. Weise, 22 Ill. App. 272, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 337 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Baker, P. J.

In 1877 Charles McClain sold and conveyed to Andrew Weise a tract of land in Cooke County, Texas, containing 100 acres, and received from him §600, the full consideration therefor. On the 11th of March, 1879, Weise executed a promissory note for §252.50 to J. Z. Keel or order, due twelve months after date, with interest at 12 per cent, per annum, and secured it by a mortgage to Keel on said tract of land. C. H. and L. J. McCormick recovered a judgment on the 2d day of October, 1879, before a Justice of the Peace in said Cooke County, for §150.24 against Weise; and on the 11th of March, 1880, an execution was issued upon said judgment, and delivered to a Constable, and levied on the land mentioned. Prior to the sale on this execution, Keel sold and transferred the Weise note and mortgage to McClain. By the law of the State of Texas a Constable has power to levy an execution from a Justice of the Peace upon real estate, and sell and deed the real estate, and from such sale there is no redemption. The Constable sold the land in question on the McCormick execution in May, 1880, and it was purchased by McClain for §20; and thereupon tlie Constable executed to him a deed, which deed had the effect to vest in him all the right, title, interest and equity of redemption of Weise in said real estate.

On the 26th day of March, 1880, and prior to the occurrence of a few of the transactions above mentioned, Weise made to McClain a promissory note for §30, due one day after date, and drawing 8 per cent, interest.

On the 17th day of December, 1880, and more than seven months after the sale of the 100-acre tract of land on execution, McClain instituted an attachment suit in the County Court of Cooke County, Texas, based upon said note for $30 and said note for $252.50, and an attachment writ issued in that suit was levied upon 640 acres of land in Wichita County, Texas, as the property of said Weise. At the time of the commencement of the attachment suit, Weise was, and during all the time since has been, a resident of Bureau County, Illinois, and he did not enter his appearance in said suit, and the only service upon him therein was the delivery to him in Bureau County of a citation and a copy of the petition of McClain. The attachment proceeding resulted in a judgment against Weise, and a sale of the 640 acres of land to McClain for $30, and there being no right of redemption, a Sheriff's deed, which vested the title of Weise to said land in McClain. The amount realized by this latter sale as a credit upon the indebtedness of Weise to McClain, after deducting costs and expenses, was $17.45.

On the 19th of .November, 1885, McClain commenced against Weise a suit at law in the Circuit Court of Bureau County, Illinois, and claimed the right to recover the full amount of principal and interest upon both the $30 note and the $252.50 note, less the $17.45 realized from the sale of the Wichita lands.

The record now here on appeal is that made in the Bureau Circuit Court in the matter of a bill in equity exhibited by Weise against McClain for the purpose of enjoining the prosecution of the suit at law upon the two Texas notes and compelling their surrender. The cause was heard upon bill, answer, replication and proofs: and the court found the facts and decreed that the injunction be made perpetual as to the Keel note, and that it be surrendered to Weise ; that Weise pay the balance due on the $30 note, with 8 per cent, interest thereon, a'nd the costs of the suit at law; that the judgment in the attachment proceeding be declared paid and satisfied, and that McClain pay the costs made upon the bill for an injunction.

The important question in the case is whether the mortgage note given by Weise, appellee, to Keel, and by the latter assigned to McClain, appellant, was satisfied by the sale to appellant upon the McCormick execution of the equity of redemption of appellee in the tract of land containing 100 acres, said tract being the subject of the mortgage. The general rule, both at law and in equity, is that if a person holds a mortgage upon real estate, and then by his own act takes the equity of redemption and vests it in himself, a merger takes place and the estate is discharged from the incumbrance and the mortgage debt satisfied. Appellant, however, insists the intention is the controlling consideration, and that if a party acquires an estate upon which he has an incumbrance, the incumbrance is, in equity, considered as subsisting or extinguished according to his intention expressed or implied. This doctrine is announced in the leading case of Campbell v. Carter, 14 Ill. 286, and in numerous ‘ subsequent cases, many of which are cited in the briefs. In Carter v. Harrison, the general rule, as first above stated, is recognized; and the court quote with approval the language of Chancellor Kent, used in James v. Johnson, 5 Johns. Ch. 417, that “in equity the merger is prevented and the distinction of the estates preserved in special cases only,” and that this is done “ where the intention of the party is distinctly 'declared at the time, or where something just and beneficial requires the charge to be preserved in a case in which the party has not declared or can not deblare his intention.”

Unless there are facts or circumstances in proof that take this case out of the general rule, it must be held it was the intention of appellant at the time he bought the land and took the conveyance from the Constable, to receive it in satisfaction of his mortgage and mortgage debt. The salient point is the intent existing at the very time of the purchase. It will be at once'admitted that the fact that more than five years thereafter he brought suit in the Bureau Circuit Court to collect the mortgage note, affords but the very slightest, if any evidence whatever, of what his real intention was at the time indicated. And so, upon the same principle, when more than seven months thereafter, he, knowing Weise had removed from the State leaving behind him land in another county, sued out attachment process based in part on this mortgage note, and when, in the latter part of 1880 or early part of 1881, he made the conflicting statements to Stevens, that he bought the land subject to the Keel mortgage, and also that he intended to hold Weise for the balance, such circumstance and such conversation have but small probative force to show the intention existing in May, 1880. When the acts done and statements made are concurrent with the principal act and form a part of the res gestee of that act, then, such acts or statements are frequently conclusive in respect to the intent. Such, however, is not the case now before us. Under the circumstances of Dunphy v. Riddle, 86 Ill. 22, the retention of the note and mortgage by the mortgagee and grantee was a strong and controlling fact to show it was the intention there should be no merger, while here that fact has almost no force whatever. There the deed to the equity of redemption was made by the mortgagor himself and for an independent indebtedness, and had an extinguishment of the mortgage been intended, the note and mortgage would naturally have been given up or canceled; but here the conveyance was by an officer of the law under a judicial sale, and Weise, the mortgagor, had removed from the State. The only testimony of any moment in the record tending to prove the intention at the date of purchase was there should be no merger is that of McClain himself, who testified that in buying the land at the sale he did not intend that his claim against Weise, on the Keel note, should be extinguished.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ill. App. 272, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclain-v-weise-illappct-1887.