Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Kirchoff

27 N.E. 91, 133 Ill. 368
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 91 (Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Kirchoff) 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
Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Kirchoff, 27 N.E. 91, 133 Ill. 368 (Ill. 1890).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, brought by Elizabeth Kirchoff on the 12th day of June, 1882, against the Union Mutual Life Insurance Company, to redeem lots 2 and 4, block 21, in canal trustees’ subdivision of a certain quarter-section of land in Cook county, to which the company acquired title under a quitclaim deed from complainant and her husband, and under certain foreclosure proceedings in which she, her husband, and others, were defendants.

The record is quite voluminous, but the facts, briefly stated, are substantially as follows: On the 8th day of May, 1871, Julius Kirchoff, complainant’s husband, borrowed of the insurance company $60,000, and to secure the payment, he and Elizabeth Kirchoff, and her mother, Angela Diversey, executed their joint note. Kirchoff and wife executed a deed of trust on all real estate they owned, including the two lots,—their homestead. Mrs. Diversey also executed a deed of trust on lands owned by her, to secure the loan. In 1877, default having been made in the payment of the money, negotiations were commenced with a view of a renewal of the loan on long time, at a reduced rate of interest. These negotiations did not prove successful, and an effort was then made for a settlement by having the mortgagors surrender all or most of the property in payment of the debt. In the meantime, judgment was rendered against Mrs. Diversey, on the note, by confession, and in July, 1878, bills were instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States, to foreclose the two trust deeds. In the trust deed executed by Mrs. Diversey, a part of the premises belonging to her were incorrectly described, and in the bill to foreclose, the company sought to correct the error. Mrs. Diversey put in an answer, denying any mistake in the description, and set up other matters of defense. On January 1,1879, Kendall, the attorney of the insurance company in Chicago, wrote the company that, in his opinion, an offer to Mrs. Diversey to let-her retain forty acres of the land would induce her to give the company a deed of the balance of the property; that Kirchoff would surrender all his property, and make an arrangement to buy back his homestead at a liberal price, but “I do. not dare to settle with him without settling the whole case,” as Mrs. Diversey’s matters may be complicated by any settlement with Kirchoff. To this the company replied: “If settlement can be made of all complications, etc., and with quitclaims from all parties, we will consent to let her keep forty acres.” A short time after this,—about the 9th day of June, 1879,— a settlement was made, and in September, 1879, Mrs. Diversey conveyed to the company all the land named in the trust deed,' which she owned, except the forty acres, and that was released to her. At the same time, complainant and her husband, by quitclaim deed, conveyed to the company all the land named in the trust deed they had executed to the company.

Thus far there seems to be no substantial dispute between the parties, but in reference to what arrangement was made between the complainant and the insurance company, under which she quitclaimed all the property described in the deed of trust, to the company, and allowed a subsequent decree of foreclosure to be entered, the parties do not agree. The complainant insists that during the preceding negotiations it was agreed, in consideration of her quitclaim deed, the appellant would reconvey to her two lots heretofore described, one of which was then occupied as her homestead, the other cornering upon it; that the price at which the reconveyance should take place was their valuation at a previous appraisement by James H. Bees, namely, $7500 and $2500, respectively, and that complainant was to execute, in payment therefor, her notes for $10,000, extending over a period of ten years, bearing interest at six per cent, and secured by a mortgage upon the two lots. The insurance company, on the contrary, contends that no such agreement was ever concluded, and that if it was, complainant is not, under all the facts, entitled either to redemption or a decree for specific performance.

During the time the negotiations were in progress which resulted in the settlement under consideration, Edwin A. War-field was the financial agent of the Union Mutual Life Insurance Company, at Chicago, and Robert B. Kendall was the attorney of the company in charge of its business. After the settlement had been concluded, it turned out that certain incumbrances existed against some of the property, which were subsequent to the trust deed, but which would take priority to the quitclaim deed executed by complainant and her husband. It therefore became necessary, in order to obtain a perfect title, to go on with the foreclosure proceedings, which was done. A decree was rendered, the property was sold, and upon the expiration of the time of redemption a master’s deed was executed.

In order to establish an agreement under which the complainant was entitled to redeem, reliance is placed mainly upon the evidence of three witnesses—Julius Kirchoff, Edwin A. Warfield and Robert B. Kendall. The first named witness testified that he had authority from his wife to settle the matter for her, and in all he did he acted as her agent; that the . company filed a bill to foreclose the mortgage in July, 1878. He further testified: “About the time the bill was filed to foreclose the trust deed,'I made a contract with the defendant looking toward a settlement. They wanted a quitclaim deed on the consideration of the two lots known as the homestead, and we gave a quitclaim deed in 1879, we agreeing to pay them for the homestead whatever the appraisal should be. The corner lot was appraised at $7500, and the other at $2500, (total $10,000,) to he paid in ten years—$1000 a year. They agreed to it, and we gave them a quitclaim deed. Some time after that they tried to foreclose. I asked Mr. Warfield what they meant. He said: ‘It is exactly the same as we made the contract, and is all right. It is better to have it foreclosed to keep the mortgage safe for us.’ I saw Mr. Kendall, the lawyer of the company. He said there were some judgments against' that-property, and to make it safer they had to foreclose, and that I need not he afraid—it would be all right. They told me they made out the deeds and sent them to their main office. When they came hack, during that year, they were to be delivered to us on payment of $1000. It took some time, on account of. the foreclosure.. It was at six per cent interest. Mr. Warfield first saw me in relation to getting a quitclaim before the foreclosure proceedings were commenced. We were to relinquish everything except the homestead—give them a quitclaim; and keep the homestead—the two lots. We were to give a quitclaim deed to everything, including the homestead - lots, and redeem the homestead at the appraised value—$7500 for one lot and $2500 for the other. They were to make a deed out, and send it to the company, and upon its return, deliver it to us at any time during the year, and we were to pay $1000, and $1000 a year thereafter, until $10,000 was paid, with six per cent interest. I agreed with the company’s agent that Mr. Bees should make the appraisal. Warfield, Kendall and myself went with him. He appraised the corner lot at $7500 and the other at $250.0—total, $10,000. The terms of payment were ten years’ time—$1000 the first year, or upon the delivery of the deed, whenever the deed was ready, and $1000 each year thereafter, until $10,000 had been paid, with six per cent interest.”

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 91, 133 Ill. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-mutual-life-insurance-v-kirchoff-ill-1890.