Stanfa v. Buffo

280 Ill. App. 261, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 382
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 1935
DocketGen. No. 8,895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 280 Ill. App. 261 (Stanfa v. Buffo) 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
Stanfa v. Buffo, 280 Ill. App. 261, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 382 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee instituted this suit on January 31, 1934, to foreclose a mortgage executed by Mauriyio Buffo and Lucia Buffo, his wife, on April 2, 1932, to secure the payment of a note for $4,000 and interest thereon, due two years after date. The mortgagors, who are appellants here, filed an answer and counterclaim, alleging that the mortgage sought to be foreclosed was executed by them in renewal of a previous mortgage which they had given to secure the payment of $4,000 upon which only $650 remained unpaid. Their answer and counterclaim further alleged that at the time of the execution of the renewal note and mortgage for $4,000, they believed they were executing a note and mortgage for the true balance due, which was $650, and that the renewal note and mortgage for $4,000 was procured by fraud and by false and fraudulent representations. The answer and counterclaim admitted that there was due from them under the provisions of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed the sum of $650, with interest from December 1, 1933, and sought to have the note and mortgage described in the original complaint reformed so as to correctly show the intention of the parties. The cause was heard by the chancellor and a decree of foreclosure and sale was rendered in favor of appellee, finding the amount due him to be $4,556, together with attorney fees as provided by the mortgage. From this decree appellants have brought the record to this court for review.

The uncontradicted evidence is that appellants purchased the premises involved herein on October 2,1926, from one Farino and that they obtained a portion of the purchase price by executing on that day their note for $4,000, due five years after date, bearing six per cent interest payable semiannually, and securing the payment thereof by a mortgage upon the premises purchased. Jasper St. Angel was at that time and for several years thereafter engaged in the real estate business and he was named as payee in the note and mortgagee in the mortgage, and the mortgage specified that both principal and interest were payable to the order of the mortgagee at the office of St. Angel & Company, which was a. corporation, Jasper St. Angel being an officer thereof. On the same day St. Angel assigned the mortgage and indorsed the note to appellee herein, but the assignment was never filed for record. For approximately five years appellants made payments of their interest monthly at the office of St. Angel and Company, paying St. Angel himself or an officer or employee of his company and also paid during this period at the same place and to the same parties $3,350 upon the principal, receiving proper receipts therefor. Jasper St. Angel paid appellee the interest on this note as in the note specified, regularly, but retained for his own use, or the use of his company, all of the principal payments which he had received from appellants. When the note and mortgage matured on October 2, 1931, there remained due from appellants thereunder only $650.

On September 16,1931, appellants executed an agreement, which recited that the unpaid principal sum of this note was $4,000, that it would mature October 2, 1931, that the then owner was appellee and that he had agreed to extend its payment for six months. On the same day, appellants executed an interest note for $120, due April 2,1932. On this latter date, appellants executed another note in the sum of $4,000 and secured the payment thereof by a mortgage upon the same premises covered by the prior mortgage. In this note, appellee was named as the payee and the mortgage was made to him as mortgagee, and it is this note and mortgage which forms the basis of this proceeding. Just prior to their execution, appellee, St. Angel, and appellants had several meetings and appellants were advised for the first time that the money which they had paid to St. Angel to apply upon the principal had not been turned over to appellee, but that St. Angel had converted it to his own use. It is the contention of appellants that at the time this renewal note- and mortgage were executed, they were led to believe and did believe that they were executing a note for $650 and that the execution of a $4,000 note and the mortgage to secure the payment of the same were obtained by St. Angel as agent and representative of appellee through his, St. Angel’s, false and fraudulent representations.

The renewal note and mortgage were prepared by an attorney representing appellee and given to St. Angel to have executed. He took them to the home of appellants and procured their signatures thereto, and he, St. Angel, executed the certificate of acknowledgment to the mortgage as a notary public. According to the testimony of Mauriyio Buffo, St. Angel told him just prior to the time he came to their home with the renewal note and mortgage that it would have to be renewed for the balance due, which was $650, and that the new mortgage would be for $650 and would be payable to him, St. Angel, just as the first one. At the time he and his wife signed the renewal note and mortgage, he testified that he said to St. Angel: “I’m signing for what I owed, $650.00, and St. Angel said ‘Yes,’ ” and relying on this statement, he signed the renewal note and mortgage. Lucia Buffo, the wife of Mauriyio, testified that before she signed the renewal note and mortgage, she also asked St. Angel if it was for $650 and he replied in the affirmative. St. Angel’s version as to the renewal transaction is as follows: “Before the mortgage was executed we had two or three meetings. Mr. Stanfa wanted to meet there (the home of appellants). Buffo said: ‘I owe only $650.00.’ I said, ‘Yes, but this man has the whole thing coming.’ He (Buffo) said: ‘I can get the money if I go to the people.’ I said: ‘You can’t get the money because you made the payment to St. Angel and Company, but if things get better I’m going to see you get this money after a while. ’ They were working in the basement that day, the table was all wet, I didn’t want to soil the whole thing so I folded it so they could sign it. They said they only owed $650.00. I said: ‘Yes but the balance is a credit to St. Angel and Company. If things get better we can collect the money. ’ Mrs. Buffo said while she was signing that she only owed $650.00 and I said: ‘Yes but this man has the whole thing coming.’ Mr. Buffo always said he only owed $650.00. St. Angel and Company owe the money and I am willing to take the responsibility for the balance if things get better. The agreement that I should pay the difference was agreeable to Mr. Stanfa. Mr. Buffo was to pay $650.00. All of the amount paid on the principal by the Buffos was paid prior to April 2, 1932. Mr. Q-oembel (one of the attorneys for appellee) made out the note and mortgage for Mr. Stanfa. They asked me to act as a Notary Public because they were Italians and I would understand their language. When the mortgage was due, Mr. Stanfa wanted to know who the Buffos were and I told him. The balance due of the principal from November, 1930 to date was $650.00 and I have been paying Mr. Stanfa interest since April 2,1932 and have paid him more than $400.00 money that St. Angel and Company had. I paid Mr. Stanfa direct and Mr. Buffo does not have anything to do or any notice that I am paying Mr. Stanfa.”

It is conceded that appellants are uneducated and could not read or write English. St. Angel was of the same race and they had implicit confidence in him. In procuring the extension agreement and the renewal of the original note and mortgage, St.

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280 Ill. App. 261, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanfa-v-buffo-illappct-1935.