Thomas v. Home Mutual Building Loan Ass'n

90 N.E. 1081, 243 Ill. 550, 1910 Ill. LEXIS 1808
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 90 N.E. 1081 (Thomas v. Home Mutual Building Loan Ass'n) 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
Thomas v. Home Mutual Building Loan Ass'n, 90 N.E. 1081, 243 Ill. 550, 1910 Ill. LEXIS 1808 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

The executors of the last will and testament of Henrietta Snell, deceased, filed their petition in the probate court of Cook county, alleging that on April 5, 1901, the Home Mutual Building Loan Association of Racine, Wisconsin, filed its claim against the estate of said Henrietta Snell, deceased, based upon the following facts: That on October 21, 1898, Grace S. Coffin, daughter of Henrietta Snell, being then the owner of certain real estate, executed a mortgage upon the same to said building loan association to secure the payment of her note and bond for $5000 of that date, which mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded in Kenosha county, Wisconsin, where the land was situated, copies of the mortgage, note and bond being attached to said claim; that on December 1, 1898, Grace S. Coffin conveyed said premises to Henrietta Snell, and by the deed of conveyance the grantee, Henrietta Snell, “assumes all encumbrances which is now of record against said property;” that by said deed it was also provided that in the event of the death of Henrietta Snell- during the lifetime of the grantor the title to said premises should revert to and vest absolutely in said Grace S. Coffin; that this deed was acknowledged and recorded in said Kenosha county, a copy of which was also attached to said claim. The petition then alleges that said encumbrance not having been paid during the lifetime of Henrietta Snell, the claim was allowed in the probate court of Cook county on September 24, 1901, in the sum of $4762.10; that an appeal was prosecuted to the circuit court of Cook county, and on March 8, 1902, judgment was entered in the circuit court allowing the claim for $4871.22; that upon the death of Henrietta Snell title to the said premises became vested in said Grace S. Coffin; that on August 29, 1902, Grace S. Coffin, by warranty deed, conveyed said premises to Florence E. Hammond, which deed was duly recorded; that on March 2, 1903, Florence E. Hammond paid to the building loan association the amount then due it upon said encumbrance, and the building loan association thereupon executed and delivered its release of said mortgage, in and by which it acknowledged satisfaction and payment in full of said mortgage, which release was duly acknowledged and recorded; that on October 30, 1903, Florence E. Hammond conveyed the said premises, by warranty deed, to Joseph C. Yeager, and that the encumbrance so paid by Florence E. Hammond was the same encumbrance described in the claim filed by said association against the estate of Henrietta Snell; that petitioners were informed that Frank G. Wright and Susan F. Gunsolus claimed to be the owners of the claim so allowed against said estate in favor of the building loan association by virtue of a pretended assignment from said association, but that in fact and in law the claim so allowed had been paid and that the estate and the executors should be relieved from its payment, and prays that the court may find and decree that the claim so allowed against said estate has been paid and satisfied, and that the estate and petitioners, as executors, be relieved from the payment thereof. The building loan association, Frank G. Wright and Susan F. Gunsolus were the only parties made defendants. Wright answered, admitting the assignment of the judgment to him and disclaiming any interest in the subject matter of the petition. Susan F. Gunsolus answered, alleging that she took an assignment of the judgment from Wright and paid the face value thereof. On the hearing the probate court denied the prayer of the petition. An appeal was prosecuted to the circuit court, where, upon a hearing, the prayer of the petition was denied and the petition dismissed. From this judgment and order of the circuit court the executors appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to allow the prayer of the petition. During the pendency of the cause in the Appellate Court, Helen E. Gunsolus, assignee, was substituted for Susan F. Gunsolus, and Helen E. Gunsolus now prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court.

On the trial of the cause in the circuit court it was stipulated that the claim was filed as stated; that Mrs. Coffin executed the mortgage to secure her note and bond for $5000, which mortgage was recorded; that on December 1, 1898, Mrs. Coffin conveyed the premises to Mrs. Snell by warranty deed, in which the grantee assumed all encumbrances of record on the premises; that said deed provided that the premises should revert to the grantor in the event the grantee should die during the lifetime of the grantor; that Mrs. Snell died February 24, 1900, and the encumbrance not having been paid, the building loan association filed its claim against her estate, which was allowed in the probate court on September 24, 1901, for $4762.10, apd, on appeal, in the circuit court for $4871.22; that a certified copy of the order and judgment of the circuit court had been filed in the probate court; that upon the death of Mrs. Snell the title to said premises became vested in Mrs. Coffin according to the terms of said deed; that on August 29, 1902, Mrs. Coffin sold and conveyed said premises, by warranty deed, to Mrs. Hammond, which deed was recorded, and that Mrs. Hammond, on October 30, 1903, sold and conveyed said premises to Joseph C. Yeager,—which stipulation was admitted in evidence. In addition to the stipulation, the claim of the building loan association allowed in the circuit court, together with exhibits attached and with the order of judgment entered thereon; the deed from Mrs. Coffin to Mrs. Snell; the deed from Mrs. Coffin to Mrs. Hammond; the note, bond and mortgage, all marked “paid and canceled by Florence E. Hammond, by Eranlc G. Wright;” the release of the mortgage by the building loan association; the contract between Mrs. Hammond and Mrs. Coffin, and the assignment of the judgment to Wright, were admitted in evidence.

Respondents called as a witness Herbert Hammond, the husband of Florence E. Hammond, who testified that during the year 1902, acting as the agent of his wife, he entered into a contract with Grace S. Coffin to purchase the premises in question, together with certain chattels thereon, for the sum of $500, subject to three mortgages,— one for $5000 payable to one Ansley, one for $1500 and another for $2500; that he also had transactions with the said building loan association with reference to the note, bond and mortgage of Grace S- Coffin; that he asked Mrs. Coffin about the mortgage, and that she said her mother had assumed that debt, and that she (Mrs. Coffin) had subsequently borrowed money on the property and that the showing was sufficient to satisfy the man who took the mortgage; that he bought the property knowing the mortgage was there; that witness had received a letter from the attorney for the association, which was admitted in evidence, demanding the payment of the mortgage indebtedness" and offering to assign the judgment against the estate of Mrs. Snell. Hammond further testified that Wright acted as the agent of Mrs. Hammond in making the purchase of the judgment; that the contract of purchase entered into between his wife and Grace S.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 1081, 243 Ill. 550, 1910 Ill. LEXIS 1808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-home-mutual-building-loan-assn-ill-1910.