Ogle v. Turpin

102 Ill. 148, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 13
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 102 Ill. 148 (Ogle v. Turpin) 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
Ogle v. Turpin, 102 Ill. 148, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 13 (Ill. 1881).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It appears from the record, that in August, 1874, Runyan held several notes, payable to himself, on Herman R. Allen. They bore date the 31st of July, 1874, payable in one, two and three years, and secured by mortgage on lands in Cook county, of even date, and duly recorded. Runyan, for a valuable consideration, indorsed to appellant, Ogle, and delivered them, with the mortgage, to him. In the spring of 1875 Runyan obtained a deed for the mortgaged premises from Allen, for the equity of redemption. Runyan, thereupon, and before the notes were due and were still unpaid, without the consent or knowledge of Ogle, on his apparent title, which appeared to be perfect of record, negotiated and obtained a loan of $20,000 from the Fidelity Savings Bank and Safe Depository, and to secure the same executed a trust deed to Arnold Tripp, with the usual power of sale. It does- not appear that Haines, the president, or Tripp, the attorney of the bank, or any-of its officers, had any other. notice that Ogle still held the Allen notes and they were not paid, than can he inferred from the title as it stood of record when the loan was made. Ogle filed his bill to foreclose this mortgage which, Eunyan had released of record, given by Allen" to Eunyan, to secure his notes as assignee of the notes, against the bank, and Turpin having been appointed receiver of the bank, was made a defendant. On a hearing in the Superior Court of Cook county the bill was dismissed. Complainant thereupon removed the case to the Appellate Court for the First District, where, on a hearing, the decree of the Superior Court was affirmed, ■ and he brings the record, bn appeal, to this court, and urges a reversal.

Neither party denies the validity or fairness of the debt of the other, as against Eunyan, or that both were liens on the property when the deed of trust was executed and delivered to Tripp, but the question is whether the bank did not obtain a superior lien by that deed, or took their lien subject to Ogle’s, and the whole question seems to resolve itself into one of whether there was negligence on the part of the bank, Appellant claims that the bank had no right to rely alone on the record of the title to the property, which showed that it was clear, but as the notes given by Allen were not then due, "that it should have made inquiry as to whether or not they Vere paid, and were not, as the fact proved to be, in the hands of an innocent holder, and the bank having failed to exercise ordinary care, it should have its claim postponed to that of appellant. On the other side it is claimed, that when it appeared that Eunyan had procured Allen’s equity of redemption in the property, and had released and satisfied his mortgage, the bank had a right to rely on the record, and was not bound to make further inquiry, and it took the preferred lien.

It has not been suggested of whom the bank should inquire. It inquired of Eunyan, and he said the title was good for the property. Had the bank inquired of Allen, he could only have given information that he had not paid the notes, but could not have referred the bank to any person as assignee of the notes, and it was not required to go into the commercial world to find a holder. The mortgage showed the notes were payable to Eunyan, and when he released the mortgage the bank had the right to presume the notes were paid, or if not, that he had waived and released the mortgage security, and was willing to look to the responsibility of the maker, or had obtained other security. We think the mere fact that the time of payment had not arrived, was not sufficient to put the bank on inquiry, or to charge it with notice that the notes had been indorsed to appellant, and were unpaid, and to give his claim a preference the bank must have had notice in fact, or of circumstances pointing to notice.

The release or cancellation by the mortgagee is prima facie a satisfaction, but may be shown, as between the parties, to have been made by mistake, accident or fraud, as was said in Flower v. Elwood, 66 Ill. 444. But the question remains, whether the same rule applies to innocent purchasers and incumbrancers. The ruling of this court has been, under our recording laws, that a purchaser or incumbrancer may rely on, and be protected by, a clear and regular title of record, unless affected by notice of secret adverse titles or liens. Such was the manifest object and purpose of this law, and it has ever been so enforced. The very object is, that all persons having any deed, mortgage, or other instrument in writing relating to or affecting the title to land, shall record it, or failing to do so, as against innocent subsequent, purchasers or lienholders he must be precluded from asserting his claim. Eunyan’s release of the mortgage held against Allen was prima facie a satisfaction,—that the bank, in the absence of notice, or what is equivalent to notice, might act.

But it is urged that Eunyan, having acquired the equity of redemption, could not release the premises from the mortgage to himself; that such an act was nugatory, and affected or changed the rights of no one; that having no legal or binding effect, appellant’s lien under the mortgage remained unimpaired, and the bank did not acquire a lien superior to his. As between Runyan and appellant this is true, and the same thing may be said as to subsequent purchasers or lienholders with notice, but we are unable to extend the rule to persons acting without notice or anything to put them on - inquiry. The bank had no such notice, or reason to suppose the notes were outstanding and unpaid. On the contrary, the facts and circumstances before its officers justified the reasonable inference that they had been paid or canceled, and taken up. This would be the reasonable inference deducible from the fact that Runyan united the equity of redemption with the interest he held under the mortgage, thus becoming the owner of the fee. That act, of itself, would induce the belief that the debt had been canceled by Runyan becoming the absolute owner in fee, and the lien extinguished. Persons uninformed of this fact would reasonably suppose, when he was the absolute owner of the property,, that he did not look to it as security for the payment of the notes named in the mortgage,—they would infer that the debt was paid, discharged, or otherwise secured, and the lien extinguished. The bank officers were therefore fully justified in that conclusion, and in acting upon the inference.

The case of Edgerton v. Young, 43 Ill. 464, is referred to as controlling this case. It differs from this in the material fact that the mortgagee in that case had not entered a satisfaction of the mortgage on the record. When the attorney of the bank found it thus satisfied, in this case, without circumstances to put him on inquiry, he had a right to rely on the record of satisfaction. As the record stood, it showed that Runyan was the owner of the title, free from incumbrance. The assignment of the notes operated as an equitable assignment of the mortgage, and the assignment was an instrument that related to or affected the title to land, and to become operative as to creditors and purchasers the assignment of the mortgage should have been formally made and recorded, to charge notice to all persons dealing with the title, or at least the assignment on the note should have referred to the mortgage, and that assignment should have been recorded. As between the parties, the mere assignment, without recording, was all that was required to assign the mortgage, but as to strangers it was otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Ill. 148, 1882 Ill. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogle-v-turpin-ill-1881.