Shepard v. Wheaton

60 N.E.2d 47, 325 Ill. App. 269, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 291
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 28, 1945
DocketGen. No. 9,458
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 N.E.2d 47 (Shepard v. Wheaton) 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
Shepard v. Wheaton, 60 N.E.2d 47, 325 Ill. App. 269, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 291 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Riess

delivered the opinion of the court.

John Garvin, trustee and stockholders’ agent, one of numerous defendants in a mortgage foreclosure proceeding pending in the circuit court of McLean county, has appealed from a summary judgment entered against him and in favor of plaintiff in the above cause. The plaintiff appellee, J. F. Shepard, had filed a suit in equity to foreclose a first mortgage real estate lien given to secure payment of a promissory note in the principal sum of $7,000, by Lewis 0. Wheaton and Minnie A. Wheaton, his wife, to Shepard as trustee, on March 15, 1922 and duly recorded on May 4, 1922. On March 1,1925, the Wheatons had executed a second deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage covering the same real estate, which was recorded on June 12, 1925. This second mortgage lien was given to secure the payment of a series of five promissory notes aggregating $8,000. Notes numbered 1, 2 and 3 were for principal sums of $2,000 each and notes numbered 4 and 5 were for $1,000 each; the latter two being held by defendant appellant Garvin as trustee and assignee agent for former bank stockholders. The foreclosure suit was filed on July 29,1932, and set forth both mortgage liens, alleging the second mortgage to be a junior and subordinate lien to that of the plaintiff. The mortgagors, noteholders and others claiming interest under the second mortgage were joined as defendants. All defendants except appellant failed to plead and made default. Appellant Garvin alone filed an answer and counterclaim and now prosecutes this appeal.

On June 5,1929, one L. B. Strayer, as administrator of the estate of Sarah Hefner, deceased, holder of notes 1, 2 and 3 secured by the second mortgage, had filed a suit in chancery against J. F. Shepard and the Normal State Bank for an accounting and equitable relief. In that proceeding, it was alleged that Sarah Hefner had placed in the hands of J. F. Shepard and the Normal State Bank, funds to be invested for her, which money was used in the purchase of said second mortgage notes numbered 1, 2 and 3.- The administrator charged that defendants had falsely represented to the deceased that the notes were secured by first mortgage liens; that she later learned such representations to be false and by her suit, sought rescission of the contract for the sale and purchase of the notes and recovery of the purchase price paid therefor. On the day following the filing of this suit, Stella Flesher, daughter of Sarah Hefner, as assignee and owner of the mortgage notes 4 and 5, filed a similar suit with similar allegations of fraud and misrepresentation against said defendants Shepard and Normal State Bank. She also prayed rescission of the contract of purchase as to notes 4 and 5, aggregating $2,000, and sought recovery of the purchase price thereof. She tendered the notes to the defendants in that proceeding and then deposited them with the clerk of the circuit court of McLean county in which all of the suits were pending. The filing of both suits seeking rescission of the contract and recovery of the money antedated the filing of the foreclosure proceeding wherein the summary judgment now before this court was entered. Some of the same attorneys who appear herein represented the owners of the three notes held by the mother’s estate and of the two notes held by the daughter. By agreement, the Flesher case of the daughter seeking rescission of notes 4 and 5 was to abide the final decision in the Strayer case affecting notes 1, 2 and 3 which decision should be ‘1 accepted by counsel on both sides as controlling the issues” in the Flesher case. The statement and stipulations in relation thereto by Mrs. Flesher and her attorney Mr. Dunn, who is also counsel for appellant in this proceeding with other counsel, appears with Mrs. Flesher’s subsequent motion to dismiss her suit set forth at page 5 of additional abstract. The motion to dismiss the Flesher suit and return notes 4 and 5 to her was filed on December 27, 1943 and on the same day was heard and taken under advisement and since then, no order has been entered in that cause and the motion was never ruled upon by the chancellor of the trial court in which the case is still pending. Copies of the pleadings and court proceedings in the Strayer and Flesher cases together with certified copy of the Appellate Court’s opinion in the Strayer case are attached as exhibits to the amended verified complaint, all of which appear from the exhibits and stipulations and clerk’s certificate attached thereto.

The case filed by Strayer as administrator of the estate of Sarah Hefner, deceased, mother of Stella Flesher, was dismissed by the trial court for want of equity in 1937. An appeal was taken from that decree to this court and the respective parties were represented in this court by some of the same counsel as those appearing in the present and all prior proceedings. The Strayer case was decided by this court on April 20,1938; our opinion appearing in abstract form in L. B. Strayer v. Shepard, 298 Ill. App. 630, 19 N. E. (2d) 234. The exhibit of a certified copy of the court’s opinion in that case, upon rehearing therein, fully details the material facts averred and involved in the present proceeding. We there fully discussed the equitable claims of plaintiff under, the facts presented and held that the appellant was not entitled to equitable relief and had a complete and adequate remedy at law, since she sought recovery of only a money judgment or decree.

During the year of 1926 and before filing her above suit in 1929, Stella Flesher had assigned her notes numbered 4 and 5 and certain other notes as collateral security for a $2,700 loan, to the Farmers State Bank of Wenona of which appellant was then president. These pledged notes numbered 4 and 5 were later delivered to her by the bank in order to enable her to tender them to Shepard and the Normal State Bank and to deposit them with the clerk of the circuit court as a continuing tender, in which entire transaction the bank pledgee co-operated with her and were conversant with the facts. The assets of the Farmers State Bank of Wenona later passed to the First State Bank of Wenona, in wMch transaction the Farmers State Bank guaranteed payment to the First State Bank of Wenona of the Flesher second mortgage notes numbered 4 and 5 then held as collateral. Appellant John Garvin, president of the Farmers State Bank, testified in the Strayer case. Appellee Shepard contends that by reason of these circumstances and the acquirement of the notes concerning which Stella Flesher had filed her suit in which the notes were so deposited and still remain in the custody of the clerk of the circuit court of McLean county, the Farmers State Bank, as assignee pledgee of the notes became privy to the rescission by Stella Flesher. Subsequent to the disposition by this court of the appeal in the Strayer administrator case, the appellee Shepard filed an amended complaint on September 2,1942 in the foreclosure proceeding under the first mortgage, setting up the transfer by Stella Flesher to the Farmers State Bank of Wenona as assignee of all her right, title and interest in and to notes 4 and 5 and the bank’s legal ownership thereof. The bank was then joined as a defendant and the same relief was prayed as against all defendants in the original complaint.

Later, on March 24, 1943, defendant appellant Garvin, as trustee and stockholders’ agent, filed his appearance and answer to the amended complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E.2d 47, 325 Ill. App. 269, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-wheaton-illappct-1945.