Poole v. Kelsey

95 Ill. App. 233, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 452
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 11, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 95 Ill. App. 233 (Poole v. Kelsey) 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
Poole v. Kelsey, 95 Ill. App. 233, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 452 (Ill. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Hr. Justice Worthington

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee urges that a freehold is involved, basing his claim upon the allegation of ownership in the concluding lines of appellant’s answer, and that this court has, therefore, no jurisdiction. This claim is not well founded. The title of appellant is not disputed. The issue is whether or not the north half deeded to him by George Wilkinson is subject to the lien of the Ætna mortgage. This issue does not involve a freehold.

“ It is the rule that bills to foreclose mortgages, or to establish other liens upon lands, do not ordinarily involve freeholds, because the defendant may, in such cases, bv the payment of the money necessary to discharge the liens, prevent the decree being executed so as to divest him of his freehold, and usually the only question litigated is the existence of the lien, the title itself not being in issue.”

In the case at bar, the Blood title, in the first instance,to the north half in controversy, is not disputed, neither is the conveyance from Blood to George Wilkinson, nor the conveyance from George Wilkinson to appellant. The sole issue, then, is whether the mortgage to the insurance company, by virtue of the agreement between appellee and George Wilkinson, is kept alive as a lien on said north half, as against the deed from George Wilkinson to appellant. This court has jurisdiction to decide that issue.

The evidence in the case discloses these facts:

January 18, 1882, Blood borrowed $500 from the Ætna Life Insurance Company, giving his note therefor, due January 1, 1887, at seven per cent interest, payable annually, and secured by mortgage on the east ½, N. W. ¼, Sec. 36, T. 2 N., R. 13 W. This note, marked canceled, amounting to $529.15, was paid November 1,1887, by appellee to Oliver J. Bailey, agent of the insurance company, and the note and a release of the mortgage forwarded to appellee. Bailey testifies:

“ Said mortgage was paid in full. A release of said mortgage was duly executed by the Ætna Life Insurance Company, and under date of December 16, 1887, together with all the papers in the loan (note, mortgage and abstract of title) was forwarded to James E. Kelsey. I had no knowledge at the time of the payment of such loan that anything was intended by such payment other than the full and complete satisfaction of said mortgage. Said note and mortgage was never sold or assigned by said insurance company, or by any one for it.”

January 3, 1886, Blood and wife, by warranty deed, con veyed the north half of the tract mortgaged to the insurance company to Robert T. Wilkinson and George Wilkinson. This deed contained no reference to the Blood mortgage to the insurance company.

February 6, 1888, Robert T. Wilkinson and wife quit-claimed their interest in said tract to George Wilkinson, he thereby becoming sole owner of said mortgaged north half.

September 6, 1886, Blood and wife, by warranty deed, conveyed the south half of the mortgaged tract to Kelsey, appellee, subject to the mortgage to the insurance company. The deed contains this clause:

“ Provided, however, that said warranty is subject to a mortgage of $500, due January 1, 1887, said mortgage given by the grantors in this indenture to the Ætna Life Insurance Company.”

The testimony of Blood shows that appellee Kelsey, as part of the purchase price for said south half, agreed to pay the Blood note to the insurance company. Blood testified :

“ I conveyed the south half of the eighty acres to Kelsey (appellee) for a mill. Do not recollect exact consideration, but traded it with the $500 mortgage on it. This mortgage was due the Ætna Life Insurance Company. The payment of that mortgage' by Kelsey was part of the consideration. 1 paid enough in the mill trade to satisfy mortgage. I had deeded north half to the Wilkinsons, and gave them mortgage on the south half to secure payment of ¿Etna Insurance Company on north half. Gave warranty deed for north half to Wilkinsons and I to pay incumbrance.”

Appellee Kelsey, in his cross-examination, confirms this evidence of Blood as follows:

Q. If I understand you correctly, you had assumed to pay off the $500 mortgage ip the deal with Mr. Blood? A. Yes, sir.

The witness further testifies that he expected to get the /money from George Wilkinson to pay the insurance company mortgage; that he expected to pay the loan off myself, George owing me $500; I expected to use that to pay it off with. Kelsey then, in paying the Blood note to the insurance company, did only what he agreed to do, as part of the purchase price of the south half.

When the insurance notes for principal and interest, with the release, were sent by Bailey to appellee, they were marked canceled. The payment of these by appellees, as stated supra, was on November 1, 1887.

On September 6, 1886, being the same date as the deed from Blood and wife for the south half to appellee, the contract between appellee and George Wilkinson was entered into, upon which appellee bases his claim for subrogation.

This contract was an agreement by appellee to purchase the Blood note from the insurance company, and to hold-the mortgage securing it to the compan}7 as a mortgage upon the north half of the tract described in it, to secure a note to be given appellee by said Wilkinsons, equal in amount to what was due on the Blood note, treating that note at that time as unpaid.

r This note George Wilkinson executed to appellee, dated December 20, 1887, for §569.90, and it is the note sought to be collected in this proceeding.

This agreement between appellee and George Wilkinson was not recorded. It was an attempt by these parties to keep alive, for their own purposes, an incumbrance on the north half of the property mortgaged to the insurance company, securing Blood’s §500 note, which note appellee had agreed with Blood to pay as a part of the purchase price to Blood, when appellee bought the said south half from him. That this incumbrance could not be so treated and continued by appellee and George Wilkinson -is too clear for controversy. When appellee, pursuant to his agreement, paid the Blood note to the insurance company, November 1, 1887, and received it, marked canceled, and a release of the mortgage, the mortgage, so fa,r as anything he might do, was as completely extinguished as if the release had been recorded. He had only done what he had agreed to do, as part of the purchase price of the south half. White v. Cannon, 125 Ill. 412.

Blood had given a warranty deed to the north half. He was interested as the maker of the note to the insurance company, in having it paid, and also as a warrantor of the title to the north half. Appellee was not a surety for Blood upon the insurance note so as to give him any claim or control of the mortgage securing the payment of that note by him. By his agreement with Blood, he promised to pay this note, not as surety, but as part of the consideration Blood was to receive from him for the south half sold to him. He could have been sued for it by the insurance company. Ingram v. Ingram, 172 Ill. 287.

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Related

Hough v. Ætna Life Insurance
57 Ill. 318 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Small v. Stagg
95 Ill. 39 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1880)
White v. Cannon
17 N.E. 753 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)
Ingram v. Ingram
50 N.E. 198 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)
Suppiger v. Garrels
20 Ill. App. 625 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Ill. App. 233, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-kelsey-illappct-1901.