Smith v. Jackson

39 N.E. 130, 153 Ill. 399
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 130 (Smith v. Jackson) 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. Jackson, 39 N.E. 130, 153 Ill. 399 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a suit in chancery, brought by Albert J. Jackson, against Adam Smith and others, to-foreclose a mortgage. The facts disclosed by the record, about which there seems to be little, if any, dispute, are as follows: On the 10th day of March, 1884, Johnson Jacobs, being the owner in fee of the north-east quarter of section 36, in township 22, of range 6, in Whiteside county, borrowed of Jonathan O. Forbush the sum of §4500 for five years, and secured the same by mortgage upon the land above described, the mortgage providing, among other things, that in case of a bill to foreclose the same the mortgagor should pay all reasonable solicitor’s fees, and all costs and expenses in and about the foreclosure suit. July 26, 1885, he borrowed the further sum of §700, of John W. Martin, and secured the same by a second mortgage on the same premises, and afterwards conveyed the land, subject to the two mortgages, to Henry Johnson.

In 1887 Martin filed his bill to foreclose the junior mortgage, making Johnson Jacobs and wife, Henry Johnson and wife, and William O. Page and Margaretta Hummellman, two judgment creditors of Johnson Jacobs, parties defendant. Forbush, the senior mortgagee, does not seem to have been made a party. The suit, however, resulted in a final decree of foreclosure, under which the entire quarter section of land was sold by the master February 3, 1888, for §859.02, Martin becoming the purchaser.

On the 25th day of April, 1889, Adam Smith recoxered judgment by confession in the circuit court of Whiteside county, against Henry Johnson, for $954 and costs. On the 14th day of May, 1889, which was after the expira* tion of fifteen months after the foreclosure sale to Martin, Smith paid Martin the amount of his bid and interest, and received from him an assignment of his certificate of purchase, and on the same day, it being claimed that no redemption from the sale had been made, the master executed and delivered to Smith a master’s deed conveying the land to him.

Smith, after obtaining the master’s deed, sold and conveyed the south half of the quarter section to Henry Fulfs for $4800, and out of that sum paid $2300 on the Forbush mortgage. He also paid and satisfied the Hummellman judgments, amounting to near $500. He subsequently sold and conveyed the north half of the quarter section to Henry Juilfs for $3000, and received from Juilfs for the purchase money his six promissory notes, for $500 each, secured by mortgage on the land sold. None of these notes are paid, and all of them remained in Smith’s hands until his death, and are now in the hands of his administratrix.

Matters being in this situation, Albert J. Jackson, on April 10, 1893, purchased and obtained an assignment to himself of the Forbush note and mortgage, and on April 17, 1893, he filed the present bill to foreclose the mortgage, making Smith, Jacobs and others parties defendant. Smith thereupon tendered to Jackson’s solicitor the amount, principal and interest, then due on the note and mortgage, together with the costs then accrued, and $75 solicitor’s fees, the amount of the money so tendered being $2720. This tender, the .solicitor, by direction of Jackson, declined to accept, and Smith, on April 29, 1893, brought the same into court and placed it in the hands of the olerfi: of the court for Jackson, and the clerk deposited it in the bank of which Jackson is an officer, where it has since remained.

Jackson, having declined to accept the tender, proceeded with his foreclosure suit. Smith answered the bill and filed a cross-bill, praying to redeem from the Forbush mortgage, for his own protection as grantor of the two eighty-acre tracts, and as mortgagee of the north eighty. By his cross-bill he claimed title in fee to the land under the master’s deed, and set out his subsequent conveyances of the two eighty-acre tracts, and the execution to him, by the purchaser, of the mortgage on the north eighty for the purchase money, and also set out his tender to Jackson of the amount due on the Forbush mortgage, together with costs and solicitor’s fees, and prayed that the tender might be decreed to be sufficient, and that he might be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee, and a general prayer for relief.

Jackson answered the cross-bill, denying the validity of the master’s deed, and denying Smith’s title thereunder. It alleged that on April 25,1889, which was more than twelve and less than fifteen months after the date of the sale under the Martin foreclosure, the executor of Page made a pretended redemption from that sale, by causing a pretended execution to be issued on the judgment recovered by Page, in his lifetime, against Johnson Jacobs, and placing the same in the hands of the sheriff of Whiteside county, and causing the same to be levied on the quarter section of land in question, and by depositing with the sheriff, at the same time, the sum of §943.47,—the amount at that time necessary to redeem from the sale; that the sheriff placed a certificate of redemption on record, and that Smith, the assignee of the certificate of sale, accepted the redemption money, and that upon such acceptance the certificate of sale became of no force and effect and absolutely null and void, and that after these redemption proceedings, the master, in ignorance thereof, executed the master's deed to Smith, The answer admits that the redemption proceedings were illegal of themselves, but claims that the redemption money having been deposited with the sheriff by the executor of Page, and having been accepted by Smith, the assignee of the certificate of sale, all rights under the foreclosure sale were extinguished, and the master’s deed was consequently illegal and void, and conveyed no title to Smith.

The suit coming on to be heard on pleadings and proofs, it was shown by the evidence, among other things, that on the 25th day of April, 1889, Page being then dead, his executor, without having first caused his letters testamentary to be recorded in the circuit court as provided by statute in such cases, sued out an execution on the' judgment recovered by Page, in his lifetime, against Jacobs, and placed the same in the hands of the sheriff of Whiteside county, and caused the same to be levied upon the land in question, and at the same time undertook to redeem from the Martin foreclosure sale by depositing with the sheriff the sum bid at that sale, and interest. Nothing further seems to have been done in the matter of the redemption, unless it was the recording of a certificate of redemption by the sheriff. The controversy here is over the question as to whether Smith is shown to have accepted the redemption money in such way as to make the redemption binding upon him, and that question will be considered further on.

The court, at the hearing, found that all the material allegations of the original bill were proved, and that the equities of the case were with the complainant in that bill, and that the cross-bill was without equity and should be dismissed. The court also found, that at the date of the decree there was due the complainant on the mortgage the sum of §2848.68, and the further sum of §250 for solicitor’s fees, making §3098.68, and a decree was rendered in his favor for that amount and costs, and for a sale of the north half of the quarter section of land therefor, and dismissing the cross-bill for want of equity. While the suit was pending in the circuit court, Adam Smith died, and his administratrix was substituted as a party in his stead.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 130, 153 Ill. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-jackson-ill-1894.