Weld v. Rees

48 Ill. 428
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 Ill. 428 (Weld v. Rees) 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
Weld v. Rees, 48 Ill. 428 (Ill. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walkee

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, filed by defendants in error, on the 1st day of April, 1867, in the Superior Court of Chicago, to redeem a lot in the city of Chicago, from a mortgage and deed of trust. On the 1st day of December, 1854, defendant in error, being the owner of the lot in controversy, executed a mortgage to one Richard IL Swift to secure the payment of five thousand dollars, for which he also gave five'bonds of one thousand dollars each, payable six years after date, with ten per cent, interest, payable semi-annually, and for the interest, coupons were attached to the bonds. The mortgage was acknowledged on the 11th, and recorded on the 29th of the same month.

On the 27th day of the next March, defendant in error executed a trust deed for the same lands to' Grant Goodrich and George Scoville, as trustees, to secure the same debt, authorizing them to sell the premises, in case of default in the payment of principal or interest, at public auction, after publishing a notice in a newspaper published in the city of Chicago, ten days before the day of sale. ' On the 1st day of January, 1856, defendant in error executed a mortgage on the premises, with other real estate, to Frederick Bronson, of the city of Hew York, to secure the performance of certain covenants previously entered into by defendant in error.

Previous to the 13th day of February, 1862, William F. Weld, one of the plaintiffs in error, became the purchaser of the bonds, and on. that day Goodrich, one of the trustees, sold the premises to one William II. Brooks, who was the highest bidder, at $4,000, and the trustees united in executing a- deed to Brooks. It seems that Charles A. Gregory was acting as attorney for Weld, and employed Brooks to bid in the property at the sale. He paid no consideration, and on the 1st day of March, 1862, conveyed the same to Weld and received no consideration from him, having acted as his agent in the purchase. . >

The notice of the sale was published in the Chicago Morning Post—the first on the first day of the month, and the last on the day of the sale. Mo paper being issued on Monday, there were but eleven days that it appeared in the paper, and two of them were on the Sundays that intervened. Weld went into possession immediately after the sale. Subsequently, Bronson being about to foreclose his mortgage, defendant in error conveyed this lot, and other property, by quit-claim deed, which it embraced, to Bronson, to avoid expense, but Bronson’s attorney refused to receive the deed, and defendant in error had it recorded. Weld, on the 5th day of March, 1867, had a judgment, by confession, rendered against defendant in error, for the unpaid balance of the bonds, upon which an execution- was issued and levied upon the property of defendant in error, and the same was subsequently paid by him.

The bill was filed against plaintiffs in error, praying that complainant be permitted to redeem by paying such sum as should be found equitably due to Weld, and that the deed to Bronson be decreed to be void.

It appears that on the 5th day of April, 1867, Weld sold and conveyed the premises to John T. Moble and Francis B. Little. This deed was recorded in the proper office on the 13th day of the same month. Answers were filed to the bill, and Moble and Weld filed their cross bill, claiming that they are bona fide purchasers; that defendant in error is estopped from asserting title, by executing the quit-claim deed to Bronson. Answers were filed to the cross bill. On the hearing, the court below found that defendant in error was entitled to redeem, referred the same to ascertain the amount he should pay, and that the quit-claim deed to Bronson be declared void. The master reported the amount due; his report was confirmed, and a decree was rendered allowing a redemption. The record is brought to this court, and various errors are assigned.

It is urged in affirmance of the decree, that the notice of the time and place of the sale was insufficient, as there were not ten papers containing the notice issued, without including those issued on one of the Sundays ; but there were twelve days, excluding the day on which the sale was made, after the first insertion. The deed of trust provides, that,

“ In case default be made in the payment of said bonds or coupons, or any or either of them, or any part thereof, according to the tenor and effect of the same, respectively, within thirty days after the maturity thereof, then the said Grant Goodrich and George Scoville, or either of them, on application of the said ¡Richard ¡K¡. Swift, or his assigns, or any or either of them, or any holder of any of the above described securities, after publishing a notice in a newspaper published in the city of Chicago, ten days before the day of such sale, to sell the said premises, and all right and equity of redemption of the said parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns, at public auction, at the north door of the court house in the city of Chicago, to the highest bidder for cash, at the time mentioned in such notice, and to make, execute and deliver to the purchaser or purchasers .thereof, a deed or deeds for the premises so sold.”

It will be observed that the language does not, in terms, require notice to be published by ten daily insertions, or a notice for ten days, the first insertion being ten days before the sale. If it had, then there might be some question as to the sufficiency of the notice. But the language is, “ after publishing a notice in a neiospajper published in the city of Chicago, ten days before the day of such sale.” Had there been but one insertion, and that on the first day of the month, it would have been a notice in a newspaper published ten days before the 13th of the month. The language, in terms, does not require, nor does it import, that the publication shall be a continuous one. Had it been in the country, where but weekly papers are published, and this language had been used, as it usually is, no one could or would contend, that the sale could not be made until the publisher had changed his paper from a weekly to a daily, and the notice inserted for ten successive days. In such a case an insertion in a weekly paper would answer the requirement. The language employed in this case would seem to have been employed to exclude the idea that the notice should be continuous, as it has no terms which would imply successive or continuous publications. It speaks of but one notice and one paper, and that ten days before the sale. The language employed in this deed is not similar to that used in the law, upon which the case of Scammon v. The City of Chicago, 40 Ill. 146, was decided; nor does the language, in this case, require or admit the same interpretation. Hence, that case can not control this.

There can arise no question in this case as to the power of one trustee to conduct the sale, as the trust deed expressly authorizes it, and they both joined in the deed to the purchaser. If such an objection could be raised in any case, it cannot in this, as the power in that respect has been fully complied with in conducting the sale.

It is urged, in support of the decree, that the trustees should have notified the public that the mortgage to Swift was to secure the same, and not another and different debt. The public were notified of that fact by the public records.

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48 Ill. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weld-v-rees-ill-1868.