Meacham v. Steele

93 Ill. 135
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 93 Ill. 135 (Meacham v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meacham v. Steele, 93 Ill. 135 (Ill. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is to be observed, in the first place, that no point is made by appellees with reference to the validity of the deed of trust from Robert W. Meacham and wife to Follansbee, or with reference to the genuineness of the claim secured by it. The good faith of that transaction does not, so far as the evidence is concerned, seem to be in any manner questioned. Indeed, the decree of the circuit court recognizes the fact that this deed of trust was a prior valid incumbrance on the lots in controversy. It follows, therefore, when appellees purchased these lots under their decree against Meacham, that whatever rights they thereby acquired were subject to appellant’s deed of trust, unless she had, in the meantime, done something to make it inequitable to enforce it as against them. Assuming that appellant had done nothing to affect her rights under the deed of trust as a prior valid incumbrance, the position assumed by appellees on their purchase was that of one purchasing from a mortgagor a part of the mortgaged premises.

Where there is no controversy as to the facts there can be but little doubt as to the respective rights and duties of persons thus circumstanced. In such cases, where the mortgage has been duly recorded before the purchase the mortgagee Avill not be charged Avith constructive notice of the purchaser’s deed Avhen put on record. It therefore follows, if the purchaser seeks to enforce any right or equity upon the hypothesis that the mortgagee had notice of his purchase, he must allege and prove that the mortgagee had actual or implied notice of his purchase.

Where one thus purchases a part of mortgaged premises he can not redeem that part purchased by him by paying a just proportion of the mortgage debt. The mortgagee is entitled to retain his lien upon every part of the mortgaged estate until the whole of the mortgage debt is paid. Yet, in equity the unsold portion of the mortgaged premises will be regarded as the primary fund out of which to discharge the mortgage debt, and until that is exhausted no part of the purchased premises can be applied for that purpose. And the mortgagee is not permitted to do any act that will deprive the purchaser of the right to have this primary fund first applied in the discharge of the mortgage debt. Hence it is a familiar rule in equity that if the mortgagee, in a case of the kind supposed, with notice of the purchaser’s rights, buy of the mortgagor the unsold portion of the mortgaged premises, and accept from him a deed therefor, by which the equitable estate is merged in the legal, it will operate as a discharge of the mortgage debt in the ratio that the value of the premises thus purchased by the mortgagee bears to the total value of the mortgaged estate. So, also, if the mortgagee, for any cause, execute a release or other conveyance in fee to the mortgagor of the unsold portion of the mortgaged premises, it will in the same manner operate as a discharge pro tanto of the mortgage debt.

It appears, as already shown, that the deed of trust from Meacham and wife to Follansbee, to secure Meacham’s indebtedness to appellant, included not only the eight lots purchased by appellees under their decree, but also six other lots in the same block. And it is claimed by appellees that the warranty deed from Meacham and wife to appellant, of July 2, 1875, had the effect of stripping the trust created by this trust deed of its executory character so as to leave in the latter nothing but a dry trust, which, being a simple use, was executed by the statute, and that appellant by this means being clothed with the legal title, her equitable rights under the deed of trust became merged in the legal estate, and the incumbrance thereby extinguished. Conceding this to be so, of course it would follow that the sale subsequently made by Follansbee under the trust deed was without authority and invalid as against appellees.

We fully recognize the doctrine that whenever one person by any means becomes clothed with the legal title to a tract of land in which he has no beneficial interest, and with respect to which he has no duty to perform, so that he simply stands seized of the land to the use of another person, the statute will execute the use by annexing the possession to the use and clothing the latter with the legal title. Yet, conceding this doctrine to its fullest extent, it does not therefore follow that the facts here show a proper case for its application.

Whatever effect the doctrine in question may be supposed to have had upon the right of the trustee to sell the lots embraced in both deeds, there certainly can be no pretence for the claim, on the grounds suggested, that his right to sell the lots included in the trust deed alone was at all affected by the execution of the warranty deed. For since the warranty deed did not include the lots purchased by appellees, or make any reference to them, it was therefore simply impossible for the rights or relations of the parties with respect to them to have been at all affected in the manner suggested by the execution of that deed. But upon what principle can it be claimed that the transfer of the equity of redemption in the six lots included in both deeds will have the effect of changing the character of the trust so as to relieve the trustee of the duty, or deprive him of the right to sell, when requested to do so, as provided in the trust deed ? It is true that at law, if the mortgagor conveys the equity of redemption to the mortgagee, the equitable estate will be merged in the legal, and it will operate as a payment of the mortgage debt to the extent of the value of the mortgaged premises. But in equity it will not necessarily have this effect.

If it was not so intended, or if it is necessary for the protection of the mortgagee from intervening liens or claims against the mortgaged premises, equity will treat the two estates as co-existing in the mortgagee. Conceding for the purpose of the argument, then, that appellant’s position was that of a mortgagee having a release of the equity of redemption, it would not therefore necessarily follow that the estates would merge,—for, as we have just seen, that would depend upon the intention, rights and interests of the parties. And when tested by this rule there would be no merger, for it was necessary to keep the two interests co-existing in order to protect appellant from the intervening claim of appellees.

And, moreover, there is not a particle of evidence in this record to show that appellant intended to surrender her lien upon the property embraced in the trust deed. The evidence on this point is all the other way.

But did appellant, upon the execution to her of the warranty deed by Meacham and wife, assume the position of a mortgagee, having a release of the equity of redemption, with respect to the six lots included in both deeds? The answer to this question depends upon whether, as is claimed by appellees, that conveyance so affected the character of the trust as to convert it into a naked use. If so, it was executed by the statute, and the legal estate was at once transferred by operation of law to appellant, leaving no title or interest whatever in Follansbee, the trustee. What was the nature of the interest or estate which passed by the warranty deed? Certainly no part of the legal estate, for that had been transferred to Follansbee. It is evident that nothing passed by it but Meacham’s equity of redemption.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ill. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meacham-v-steele-ill-1879.