Seaverns v. Presbyterian Hospital

64 Ill. App. 463, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 944
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 Ill. App. 463 (Seaverns v. Presbyterian Hospital) 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
Seaverns v. Presbyterian Hospital, 64 Ill. App. 463, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 944 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This writ of error is prosecuted to reverse a decree of foreclosure entered in a suit brought by the defendant in error to foreclose two certain mortgages.

One of the mortgages for $10,000 was made by a prior owner of the mortgaged premises, and the other for $2,000 ■was made by the plaintiff in error after he became the owner of the same premises; and the indebtedness secured by each matured on the same day. These two mortgages are hereinafter referred to as the Peabody-Houghteling mortgages, and were purchased by the defendant in error on July 21, 1894.

It is not claimed that there could have been any successful defense against either mortgage in the hands of any one except the defendant in error.

The right of defense against a foreclosure of the mortgage, by the defendant in error, is claimed to exist because of a failure by the defendant in error to perform a legal obligation which rested upon it to pay and discharge the same at the time it purchased them.

It is claimed that such legal obligation arose out of certain dealings and attendant circumstances, with reference to a subsequent mortgage for $25,000, made by the plaintiff in error to the defendant in error upon the same premises.

Those dealings were substantially as follows:

In the year 1890, and running into 1891, the plaintiff in error incurred expenses aggregating several thousand dollars for repairs and improvements to the building that stood upon and formed a part of the mortgaged premises. Such expenses were rendered necessary to put the building into condition to meet the agreement in such respect that plaintiff in error had entered into with his lessees thereof.

The firm of Bogue & Hoyt (afterward Bogue & Co.) had been for a number of years the renting and financial agents of the plaintiff in error, and undertook to direct the repairs and improvements, and to advance the money therefor, either directly or from moneys which they would procure through discounting the notes of plaintiff in error.

Plaintiff in error does not seem to have been a man of large means, and so far as the control of the property in question was concerned, he appears to have submitted almost wholly to the judgment and management of the Bogues, between one of whom, at least, and himself most affectionate and trustful relations existed.

Apparently, too, the expectation of the plaintiff in error, and perhaps of the Bogues also, at the inception of the repairs, was that their cost could not exceed $6,000, and could be met by the rents to accrue within the reasonable limits of time for which temporary discounts could be made, or during which the Bogues could carry the necessary advances, but by or before the early spring of 1891 it became known to the plaintiff in error that the repairs, then about half completed, would cost as much as $19,000.

He testified that he knew it as early as February 13, 1891, and that “about the middle of 1891” Mr. Hamilton B. Bogue told him he would have to make a mortgage. It is quite certain that he meant to say he was told so about the middle of some month early in 1891, for the mortgage that he executed was made early in April, 1891. However that may be, we see that he received the following letter from. Hamilton B. Bogue, which bears the date mentioned by him as being the date before which he knew how largely the repairs had involved him.

“ Chicago, Feb. 13th, 1S91.
Joshua Seaverns, Esq.
Dear Feiend : At the finish of expenses on the warehouse, including the Peabody-Houghteling loan and advances, there will stand against the property fully $31,000. I think the largest loan possible to obtain naturally will be $20,000.
The Aultman lease, you know, runs nine years from next May 1st, paying the first four years $3,500 per year, and the following five years $4,500 per year, all in regular monthly payments.
Sincerely yours,
Hamilton B. Bogue.”

The “ Peabody-Houghteling loan ” spoken of in the letter means the two mortgages for $10,000 and $2,000, respectively, heretofore specified by us as being the ones to foreclose which this bill was filed, and the difference between them and the mentioned sum of $31,000 represents the $19,000 expended and needed to make the repairs.

The Bogues had not rendered to the plaintiff in error any statement of the account as it existed between them at the time that letter was written, and did not inform him how much he owed them at any time before the contemplated mortgage was made, although he knew he owed them a considerable amount. They did, however, have conversations together from time to time, until the mortgage was executed and delivered, with reference to the manner in which the proceeds of the new loan should be applied, and it is plainly established that the agreement by the Bogues was that they would first apply such proceeds to the extinguishment of the two Peabody-Houghtelingmortgages, and that thereafter what remained should be kept by them to reimburse them for what plaintiff in error owed them, and for subsequent advances which they should make on account of the building.

George M. Bogue, a member of said firm of Bogue & Hoyt (succeeded by Bogue & Co., in which he was also a member), was at the time president of the Presbyterian Hospital, the defendant in error, and chairman of its finance committee, and from the time he became such, his said firm acted as the agents of the hospital in the matter of all loans made by it, aggregating over $100,000.

There was a by-law of the hospital that all of its investments by way of loans upon real estate should be in first mortgages, and should be first submitted to and approved by the board of managers.

There is no evidence of any application for the new loan having been submitted to, or approved by, the manager or the finance committee, and the first that appears to have been known of it by anybody connected with the hospital, except George M. Bogue, is shown by the following letter to its treasurer:

“ Chicago, March 31, 1891.
George W. Hale, Esq.,
Treasurer Presbyterian Hospital,
153 La Salle street, Chicago.
Dear Sir: We have negotiated a loan to A. B. & J. S. Seaverns for $25,000, on their property at the corner of 26th and Butterfield streets, the details of which will be given when we hand the papers covering the loan. Please send us your check for the amount of the loan, $25,000.
Very truly yours,
Bogue & Hoyt.”

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ill. App. 463, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaverns-v-presbyterian-hospital-illappct-1896.