Taylor v. Hopkins

40 Ill. 442
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 40 Ill. 442 (Taylor v. Hopkins) 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
Taylor v. Hopkins, 40 Ill. 442 (Ill. 1866).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It appears from this record, that Couch was indebted to Granger, in the sum of twelve hundred dollars, one-half due in one year and the other in eighteen months. To secure its payment, he, on the first day of January, 1858, executed his notes to Granger, and a deed of trust to Shipman, on the premises in controversy. By the terms of the deed, the trustee was authorized to sell the land, on a default of payment, at auction, to the highest bidder for cash, after giving ten days’ notice of the time and place of sale, in a newspaper published in Grundy county. After the maturity of the first note, the trustee advertised the property for sale, on the third day of March, 1859, and while the second note had some months to run, defendant in error, who had, on the second day of March, 1858, become the purchaser of the property from Couch, subject to the trust created by Couch’s previous deed, filed his bill, on the day advertised for the sale, to enjoin the trustee from selling the premises, on the ground that only one of the notes had matured, and that Couch had other .property out of which the money could be made.

On filing the bill, an injunction was issued .on the same day, restraining the sale. That cause was continued from time to time until the December Term, 1859, after which it seems to have been dropped from the docket, without any order or decree disposing of the case. It does not appear from the record that the case was ever tried, or the injunction dissolved, or the case dismissed.

On the 23d of August, 1859, a sale was made by an agent of the trustee, and the property was bid off by Granger, at ten dollars for each tract, in the name of Weeks, and on the 1st of September, 1859, Shipman executed a deed to Weeks. This sale and conveyance was made while the injunction was in full force. At this sale, neither the trustee nor Weeks, to whom the conveyance was made, was present. Mor was the deed, thus made, recorded until the 13th of April, 1860. And, on the 5th day of that month, Taylor obtained a judgment against Hymer and Weeks, for the sum of $521.84, on which an execution was issued on the same day, and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Grundy county, and he, on the 17th day of that month, levied upon the north half of the quarter section. This levy was followed by a sale of the land, and it was purchased by Taylor, and a sheriff’s deed was subsequently issued to him. On the 4th day of May, 1860, Hale & Ayre recovered a judgment in the Superior Court of Chicago, against Hymer and Weeks, for $525.80 and costs. An execution was issued on the same day, and delivered to the sheriff of Grundy county, who levied it on the 6th of that month, on the portion of the quarter lying north of the railroad, and a sale was made on the 30th of that month, when Taylor became the purchaser; and the premises not having been redeemed, on the 11th day of September, 1861, the sheriff executed a deed to Taylor for the premises sold under the latter execution.

Defendant in error, on the 19th day of July, 1862, filed this bill to set -aside the deed from the trustee to Weeks, as well as the levies, sales, and sheriff’s deeds, under Taylor’s purchases on the executions. The grounds upon which he relies, are that the trustee’s sale was fraudulent, and not in conformity with the provisions of the trust-deed, and in violation of the injunction, and that Taylor was chargeable with notice of the fraud and of the inj action when he purchased.

Appellant concedes that the sale by Shipman was voidable; but it is contended, that, until the sale was set aside, it could be levied upon and sold by a creditor of Weeks, the purchaser at that sale, and that title would pass to an innocent purchaser without notice;-and that Taylor was such a purchaser. The trustee, in this case, seems to have acted in bad faith in selling and conveying the trust property. He thereby rendered himself liable to punishment for a contempt in violating the injunction, and we deem it unnecessary to inquire whether he incurred other liabilities, as that question is not before ns for determination. He could not delegate his authority to another. He had been selected by the parties, and the trust had been reposed in him, although it seems their confidence had been misplaced. He might, it is true, have employed an auctioneer to cry the sale, under his immediate supervision, and he could have still controlled it for the promotion of the interests of the parties. But he was not present at the sale, and consequently could not know whether or not it was fairly or fraudulently made. It was his duty, so far as he reasonably could, to prevent a sacrifice of the interests of both parties. The person selected to make the sale, it seems probable, was reckless of the interests of Couch.

Again, where we see that the creditor became the purchaser of valuable property at only a trifling sum, it creates a strong presumption that the whole transaction was fraudulent. Why should we expect a creditor, claiming to have a debt secured for so large an amount by a trust-deed on real estate, a portion of which, sold on execution for over $1,000, to purchase it in extinguishment of his lien on the property at only twenty dollars, thus leaving more than his original debt unpaid, and not only so, but making the purchase in the name of another person ? And when it is remembered that Weeks says it was purchased for him under a previous arrangement, and he confesses these judgments, and executions are at once issued, sent out of the county and levied on the property, it raises almost an irresistible inference that a fraud was intended to be perpetrated on the rights of defendant in error, or some other person in interest. Otherwise, why should Granger agree with the purchaser to bid the property for him, and carry out the agreement, by giving up his lien on such valuable property for the sum of twenty dollars, unless he expected to enforce payment from the securities on the notes, and secretly obtain a profit from the sale by the trustee? We can see no other solution to this question, than that there was a fraud intended on complainant, or on Couch’s securities, or on both, and it has the appearance that the trustee was a party to the arrangement.

It also appears that the sale was made without the requisite notice. The evidence shows that, the newspaper of the 10th day of August, 1859, contained a notice for the sale of this property, by the trustee, on the 13th of that month. It also appears, that the notice appeared in no other number of the paper during that month. Yet the sale was made on the 23d, and the property struck off on the bid of the creditor, for a mere nominal sum. And the fact, that the conveyance was made to another person, it would seem, was designed to prevent the sale from being set aside because it was in violation of the injunction, as the actors were parties to the bill. If the design of the trustee was to escape liability by appointing an agent, he would, of course, have been mistaken, as the course of justice cannot be obstructed by such shallow devices. The conduct of the trustee was so reckless, and the violation of all his duties is so manifest, and every principle of fairness so much outraged, that it is wholly indefensible, and counsel for plaintiff in error admit that the sale could not be sustained, as between the parties to it. See Thornton v. Boyden, 31 Ill. 200.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ill. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-hopkins-ill-1866.