Smith v. Doyle

46 Ill. 451
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 Ill. 451 (Smith v. Doyle) 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
Smith v. Doyle, 46 Ill. 451 (Ill. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a suit’ in chancery, brought by Abel M. Smith, in the Scott Circuit Court, against Charles Doyle, to redeem certain premises from a mortgage. It appears that complainant, in the spring of 1861, was the owner of a house and lot in the town of Haples. That at .the spring term, McEvers, Springer & Co., recovered a judgment in the Scott Circuit Court against complainant; that the premises were sold under the judgment, but he still had a homestead right, and the right to redeem from the sale.

It is admitted that plaintiff in error was indebted to defendant in error, and it appears that he gave to him a mortgage and note to secure the debt, and subsequently, by some new arrangement, a power of attorney to confess a judgment. That a judgment was confessed on the 29th of April, 1862, for $302 93 on the note, and on the second day of May, following, plaintiff in error and his wife executed a deed to the premises in which homestead and dower were relinquished. It appears that defendant in error sued out execution on his judgment, and had it levied upon the premises, and he redeemed them from the sale by McEvers, Springer & Co., and at the sale under his execution bid the amount required to redeem, and became the purchaser, and received a deed at the time from the sheriff.

Plaintiff in error insisted that defendant in error agreed to loan him the money necessary to redeem, and that the judgment was confessed to enable him to redeem through defendant in error, as the year had expired within which plaintiff in error could avail of that right, and that he was to have one year in which to pay the money and have the property. He also insists that the mortgage has never been foreclosed, and the premises are subject to redemption. Defendant denies that he redeemed the property for plaintiff in error, or agreed to loan him the money for that purpose, but insists that the judgment was confessed and the deed was made to enable him to secure his debt. And that peacable possession of the property was surrendered to him under his deed. It appears that the property was worth from one to two thousand dollars. . There were several witnesses who testified in the case, and there is some conflict. Fooshee swears that defendant in error stated he was willing to give the property back if plaintiff in error would pay him his money. That this occurred after possession of the property was surrendered to defendant in error. Plaintiff in error states that a contract was made to redeem; that defendant, by the arrangement, was to redeem and wait one year for his money; that the redemption money was to be an additional loan. That this agreement was prior to April 28, 1862; that he knew nothing of the sheriff’s deed to the defendant in error, who never spoke of it; that he placed confidence in him because he professed to be a friend. That he surrendered possession because he believed he had no remedy, and was too poor to litigate.

hiewick testified that plaintiff in error offered to redeem in June, 1863, but defendant in error refused to receive the money. That plaintiff in error offered to get gold for the purpose, but he still declined. Shaner states that defendant in error said, immediately after the judgment was confessed, that he had secured his claim against plaintiff in error, and was to wait one year for the money. Hinman testified that defendant in error stated, immediately before the redemption, that if plaintiff in error would secure his debt, he would wait one year for the money. That he saw him, at the request of plaintiff in error, in reference to the matter, and that the latter agreed to the proposition.

Abbott testified that nothing was said about a redemption at the time the power of attorney was executed, hut defendant in error, after his return from Greene county, where the judgment was confessed, stated to plaintiff' in error, if he would pay him all money loaned, costs, interest, etc., in gold, within one year, he might have the property hack. That the conversation occurred in Sear’s store, hut does not' know of any prior agreement.

Defendant in error stated, as a witness, that he loaned plaintiff in error gold; denies that there- was any contract for a redemption from him, but stated that he told him at Sear’s store what Abbott testified he said. That plaintiff in error never offered to redeem, and never told any person he had given a year to redeem, and did not tell Hinman that if plaintiff in error would secure his debt he would wait a year for his money. Sear states, that in the conversation at his.store, defendant wanted gold; that plaintiff in error demanded possession- of the property. Sinkins testified, that during the month of September, 1862, the parties came to his office, and plaintiff in error said they had agreed on a settlement of the controversy about the property, and gave witness the terms of the agreement, in the presence of defendant in error, and requested witness to draw up a bond for a deed; that he drew the bond, but it was never executed.

Although not entirely satisfactory and free from doubt, we think it appears from this evidence that defendant in error did agree to redeem and give time to plaintiff in error to pay the debt. That the advance of the money to redeem from the judgment of MeEvers, Springer & Co., was a loan. If not, why did plaintiff in error so repeatedly-say that if his money was paid to him within one year, plaintiff in error should have his property. And we are fortified in this belief from the circumstances of the case. At the time the judgment was confessed, the year had expired within which plaintiff in error could redeem as the debtor, or defendant in error, as his mortgagee, could redeem. The judgment being older than the mortgage, it was cut off, and had ceased to be a hen, and no person but a judgment creditor could redeem. And defendant in error was therefore under necessity of procuring a judgment against plaintiff in error,-and redeem as a judgment creditor, or lose his debt. And this being the case, it was natural that he would, to avail himself of this only mode of securing his debt, be willing to offer inducements to plaintiff in error to place him in that position. And it is not reasonable to conclude that plaintiff in error would not only confess a judgment to enable him to redeem property worth four or five times the debt at the very least, for which it had been sold, and then deed it to him and release his homestead, and his wife her dower, that he might obtain the property at precisely the amount necessary to redeem from the purchase under the execution, and still leave the judgment then confessed unpaid.

It is not reasonable to suppose that plaintiff in error intended to be so generous, when he would become houseless by the act, and leave himself in debt, and confer on defendant the title to property worth, as the evidence shows, between one and two thousand dollars. Justice did not require it, and we do not believe that it was intended. To have accomplished what the evidence shows he did, defendant in error must have offered some inducement, and it must have been the agreement to permit him to redeem from the mortgage and the judgment, or he must have practiced some fraud on plaintiff in error. The question then arises, whether the whole transaction, when considered in all of its parts, constituted a loan of money, and taking the title to secure its payment operates as a mortgage, from which a redemption may be had.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-doyle-ill-1868.