Reed v. Kemp

16 Ill. 445
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 16 Ill. 445 (Reed v. Kemp) 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
Reed v. Kemp, 16 Ill. 445 (Ill. 1855).

Opinion

Scates, 0. J.

Five questions have been presented and pressed upon our attention, in the argument of this cause

First, That cross-bills have been filed and have not been answered ; Second ,The execution of the bond by Reed; Third, The alteration of the bond by Kemp; Fourth, Recording of the bond as notice; and Fifth, Subsequent purchases, without notice. Upon all these points, our opinion is with the defendant.

Revised Statutes of 1845, p. 96, secs. 24 to 29, prescribo that defendant may, after answer to the bill, file cross-bills, and thereupon, like rules for answers thereto, may be taken, and answers shall be evidence as in original suits. The cross-bill under our statute is held to be an adjunct to the original, and requires no service. Fleece v. Russell et al., 13 Ill. 32. Still the party should take some step in it, in order to obtain an answer, make an issue and have a hearing at the same time as the original. Simply filing a cross-bill, without taking any further step in", or notice of it, will not be allowed to hedge up the way and suspend the rights of original complainant to proceed with, and have a hearing of his cause. Such seems to us to have been the course taken with one of these cross-bills, if indeed it be not answered by the one only answer filed, under a rule to answer (defendant’s cross-bill.) The rule and the answer were both treated as embracing all that was necessary to be done; and we see and hear nothing more of the matter, until the question is raised in this court, that one of the cross-bills has not been answered. We think it too late; the party must be considered as either having abandoned his cross-bill or waived any other or separate answer than was made.

The testimony to Reed’s signature to the bond, corroborated as it is by so many strong circumstances showing his recognition and admission of a contract about the land, we deem altogether sufficient and satisfactory, and we think it unnecessary to recapitulate it.

The alterations admitted by Kemp to have been made by him, are immaterial. Nor indeed can we regard any alleged alterations to be material; to alter the sense, liability, or the obligation of the bond. If it were set up, or in fact made, as a mortgage, the alteration of the consideration from sixty-three to sixty-five, taking that to be the amount of the debt, would be a material one, and enlarge the amount of the obligation. So would a change in the penalty of a bond. But it would seem to be otherwise if the mere recital of a consideration in a .deed or contract, for the simple and sole purpose of showing that there was a valuable consideration paid, or to be paid. Such appears to us to be the character of this recital, and the object of expressing the amount paid in this case, and it can make no difference in the validity or obligation, whether it wore five or sixty-five. There is no presumption of law arising upon the face of an instrument from bare inspection of its appearances, whether it has been, and if so, when, altered from the true contract ; such appearances may throw suspicion and distrust upon the instrument, but it is a question of fact and not of law. Gillett et al. v. Sweat, 1 Gil. R. 489. In Walters v. Short, 5 Gil. R. 256, the court express dissatisfaction with a rule of presumption in favor of the alteration being made at the time of the execution of the instrument; but while they seem to incline to a contrary presumption, they lay down no rule on the subject, as to a presumption in law at all, but seem to put it, as we think it should be, upon the matter of fact. The party producing such an instrument, is called upon for explanations, and if he fail to give them, suspicion may become the conviction of fact in the mind of the court or jury, that such alterations, or appearances of alteration, were subsequent to the execution and delivery. Such a conclusion seems strangely preponderant in the mind of the court in that case. Still these explanations may, themselves, be found on the face of the paper. See 2 Stark. Ev. 254; see also Cumberland Bank v. Hall, 1 Halstead R. 215.

A bond is valid without inserting the name of the obligor in the body of the bond. Ex parte Fulton, 7 Cowen R. 484. So the insertion afterwards, is an immaterial alteration. So may “year ” be inserted, when it will not alter the obligation of the contract. Hunt, administrator, v. Adams, 6 Mass. R. 519. So the inserting of “ pump and well of water” into a conveyance, has added nothing, as they passed without. Bowen v. Pinkham, 18 Pick. R. 172. Prefixing as a caption to an auction sale, the words “sales at auction, March 6, 1826,” was held immaterial. Nichols v. Johnson, 10 Conn. R. 196. But these must be done innocently, and without a fraudulent design, otherwise they will vitiate. 1 Greenleaf Ev., Secs. 567, 568, 569. Tested by all these examples, and compared with others reported, and by the strictest scrutiny into the apparent or supposed motive in this instance, and we still find nothing which will authorize us to set this contract aside. Ignorance is the most apparent motive. While we sustain the contract, however, we will not withhold an expression of our decided disapprobation of all, or any liberties of this character, with writings by which others are bound. No advantages are ever gained, and most frequently much injury is done the party himself, by the suspicion and distrust thrown upon his acts and his motives.

We are all agreed, that, admitting that Kemp made' them, they are sufficiently explained by the proofs, are consistent with the true contract of the parties, and it is valid and binding.

The fourth point involves a construction of the recording acts, in' relation to unacknowledged contracts being constructive notice, when recorded.

In Bourland v. The County of Peoria et al., in this volume, we have noticed the several changes in the time for recording title papers, up to the act of 1833, which gave them effect and made them notice from the filing, as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers, and void as to them until such filing; and we have adverted to the act of 1827, which embraced all contracts and agreements concerning or affecting lands in law or equity. In the Revised Statutes of 1845, the language is, if possible, still more comprehensive, and requires “ deeds and other instruments relating to or affecting the title to real estate to be recorded.” (p. 108, Sec. 22.) Before they 6an be recorded, they must be acknowledged or proved, as provided in Sec. 16, p. 105. Those so acknowledged or proved, may be read in evidence without further or other proof of execution; Sec. 25. Where not so acknowledged or proved, they may still be filed, and operate as notice and take effect; but for purposes of evidence, their execution must be proven as at law, before the recording acts ; Sec. 28, p. 109. Similar provisions on p. 305, Sections 25, 26, give a like effect and notice to levies of attachments and executions from foreign counties, or attachments in the same, from the filing of a certificate of the levy with the recorder.

This bond was not acknowledged. Two questions are raised upon this state of the facts: That no instrument, without some sort of acknowledgment, is entitled to be filed or recorded, and doing so will not help them, or amount to any kind of notice.

It is so held in Connecticut under a recording act, limited to such legal instruments, deeds, conveyances and mortgages as convey title. None others are provided for or required to be recorded. Carter v. Champion, 8 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ill. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-kemp-ill-1855.