Warford v. McQueen

31 N.E.2d 599, 375 Ill. 372
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1940
DocketNo. 25914. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 N.E.2d 599 (Warford v. McQueen) 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
Warford v. McQueen, 31 N.E.2d 599, 375 Ill. 372 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants filed their complaint in this cause in the circuit court of Marion county for partition of 216 acres of land. They also sought to enjoin and to remove as a cloud on the public record an oil and gas lease of the same premises executed by John W. McQueen to Harry F. Corbin and assigned by him to the Texas Company. The trial court granted the partition, but held the oil and gas lease valid and subsisting against appellants. It is from this latter portion of the decree that appeal is taken.

The issues grow out of a foreclosure, some years previous, involving the same premises. In 1919, Albert W. Wallace, as owner, executed a trust deed conveying the property to C. Alex Stone, as trustee, to secure the payment of notes aggregating $6500. The firm of Ranstead & McQueen, composed of Julia M. Ranstead and John W. McQueen, underwrote the mortgage and sold the notes to seven different persons, among whom were George P. Fischer and Warford Bros., a partnership made up of John H. and Albert S. Warford. In 1925, John H. War-ford died testate. He left his property to Emma Warford, his wife, who was named executrix, with a provision that if she predeceased him, it was to go to appellants, William H. Warford and Mary W. Dingle. At the time of the suit at bar, Emma Warford was dead and appellants had succeeded to the estate.

In 1930, C. Alex Stone, trustee, Thomas L. Whittaker, George W. Egger, Elizabeth P. Eakin, Emil Fehrman, executor of the will of George P. Fischer, deceased, Emma Warford, as executrix of the wills of Albert S. Warford and John H. Warford, and John W. McQueen and Julia M. Ranstead, under the firm name of Ranstead & McQueen, as holders of the notes, filed a bill to foreclose the mortgage of 1919. A decree of foreclosure was entered directing a sale for cash and that a master’s certificate of indebtedness under the 1917 act, be issued to the various complainants who were noteholders. Only one such certificate of indebtedness was issued which was to Ranstead & McQueen. The sale was held February 27, 1932, and the property bid in by Ranstead & McQueen, as co-partners, for $7500, leaving a deficiency of $1873.98.

According to the decree of foreclosure, the master’s certificate of sale, the master’s deed and the master’s term report, the sale was for cash. The master testified in this suit, that he received only the costs of the proceeding, in cash, and that in satisfaction of the bid, he was given receipts executed by Earl H. Gromer, as attorney-in-fact appointed by the noteholders, for their distributable shares of the purchase money. In this way the noteholders contributed to the purchase price in the amounts of their respective notes. The master’s deed was made out to Julia M. Ranstead and John W. McQueen, as co-partners, and vested title in them.

In December, 1931, an agreement was signed by all complainants in the foreclosure whereby Julia M. Ran-stead and John W. McQueen were made agents and attorneys-in-fact of the other complainants to bid off and hold the property for all until it could be resold and the proceeds distributed. They weré to take title to the premises “free from restrictions of record” and with “full and complete power to manage, possess and control the same and to sell and convey and to execute and deliver all proper instruments of sale and conveyance without liability on the part of the purchaser to see to the application of the purchase money.” In accordance with the agreement, the title Ranstead & McQueen took from the master wrs in their own names as co-partners. No time was mentioned in the agreement for its termination or for the resale. The agreement was never recorded, but remained at all times in the private office files of the master until this suit was begun in 1938.

Albert S. Warford, one member of the Warford Bros, firm, was not a party to the foreclosure, individually or as a partner. Although he was purportedly represented by an executrix, Emma Warford, he did not die until 1932, two years after the decree of foreclosure and a few months after the master’s deed was issued. The heirs of Albert are William H. Warford and Mary W. Dingle, appellants, who claim his interest in the premises through a note owned by Albert and used to satisfy the bid at the foreclosure sale. George P. Fischer died in 1928 leaving a will by which his estate went to his brothers and sisters. Appellants claim that the executor had no power to represent the estate in the foreclosure.

On July 9, 1936, Julia M. Ranstead, by quitclaim deed, later duly recorded, conveyed her interest in the premises to John W. McQueen. Thereafter, McQueen executed an oil and gas lease to Harry F. Corbin on September 24, 1937. Corbin and his wife assigned the lease to the Texas Company, October 7, 1937. None of the other parties interested in the premises signed the lease.

Between March and May, 1939, Mary W. Dingle and William H. Warford, both of whom had inherited interests from John IT. and Albert S. Warford, purchased the interests of all persons in the land with exception of that of McQueen. ' In May, 1939, McQueen assigned his lessor’s interest in the lease and deeded any other interest he had in the premises to Carl E- Person, cross-appellant, who reserved all rights to have the gas and oil lease set aside.

The court below held that the legal title was vested in appellants and cross-appellant, subject to the rights of the Texas Company under its lease. While appellants claim the foreclosure was invalid, they are claiming under the title acquired at the foreclosure sale. At no time have they attempted to have that sale set aside. They and the Texas Company rely upon the same foreclosure decree as a common source of title. Appellants claim through the former noteholders and argue that their interests in the premises partitioned below arose in one of two ways: Either by a purchase-money resulting trust by virtue of the contribution of the noteholders to the purchase price at the foreclosure sale, or by the agreement among the complainants in the foreclosure suit whereby McQueen was authorized to hold the title for all the noteholders. Under either theory, the interests of appellants were equitable in nature, and never appeared of record.

Appellants contend that the lease is not binding on them because the lessee is a purchaser with notice of their interests; that McQueen was a joint trustee with Mrs. Ranstead and the lease executed by him alone was invalid; that the 1931 trust agreement is void under the rule against perpetuities and that the legal title to the premises was vested in the several beneficiaries at the time of the foreclosure sale; that, even if the trust agreement is valid, its terms did not authorize the execution of the lease, and that the court erred in admitting in evidence the master’s term report and receipts under the foreclosure. -

It is urged that the foreclosure decree referred to the estates of Albert S. War ford and George P. Eischer, former noteholders; that the interests of those parties were never represented in the foreclosure, that by the foreclosure decree the lessee is charged with notice of the nonjoinder and of those interests. Appellants are in no position to take advantage of such a situation.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E.2d 599, 375 Ill. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warford-v-mcqueen-ill-1940.