Utpatel v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.

218 Ill. App. 75, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 261
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 21, 1920
DocketGen. No. 24,884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 Ill. App. 75 (Utpatel v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.) 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
Utpatel v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 218 Ill. App. 75, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 261 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by complainants from a decree dismissing their bill to foreclose a trust deed, for want of equity, and allowing the prayer of a cross-bill which sought to have the deed set aside and canceled.

One of the defendants, whose name is Mengel, owned the property in which he and his family lived. He desired to sell it and one Werner, a real estate broker, produced a prospective buyer whose name was Grander and ultimately the parties executed a contract of sale by the terms of which the latter agreed to pay $2,550 for the property. Some time later Werner went to Mengel and told him Grander did not have cash enough on hand to complete the purchase and was obliged to borrow $1,200 so as to pay Mengel the full purchase price in cash and Werner suggested to Mengel that he (Mengel) execute notes to that amount so that Grander could take them to the Chicago Title & Trust Company and get $1,200 from them on the notes and then be in a position to complete his purchase of Mengel’s property by paying him the full amount in cash, called for by the contract. Men-gel not only executed the notes but a trust deed conveying his property to the Chicago Title & Trust Company to secure the notes. Mengel was a foreigner and not very familiar with the English language. The decree entered in the trial court finds that he did not discover that one of the papers he had signed was a trust deed until 5 or 6 months later. Mengel received $100 as earnest money on his sale but nothing further developed, although he had turned his abstract of title and insurance policy over to Werner. Upon making some inquiries of Werner several months after the contract had been executed, Mengel was told that Grander had found it impossible to raise even $1,350 whereupon the contract was canceled. Mengel then asked Werner to give him back “his papers.” Werner put him off and Mengel went to a lawyer who investigated the situation and Mengel then learned for the first time that he had executed a trust deed on his property. Not being ablé to secure the return of the trust deed or the notes, Mengel had Werner arrested. It appears from the record that at the time of the hearing in this ease he had departed for parts unknown.

After getting possession of the trust deed and notes executed by Mengel, Werner, representing himself as the owner of the paper, sold it to these complainants for its face value less accrued interest and commissions. Default was made on the interest due on the notes, whereupon the complainants, Utpatel and Mauer, instituted these foreclosure proceedings and Meng-el filed the cross-bill to which we have already referred. After filing the bill in the suit at bar complainants sued Mengel at law on the notes and recovered a judgment and set those facts up here' by supplemental bill.

The common-law rule that the assignee of a mortgage or trust deed takes it subject to all equities existing against the security in1 the hands of the mortgagee, as laid down in Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188, and many subsequent cases, down through McAuliffe v. Reuter, 166 Ill. 491; Buehler v. McCormick, 169 Ill. 269; Bouton v. Cameron, 205 Ill. 50, and Peacock v. Phillips, 247 Ill. 467, is still the law of this State.

Complainants urge that the equitable defenses sought to be interposed in this foreclosure proceeding by Mengel are "completely barred 'by a statute appearing in the Session Laws of 1901 at page 248, which provides that whenever a mortgage, trust deed or other sucl> conveyance, is executed, conveying reál estate for the purpose of securing an indebtedness on the real estate mentioned in said conveyance, the conveyance shall be considered as incident to the indebtedness secured thereby and shall be exempt from defenses to the same extent as the negotiable paper described in the conveyance, if held by a bona fide purchaser for value before the maturity of the indebtedness in question. We have not been favored by any comment on this contention in the brief filed by appellees. The contention cannot prevail. The record discloses that no point was made of this alleged statute in the trial court but it is mentioned in this case for the first time in the brief filed by complainants.

While we think complainant might be barred from urging the statute referred to in this court for the first time, still, as this court pointed out in a recent decision we shall refer to in a moment, all decisions are made with the statutes of the State in mind, of which the courts take judicial notice. If the facts of any case fall within the statutory enactments, the court will interpret the statute and apply it to the case as the law. While foreign statutes, to be availed of, must be pleaded, domestic statutes are, at least, ihferentially in the mind of the court. There has been no revision of our statutes since the revision of 1874, —consequently all statutes passed since that time must be proven by "the Session Laws certified by the Secretary of State or by copies thereof certified by the same official. According to the Session Laws of 1901, the act in question is prima facie a part of the statute law of this State, although such prima facie evidence thereof is not conclusive. Spangler v. Jacoby, 14 Ill. 297; Prescott v. Board of Trustees of Illinois & M. Canal, 19 Ill. 323; Illinois Cent. Co. v. Wren, 43 Ill. 77; Grob v. Cushman, 45 Ill. 119.

While the act appears in the Session Laws of 1901 (J. & A. ft 7589), it has never been included, in any of the editions of Hurd’s Statutes. Preceding the act, as it appears in the edition of the Statutes by Jones & Addington, is a statement reading in part: “It is said upon good authority, and the records at Springfield seem to support the statement, that the above (entitled) Act was never passed by the House of Representatives.” . The same comment is made as to this act where it appears in 4 Starr & Curtis, p. 891. In the case of Schott v. Horney, 201 Ill. App. 10, this act was invoked and the question of its validity was raised in the case for the first time when the case reached the Appellate Court for the Third District, and the court reversed the decree which had defeated the foreclosure sought, on the equitable defenses interposed by defendants, and remanded the cause so that the question of the validity of the Act of 1901 referred to, could be tried out and determined. That case does not again appear in the published reports of the Appellate Court nor in the reports of the Supreme Court since that time.

However, the question of the validity of the statute has been raised in our Supreme Court in the case of Bartholf v. Bensley, 234 Ill. 336, in which case, as well as a number of others, decided by the Supreme Court since 1901, including Zollman v. Jackson Trust & Savings Bank, 238 Ill. 290, and Peacock v. Phillips, 247 Ill. 467, the court followed the law as laid down in Olds v. Cummings, supra, and the long line of decisions following, holding that such paper as is involved here is, in equity, subject to all the defenses which could be equitably interposed against the original holder. In its opinion in Bartholf v. Bensley, supra, the Supreme' Court makes no reference to the Act of 1901 and in Schott v. Horney, supra, the Appellate Court for the Third District concluded that the attention of the Supreme Court had not been called to the statute although the incumbrance sought to be foreclosed in that case was created after the passage of the act.

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218 Ill. App. 75, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utpatel-v-chicago-title-trust-co-illappct-1920.