Stanley v. Valentine

79 Ill. 544
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 79 Ill. 544 (Stanley v. Valentine) 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
Stanley v. Valentine, 79 Ill. 544 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 4th day of November, 1872, appellant received from Elizabeth Valentine a mortgage on certain real estate in North Evauston, in Cook county, to secure the purchase money for the property, and for which she had given her six notes, for different amounts, and payable on various dates, and amounting in the aggregate to $8500, and bearing ten per cent interest per annum. The mortgage was duly recorded on the 26th of February, 1873. About the 10th of March, 1873, she being desirous of raising money by loan, and to secure the same by deed of trust on the property, for the purpose of paying one of the notes she had given for the purchase money, of $3850, applied to Benjamin E. Gallup for a loan of $4000, who consented to make it if her title should prove satisfactory, except a prior mortgage and that given to appellant, and that appellant, on being paid the $3850, and being thereby enabled to pay the prior mortgage, would release his mortgage.and take from her a new mortgage, subject to a mortgage to be given to Gallup, to secure the balance of his purchase money on the lots.

At the time this arrangement was agreed upon, appellant was on the eve of starting to New York, to be absent some time, and to enable the arrangement with Gallup to be carried out, he executed a release of his mortgage, and delivered it to Gallup, to be held in escrow until the transaction should be fully consummated, and then delivered to Mrs. Valentine. Appellant having gone East, by some accident or mistake the release was taken from Gallup’s office to the recorder’s office, and there filed for record, which appellee learned for the first time on his return from New York. No loan was ever made by Gallup to Mrs. Valentine.

On the 17th day of February, 1873, Thomas Cogswell and others obtained a judgment in the Superior Court of Cook county against Mrs. Valentine, for $500.18 and costs. And the same parties recovered another judgment against her, in the same court, on the 30th day of April, 1873, for $499.67 and costs.

The judgment creditors sued out executions, and placed them in the hands of the sheriff, who levied on these lots and advertised them for sale on the 31st of May, 1873. Appellant, thereupon, filed this bill to have the release canceled, and the judgment creditors enjoined from selling the lots, unless it be subject to his mortgage. A temporary injunction was granted, but, on a hearing, the court below dissolved it, and dismissed the bill, and complainant appeals.

There is no pretense that Gallup had any, the slightest authority to deliver the deed of release until the condition was performed upon which it was placed in his hands, nor is it claimed that those conditions were ever performed, or that the release was rightfully filed with the recorder and spread upon the records. That was an accident or mistake, without either appellant or Gallup intending that it should be done, nor was there any delivery to Mrs. Valentine. It never went into her possession or came under her control, nor was it delivered to the recorder or any other person for her. As to her, then, the release in nowise changed or affected her rights, and was, so far as the apparent release of her mortgage was concerned, absolutely void, and was such a cloud on appellant’s title as in equity required it to be canceled and she restrained from asserting any rights under it.

It is true, there is no specific prayer that it be canceled as to her, but the bill contains the general prayer for relief. No rule of chancery practice is more familiar than that other than the specific relief prayed will be granted under the general prayer, when consistent with the facts stated in the bill. Now, such relief in this ease is perfectly consistent with and is not repugnant to or variant from the facts alleged and proved, and we presume no one would say the prayer would be defective had it been specifically made in this bill. It then follows, that it ivas error in the court below not to have retained the bill, and granted at least that relief.

But it is urged, that by filing the release for record the judgment creditors acquired a superior lien to that of appellant ; that the recording of the release, although by accident or mistake, let in their subsisting judgments as a lien that postpones appellant’s mortgage to their debts. On the other •hand, it is claimed that, as the release was never delivered and was absolutely void, creditors or subsequent purchasers, although bona fide, acquired no rights thereby. The release never having been delivered, it became no more operative than had it been a forgery. The title of appellant could not pass from him until the deed was delivered. The judgment creditors had not been misled by the recording of the release to advance money, to give credit, or do any act on the faith that the release was valid and operative. Their position to the case is in no way changed, nor have they done any act which gives them a superior, or any equity whatever, to claim an advantage over appellant’s mortgage.

It is manifest to all that a deed can not be operative until it is delivered. Perkins, who wrote his treatise on Conveyancing more than three centuries since, says (sec. 138, p. 28,): “And if I make a deed, and deliver it to a stranger as an escrowl, to keep until such a day, etc., and upon condition that if, before that day, he to whom the eser'owl is made shall pay me ten pounds, give me a horse, enfeoff me of a manor, or perform any other condition, then the stranger shall deliver the escrowl to him as my deed. In this case, if he deliver the same to him as my deed before the conditions or condition fulfilled, it is not my deed simpliciter ; but if the condition be fulfilled, and the escrowl delivered by him (after the conditions performed) as my deed, then it is my deed, and shall bind me—and then begins to be my deed, and shall not have relation to the first delivery.” This, perhaps, is as early an announcement of the rule as may be found in the books, and is the same as the definitions given by courts and text writers since that time. We are aware of no change in the rule since he wrote. Price v. Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne and Chicago Railroad Co. 34 Ill. 13.

Then, if a delivery before condition performed confers no title, it is difficult to perceive how others can acquire title from the grantee named in the escrow. Washburn on Real Property, vol. 3, p. 372, says: “If a deed is delivered before the previous condition is performed, it will not be the deed of the grantor, or have any effect as such.” And he refers to numerous authorities which support the text. The case of the grantee getting possession of the escrow, by fraud, before the condition performed, and then selling the land to an innocent purchaser, was fully discussed in Shirley v. Ayers, 14 Ohio, 308. The court say : “Until the performance of the condition, it (the deed) must remain a mere scroll in writing, of no more efficacy than any other written scroll; but when, upon the performance of the condition, it is delivered to the grantee or his agent, it then becomes a deed to all intents and purposes, and the title passes from the date of the delivery. The delivery, to be valid, must be with the assent of the grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Ill. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-valentine-ill-1875.