Walenti v. Krolik

234 Ill. App. 407, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 293
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 7, 1924
DocketGen. No. 29,148
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 234 Ill. App. 407 (Walenti v. Krolik) 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
Walenti v. Krolik, 234 Ill. App. 407, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 293 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this writ of error Mike Walenti, complainant in a foreclosure proceeding, seeks to reverse an order of the circuit court of Cook county, entered April 10, 1923, upon petition of Albert J. Terwell (purchaser of the equity of redemption), wherein the court found that its previous order, entered January 6, 1921, appointing one Lubis as receiver of the premises, “is void, in this that said order does not require complainant to give bond and does not find that upon notice and full hearing and for good cause shown the bond of complainant be excused”; that Terwell is the owner of the equity of redemption and entitled to possession; and that, upon the hearing upon the receiver’s account and the objections of Terwell thereto, it appears that the receiver has collected the sum of $1,044.48, and is entitled to certain • credits for payments made for taxes, insurance, repairs and for attorney’s fees, and has a cash balance on hand of $582.30; and wherein the court ordered that said order of January 6,1921, be vacated; that Lubis be removed as receiver and surrender possession of the premises and pay over to Terwell said sum of $582.30 within twenty days; and that upon filing a voucher showing such payment he be discharged.

From this order complainant originally perfected an appeal to this Appellate Court to the October, 1923, term, but on January 2, 1924, the appeal was dismissed. During the same month the present writ of error was sued out, which, upon bond being filed, was made a supersedeas. Terwell has assigned cross errors, claiming that the court erred in crediting the receiver for certain moneys expended in payment of the back taxes and for insurance on the premises, aggregating $134.10, and in not directing the receiver to pay to Mm tMs sum in addition to the $582.30.

Complainant’s bill was filed on January 4, 1921, to foreclose a trust deed, dated July 12, 1919, and executed by John Krolik and wife, wherein, as security for their principal note of $2,500, due in one year, and certain interest notes, they conveyed to a trustee the premises in question, “together with the improvements thereon, * * * and the rents, issues and profits thereof, and everything appurtenant thereto.” It was further provided in the trust deed that “the grantors waive all right to the possession of, and income from, said premises pending the foreclosure proceedings, and until the period of redemption from any sale thereunder expires”; that upon a breach of any of the covenants, etc., the legal holder of the notes should have the right to immediately foreclose, and that upon the filing of any bill for that purpose the court might at once and without notice to the grantors, or party claiming under them, ‘ ‘ appoint a receiver for the benefit of the legal holder or holders of the indebtedness secured hereby, with power to collect the rents, issues and profits of said premises, during the pendency of said foreclosure suit, and until the time to redeem the same for any sale that may be made under any decree foreclosing this trust deed shall expire, and with power to pay the taxes, assessments and insurance,” etc. To the bill the Kroliks, and one Rudolph J. Wind (to whom had been conveyed the premises subject to the trust deed) and others, were made parties defendant. It was alleged in the bill, inter alia, that the Kroliks and Wind had failed to keep the premises insured and had failed to pay certain taxes; that the premises were improved with a two-story frame building which was badly in need of repairs; that the Kroliks and Wind had neglected to keep the building in repair and on this account it was depreciating in value; and that the value of the premises, to wit, $3,000, was insufficient to pay the amount due complainant together with costs. On the day the bill was filed complainant gave notice to Wind and certain other defendants that an application would be made to the court on the morning of January 6,1921, for the appointment of a receiver. It does not appear that either Wind or any defendant made any objections to such an appointment, and Lubis was on that day appointed with the usual powers and duties, conditioned upon his filing his bond of $1,000 as receiver, which bond was on the same day filed and he immediately took possession and was in possession when the order now in question was entered.

Under the provisions of the trust deed, wherein the rents and profits were expressly pledged, and under the allegations contained in complainant’s bill, disclosing waste and insufficient or scant security, we think it clear that the court was fully warranted in appointing a receiver, pending the outcome of the foreclosure proceedings, to collect the rents and to preserve the property. But it does not appear from the present record that, before the receiver was appointed, complainant gave any bond to the adverse party or that the court found that the appointment should be made without the giving of such bond, in accordance with the ‘ ‘ Act concerning the appointment and discharge of receivers.” (Cahill’s Ill. St. 1921, ch. 22, ¶ 55.) It has frequently been held by this Appellate Court that to entitle a complainant to the appointment of a receiver, pendente lite, he must give the bond required by the statute, unless the court shall be of the opinion that a receiver ought to be appointed without the giving of such bond, and, if so, that such opinion must affirmatively appear in the order of appointment (Watson v. Cudney, 144 Ill. App. 624, 629; Staar v. Koon, 145 Ill. App. 341, 347); and that an appointment of a receiver, without complainant giving a bond or without such opinion of the court being so affirmatively expressed, was erroneous. (Ayres v. Graham Steamship Coal & Lumber Co., 150 Ill. App. 137, 143; Fluke v. Phelps, 177 Ill. App. 95, 97.) But it does not follow, as here contended by counsel for Terwell and as found by the court in the order now in question, that the appointment of the receiver was void. (Bothman v. Lindstrom, 221 Ill. App. 262, 272.) The court had jurisdiction to make such appointment, and we think that the court was fully warranted in so doing, on the case made by the bill, without requiring a bond from the complainant. The error of the court, apparently, was in failing to incorporate in the order of appointment, in compliance with the statute, the fact that the court was of the opinion that complainant’s bond should not be required. Furthermore, the then owner of the premises subject to the trust deed, Rudolph J. Wind, having notice that an application for a receiver would be made, made no objection then or thereafter; nor was any objection made by any one to the appointment and acts and doings of the receiver until February 17, 1923 (nearly five months after the foreclosure decree of September 21, 1922, was entered), when Terwell, having subsequently purchased from Wind the equity of redemption and having entered his appearance in the cause on January 22,1923, filed a verified petition, praying that said order of January 6, 1921, appointing Lubis as receiver, be vacated, that the receiver be directed to deliver possession of the premises to him, as owner of the equity of redemption, and that the receiver account and pay over to him all moneys collected as rents since January 6, 1921. In the petition he alleged that the appointment of the receiver, having been made without compliance with the statute above referred to, was void, and that, because of this and because he was the owner of the equity of redemption, he should have the relief asked.

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Bluebook (online)
234 Ill. App. 407, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walenti-v-krolik-illappct-1924.