Turpin v. Ogle

4 Ill. App. 611, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 251
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ill. App. 611 (Turpin v. Ogle) 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
Turpin v. Ogle, 4 Ill. App. 611, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 251 (Ill. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

From the record in this case it appears that in August, 1874, Eben F. Eunyan, payee and holder of certain notes of Heman E. Allen, dated July 31, 1874, payable in one, two and three years, and secured upon lands in Ooolc county by mortgage of even date and duly recorded, indorsed said notes for a valuable consideration, and delivered the same with the mortgage, to the defendant in error; that in the spring of 1875, he obtained from the mortgagor a conveyance of the equity of redemption; and that thereupon, before said notes were paid or due, and without the consent or knowledge of Ogle, but upon the strength of his apparent title, which he then made perfect of record by releasing the mortgage, he negotiated a loan of the Fidelity Savings Bank of Chicago, and executed a trust deed of the same premises to secure it.

In regard to his transaction with the bank, it appears more particularly, that he first applied for the loan about the 10th of June, 1875, and had several interviews on the subject with Mr. Haines, the president, in the course of which he constantly represented himself as the owner of the property, and was told that he would need to make out his notes for the amount desired, with a trust deed to secure them, and produce to the attorney of the bank an abstract, brought down to include the trust deed, and if upon examination the title should be found satisfactory he could have the money.

On the 18th of that month, Mr. Tripp, the attorney, prepared the deed to himself as trustee, which Eunyan then took away to execute. When he returned the next day to acknowledge it Tripp noticed in his hands a deed of release of the Allen mortgage. About the 6th of July he came again, bringing abstracts, which showed the title from Allen as follows: (1), the mortgage from Allen to Eunyan, recorded August 1, 1874; (2), the deed from Allen to Eunyan, recorded June 19, 1875; (3), the release from Eunyan to Allen, recorded July 2, 1875, and (4), the trust deed from Eunyan to Tripp, recorded July 2, 1875. The trust deed bore date the day before that of the release, which was June 19th; but both, together with the deed from Allen to Eunyan, were acknowledged on the 19th, and recorded in the order above stated. It is probable that Runyan himself took or sent all these instruments to the recorder’s office. He assured Tripp that the mortgage was in fact canceled and the property free from incumbrance; and proposed, being a prominent lawyer and operator in real estate, to give his own certificate to the title, which was declined by Tripp, who, after some days ocmpied in its examination, and in causing to be cured some minor defects which he had pointed out, reported it as satisfactory; whereupon the bank loaned the money and took the trust deed as security.

Default being made in the payment of the Allen notes, Ogle, the assignee, filed his bill to set aside the release and foreclose the mortgage as a first lien. The Superior Court, upon the pleadings and proofs, decreed accordingly, and Turpin, having become receiver of the bank and been admitted to defend, prosecutes this writ of error. The question is, who has the prior equity, Ogle or the bank?

Its ultimate decision is regarded as important, not only to the parties, whose interests here at stake are large, but also in its general application as affecting titles to real estate and the security of loans. We find no clear precedent in any adjudication of our own State, but are of opinion that it must turn upon the effect to be given to the registry acts, and to the comparative diligence or negligence of the parties in acquiring or manifesting their respective interests. Ogle in good faith paid full value for all that he received, and by the assignment of the notes unquestionably took, as between himself and the assignor, a valid and effectual assignment, in equity, of the mortgage also; so that as to him its subsequent release was a fraud on the part of Runyan.

The bank also, in like good faith, took the trust deed as security for money loaned, not only without notice, actual or constructive, that the mortgage was outstanding, but upon the faith of positive verbal assurances and of proper evidence furnished by the records that it was extinguished.

Was it bound, under the circumstances, to make further inquiry and know at its peril, that it had been assigned, or, on the other hand, was it necessary that Ogle, to protect himself against such a subsequent purchase or incumbrance of the premises, should have his assignment of record?

In the consideration of this question we attach great importance to the release. If the title of the hank was not itself apparently perfect of record, clearly it could claim no protection under the registry acts against an incumbrance or adverse title not necessarily inconsistent with that record. And such, without the release, would have been its condition. For it was well understood long before it was so declared in Edgarton v. Young, 43 Ill. 464, that upon a conveyance by mortgagor to mortgagee the mortgage would not necessarily merge, but might be held to be still subsisting if the intention or interest of the mortgagee, or perhaps his obligation-—-which in equity might control and conclusively declare his intention—should so require; and that a party claiming through him, without further assurance, must take this risk, so that if it turned out to be subsisting he would not be a purchaser without notice. The reasonableness of the doctrine was the more apparent in that case, where the party so claiming derived his title under proceedings in inviUmi.

He had purchased at an execution sale, and his deed was not from the mortgagee but from the sheriff. The former had not released the mortgage nor done any other act inconsistent with an intention, interest and duty, positively manifested by his previous assignment of it, to keep it alive; which, with a court of equity, is in such cases the controlling consideration. Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Corn, 89 Ill. 173, and authorities there cited. Exact and complete justice was therefore done, without violence to the record, by allowing the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale to take the equity of redemption, and giving effect to the mortgage in the hands of the equitable assignee. So also upon a similar state of facts, in Goff v. Denny, 2 Phila. 275, bottom paging.

And it may be that not even a deed from the mortgagee himself, with covenants against incumbrances, would be deemed, as to his grantee, such a declaration of his intention to extinguish it as would postpone the equitable assignee. Pratt v. The Bank of Bennington, 10 Vt. 293. Although upon this point the authorities seem not to be in harmony. Gregory v. Savage, 32 Conn. 250.

In the case at bar, however, we are not embarrassed by this question. The equity of the bank does not depend upon a merger of the mortgage, as in the. cases above referred to, nor upon a questionable implication of intention on the part of the mortgagee to extinguish it, to be found, if at all, in his covenants in the deed of trust. It rests upon a chain of recorded conveyances which includes a specific release of the mortgage, and excludes any assignment of it.

To all appearances the title is straight and absolutely perfect, from Allen the common source, through Runyan, to Tripp the trustee.

The only encumbrance appearing of record was duly discharged by the party in whom alone, according to the records, were the power and right to discharge it.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ill. App. 611, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turpin-v-ogle-illappct-1879.