Wechter v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.

52 N.E.2d 157, 385 Ill. 111
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 27409. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 N.E.2d 157 (Wechter v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.) 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
Wechter v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 52 N.E.2d 157, 385 Ill. 111 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause arises upon a complaint in equity for partition" and other relief filed in the superior court of Cook county by the plaintiffs, who are beneficiaries of a trust created November 15, 1927, terminable upon the expiration of a 99-year lease dated the same date.

No evidence was presented in the trial court, the plaintiffs having elected to stand upon those allegations of the amended complaint specifically admitted by the defendants and upon the affirmative allegations set forth in the answers taken as admitted by the plaintiffs.

From the amended complaint, answers thereto and exhibits attached, the following pertinent facts are shown: On November 15, 1927, Daniel E. Sawyer, the owner of the fee-simple title to certain real estate located at the southwest corner of North Michigan avenue and East Chestnut street, Chicago, Illinois, executed a lease demising said property to the Michigan-Chestnut Building Corporation, an Illinois corporation, for a term of 99 years, commencing November 15, 1927, and ending November 14, 2026, at a yearly rental of $70,125, plus the payment of taxes and an annual payment of $3000 to the Chicago Title and Trust Company, which was to become trustee and lessor. The lease provided that the lessee was to establish and maintain a $1,000,000 depreciation fund in quarter-annual installments which was to provide for the retirement of land trust certificates and for depreciation; that the lessee was to demolish the building then on the premises and construct a six-story modern building to have a fair value of not less than $850,000 with the proceeds of a leasehold bond issue of $575,000, which was done, and a new building was. erected at a cost in excess of $1,000,000. Upon the completion of the building it became additional security for the performance of the terms of the lease. The lease further provided that the lessor was to have a first, superior and paramount lien upon the leasehold estate.

Immediately following the execution of the lease, Sawyer conveyed the fee-simple title to the property to the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as trustee, subject to said lease, and simultaneously executed an agreement and declaration of trust wherein the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as first part, became trustee. The equitable ownership and beneficial interest in the trust estate was divided into 1275 indivisible equal shares each representing one' 1275th part of the equitable ownership of the trust estate. The shares were represented by certificates of equitable ownership, also known as land trust certificates transferable upon the books of the trustee. The trust was to continue for the leasehold term unless sooner terminated. It provided, among other things, that the trustee would -pay to the beneficiaries on the 15th day of May and November of each year the net proceeds which may be derived from the rental of the property and that the certificates of interest could be conveyed and transferred in full shares of one 1275th each, but not in fractions thereof. Upon the expiration of the 99-year period, it was subject to a renewal of the lease for a like term.

Article V of the trust instrument provided that the ordinary duties of the trustee were restricted to the collection of rent and the distribution of the net rentals. In the event of a default by the lessee, the trustee “shall have full authority to terminate the Lease and to sell the Trust Estate and terminate the Trust, and in such case or in any other contingency either with or without terminating the Lease to take such other action with respect to the Lessee, the Lease or the Trust Estate as it shall deem advisable, without reference to the Beneficiaries and as if it were the sole legal and equitable owner thereof, * *

Article VI provided that no beneficiary was to have any legal title to the trust property itself or any part thereof held by the trustee, his interest being in the equitable estate only and “he shall have no right to call for any partition of the Trust Estate during the continuance of the Trust * *

Article VII prohibited any assessment upon the beneficiaries and prohibited the trustee from incurring any obligation rendering the beneficiaries personally liable.

Article IX gave the trustee power to exercise all of the rights, remedies, powers and privileges of the' lessor, including the right to renew for an additional term of 99 years, and relinquished any liability on the part of the trustee for any error of judgment or for any loss arising out of any act or omission in the execution of the trust so long as the acts were in good faith; the trustee was to have power to provide funds to meet a temporary exigency or to enable it to comply with any of the provisions of the lease, to make advances at reasonable' or customary rates of interest or to borrow money and give notes, or other security, therefor, binding the income and assets of the trust, but not the trustee or beneficiary personally; that such right of control as the trustee may deem for the best interest of the beneficiaries was to be free from all control by the beneficiaries as .fully as if the trustee were the sole legal and equitable owner.

Article X provided .that the trustee, for ordinary services rendered, was to be paid the annual rate of $3000, said sum being the additional rental payable by the lessee under the terms of the lease; for extraordinary services the trustee was to receive additional compensation.

Article XIV provided that the trust agreement could be amended from time to time or. the trust terminated by consent in writing by the owners of three fourths of the outstanding shares other than shares in the depreciation fund, except that no amendment could be made to deprive or take from the trustee the control and/or discretion conferred upon it under the agreement or confer upon the owners of outstanding shares or any of them any control over, or voice in, the administration of the trust. The trust was to terminate at the end of the leasehold estate or upon the purchase of the property by the lessee. In case of termination other than by ptfrchase, distribution was to be made to- the beneficiaries in kind by conveyance of the trust estate in undivided legal interests, or, at the election of the trustee, by a sale and distribution of the proceeds. The trustee was to have full power and authority at any time to sell the trust estate and to execute proper conveyances therefor, provided that the owners of three fourths of the outstanding shares other than the shares in the depreciation fund should consent in writing to such sale.

As the period of depression approached, it was impossible to keep the building fully occupied and the lessee became badly in default on the payment of rent. The lessee also defaulted in the payment of 1929 and 1930 taxes, totaling in excess of $63,000. The trustee served notice upon the lessee to make good the default within thirty days. The defaults were not cured and on February 14, 1933, the lessee accepted the proposal of the trustee to turn over to the trustee the net rentals.

In connection with the original financing of the new building erected upon the premises, the Michigan-Chestnut Building Corporation executed a leasehold bond issue in the sum of $575,000 secured by a trust deed conveying the leasehold estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.E.2d 157, 385 Ill. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wechter-v-chicago-title-trust-co-ill-1943.