Pensoneau v. Pulliam

47 Ill. 58
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 47 Ill. 58 (Pensoneau v. Pulliam) 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
Pensoneau v. Pulliam, 47 Ill. 58 (Ill. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The complainant in these proceedings, and the appellant here, having become indebted to sundry persons by note and mortgage, appellees, to befriend him, as it would appear, paid and assumed his liabilities so secured by mortgage, taking, in one case, an assignment of the mortgage, and, in the other, procuring a new mortgage from the complainant directly to themselves. The estate conveyed was incumbered by judgments, taxes, and by a sale for taxes of one portion of it, all of which appellees adjusted or paid off, and appellant relieved therefrom. The mortgage to .appellees, which they first obtained to themselves, included in it a portion of the land covered by the mortgage assigned by Mrs. Adelaide Snyder. These original transactions were of old date, reaching back as far as 1853. The more recent, dated from about April, 1859.

Complainant not paying the money secured by these mortgages, appellees, at the August ■ term, 1859, of the St. Clair Circuit Court, filed their bill to foreclose both mortgages, as is alleged, by mutual consent, the defendant agreeing not to interpose any defense or make any objection to a proceeding, apparently irregular, that of combining two mortgages to different persons in one bill, and obtaining a decree for the sale of all the lands described in them, although one of them, that to Mrs. Snyder, had been paid and satisfied by complainant.

The usual decree passed, a sale was had, and the lands bought in by appellees for the amount due by both mortgages, and a deed executed to them after the time for redemption expired, in June, 1861.

At the March term, 1863, complainant exhibited his bijl in chancery, alleging, among other things, that this decree was had, by mutual consent, under an agreement that if, at any time, he should pay appellees the money advanced by them for him, they would re-convey the premises to him. He also alleged, that at the time the decree passed, he had paid the Snyder mortgage, and he avowed a readiness and willingness to pay the balance justly due appellees, but that they claimed more than was their due, and refused to re-convey. He prayed that Seheel and Cabanne should be required to answer under oath, but as to Pulliam, the other -defendant, his oath was waived; he prayed that an account should be taken of the amount due each of the defendants, and that he might be allowed to pay such amount, according to their mutual understanding, and, on such payment, defendants should re-convey, and for general relief.

Seheel, in his sworn answer, admits the principal allegations of the bill—that a mutual understanding existed between all the parties about the foreclosure, the purchase, the redemption and re-conveyance; that complainant had himself paid the Snyder mortgage before the decree; that he claims as due him, in virtue of the understanding mentioned, on the 25th of March, 1863, the sum of two thousand four hundred and fifty-five dollars and ninety cents, on payment of which he was ready to convey.

Cabanne, by his sworn answer, makes the same admissions, limiting the understanding to Seheel, himself and complainant; admits the payment by complainant of the Snyder mortgage; claims there was due him on the 25th of March, 1863, twelve hundred and ninety-one dollars and ninety cents, on the payment of which, with interest, he was ready to re-convey.

Pulliam, in his answer, not under oath, admits the mortgages and their foreclosure, but denies any understanding as alleged and insisted upon; states the amount he paid for complainant without giving dates; and he avers that he advanced to complainant, from time to time, in different amounts, §542.25, with the understanding that the same should be treated as an equitable lien upon the real estate under the mortgage, which he, with Seheel and Cabanne, held against complainant, and that he holds other unsatisfied judgments and notes against complainant, and denies he ever gave Seheel any authority as agent in the premises.

A replication was put in to this answer, and testimony taken, among others, the testimony of Cabanne, for complainant ; Scheel, it would appear, having died after answer filed. In his testimony, Cabanne repeats his answer, but, as before, confines the agreement to himself, Scheel and complainant. He does not know that Pulliam was present at the time, but was present on some occasions; the object was to benefit complainant, and at the same time make the payment of their advances sure; had great confidence in Scheel, and he was to attend to the matter. On his cross-examination, he stated that he and Scheel agreed to, let complainant redeem, if by so doing they would materially benefit complainant without injuring themselves; complainant was promised by, witness any reasonable extension he might want; does not know of such an arrangement with Pulliam ; he says, we felt more secure by getting the foreclosure and a deed, and also had a larger amount of land for security than before; Pulliam made no objection to the foreclosure, and don’t know that he assented to this understanding set up by complainant, or that he knew of it.

Proofs on other points not material to be noticed were made, among others, as to the value of the land. Witnesses stated they wore well acquainted with it, and in 1854 it was worth thirty-six hundred dollars, and at the hearing, twenty-two thousand dollars, and that complainant, from time to timé, had made valuable improvements, fencing and putting it in cultivation, and had erected a dwelling house on it, which, with the improvements, were worth at least thirty-five hundred dollars, and were chiefly put on since 1861, and the dwelling house was built in 1863-4, and that complainant and his family have lived on section two (2) since 1861.

The Court dismissed the bill as to Pulliam, and decreed that the devisee of Scheel and Cabanne, convey all their right to complainant, he paying into court the amounts respectively due 'them by their answers, with six per cent, interest from the time of filing their answers, with interest at six per cent, from the date of the decree, the payments to be made on or before November 1st, 1867; and upon their refusal to make such deed on payment, for twenty days, then the master in chancery to make the deed, complainant to pay the costs.

To reverse this decree complainant brings the record' here by appeal, assigning as error the dismissal of the bill as to Pulliam, and in not decreeing against all the defendants.

We have been favored with the perusal of the opinion delivered by the learned judge who heard this cause, and consider it a lucid statement of the facts, and, generally, of the law applicable to them. We are inclined to think, however, he did not give sufficient effect to the character of the transaction, and the position of the parties, and the advantages derived to Pulliam, from the consent given by complainant to the foreclosure of the two mortgages in one suit, whereby a larger amount of land was made subject to the debt of the complainant, in the foreclosure suit, one of which had actually been paid by the then defendant. By setting up this fact, and the joinder of the two mortgages in the same bill, it was in his power to delay a decree for some time, but on the understanding that he should have an opportunity to redeem, at any reasonable time after a decree and sale, no objection was made. That Pulliam was not a party to this understanding is not so clear.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ill. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pensoneau-v-pulliam-ill-1868.