Ritchie v. Judd

27 N.E. 682, 137 Ill. 453
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 27 N.E. 682 (Ritchie v. Judd) 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
Ritchie v. Judd, 27 N.E. 682, 137 Ill. 453 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This appeal brings before us for review a decree of the Superior Court of Cook county, dismissing the bill of complaint in a certain cause wherein Hugh Ritchie is complainant,. and S. Corning Judd, Edward C. Wentworth, John Ritchie, Aaron B. Mead, Albert L. Coe and Edward O’Hara are defendants.

On the 15th of June, 1865, the sheriff of Cook county made a tax deed to Hugh Ritchie for lots 1 and 2, in block 3, of H. 0. Stone’s subdivision of Astor’s addition to the city of Chicago, and on the 13th of September, 1865, the mayor of Chicago also made to him a tax deed for the same property. Thereafter, claiming to be in the exclusive possession of these lots, and to have paid all taxes and assessments thereon, on the 30th day of December; 1873, Hugh Ritchie conveyed them, by way of mortgage with power of sale, to his brother, John Ritchie, of Liverpool, England, to secure the payment of a promissory note for $3500, from the former to the latter, dated February 1,1874, payable six months after date, and bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum, payable half-yearly. The note not having been paid, on the 15th of January, 1880, John Ritchie sent it, together with the mortgage, to Aaron B. Mead and Albert L. Coe, a firm of real estate brokers doing business in Chicago under the firm name of Mead & Coe, for collection. Mead & Coe made several efforts to collect the amount due from Hugh Ritchie, which were unavailing, but by the consent of John Ritchie, coercive measures under the mortgage were delayed from time to time. At one time Hugh Ritchie offered to give a deed to John Ritchie for the lots, in satisfaction of the debt, but being informed that John Ritchie would not agree to that, he then agreed to co-operate with Mead & Coe to effect a sale of the lots for the purpose of paying the note and interest. This being satisfactory to John Ritchie, on the 19th of May, 1883, Mea.d & Coe placed the property upon their books for sale, the figures' first agreed upon as the price being $4500, but this was afterward increased to $8800.

In November, 1883, Mead & Coe made a contract with John H. Batterman for the sale of the lots to him for $9000. ' Of this, $500 was paid down as earnest money, and the remainder, $8500, was to be paid on the delivery to Batterman of a good and sufficient warranty deed for the lots within thirty •days from the date of the contract, or as soon thereafter as the title should be examined and found good, but it was provided that if the title should not prove good the $500 should he returned to Batterman. The abstract of title showed that the title of Hugh Ritchie rested entirely on his tax deeds, and that the patent title to the lots was in Amos Bostwick, who Rad obtained a deed therefor in 1856. Hugh Ritchie claimed that his title was superior to that of Bostwick, but not furnishing satisfactory evidence thereof to the attorney of Batter-man, the contract was rescinded and the $500 advanced was ¿returned to Batterman.

Subsequently, about the 3d of June, 188Í, Hugh Ritchie ■authorized Mead & Coe to have their attorneys, Messrs. Lyman & Jackson, file a bill in his name, under the Burnt Records act, to establish his title. The bill was filed, and Amos Bostwick was made defendant. He appeared and answered, ■setting up his patent title and claiming its superiority, and Re also filed a cross-bill, praying that his title be decreed established as the paramount title. The case was continued .along, from term to term, and Hugh Ritchie failed to furnish ■evidence which his attorneys thought would be sufficient to establish his title as paramount to that of Bostwick. It appears from his examination that during all that time he had in his possession important evidence in that respect, which he' willfully withheld, through a distrust of Mead & Coe and Lyman & Jackson. In view of this failure to furnish evidence, Lyman & Jackson advised a compromise with Bostwick, believing, as they informed Hugh Ritchie, that in the event of & trial of the pending suit the title of Bostwick would prevail. Accordingly, an offer was make by Mead & Coe to purchase Bostwick’s title for $2500, which was rejected by Bostwick. •'This offer had the approval of John Ritchie, but not that of Hugh Ritchie, who, though refusing to produce the requisite -evidence of that fact, continuously persisted in claiming the superiority of his own title.

About the 1st of October, 1886, Hugh Ritchie and Mead & Coe had an interview, in which, as they claim, he terminated whatever agency they previously had to act on his behalf, and he then notified them that he should thenceforward protect himself and look elsewhere than to them for aid. Meanwhile, before that time, in the month of August of the same year, one Merigold, of the firm of W. D. Kerfoot & Co., real estate brokers in Chicago, having learned at what price the Bostwiek title could be obtained and for what sum John Ritchie would sell his note and mortgage, had undertaken to make a contract with S. Corning Judd for their sale, but Judd had declined to'enter into the contract, for the alleged reason that, though willing to buy the title, he was not willing to buy the note and mortgage. Afterwards, on the 5th of October, 1886, John-Ritchie, under the advice of Mead & Coe, assigned the note, and conveyed, by deed, his title and interest in the lots as mortgagee to Edward C. Wentworth, a member of the firm of Mead & Coe, for the purpose of having him foreclose by a sale of the property, pursuant to the power in the mortgage. On the 23d of October, 1886, an agreement in writing was made and entered into by and between Edward C. Wentworth, Amos Bostwiek and S. Corning Judd, but by mistake it was dated October 1, 1886, as follows, to-wit:

“This agreement, made and entered into this first day of October, 1886, by and between Edward C. Wentworth, of the city of Chicago, in the county of Cook, and State of Illinois, party of the first part, Amos Bostwiek, of the city of Minneapolis, in the State of Minnesota, party of the second part, and S. Corning Judd, of said city of Chicago, party of the third part:

“ Witnesseth: That for and in consideration of the covenants and agreements of the said third party, as hereinafter set out, the said first party (being the holder and owner of one certain note made by Hugh Ritchie to one John Ritchie, of date of" February 1, 1874, and secured to be paid by a sale mortgage of December 30, 1873, on lots one (1) and two (2), in block three (3), in Stone’s subdivision of Astor’s addition to Chicago, which said note and mortgage were, on the 5th day of October,. 1886, duly assigned to said first party,) hereby covenants and agrees to foreclose said sale mortgage in the manner therein, provided, and sell said lots as provided in said sale mortgage, and also to procure from said John Ritchie a quit claim deed" to said lots to said third party, to be in readiness at the date-of said sale, on or before December 1,1886, and will also immediately have the abstract of title to said lots brought down to date, and procure a tax abstract of said lots.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 682, 137 Ill. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritchie-v-judd-ill-1891.