Yarnell v. Brown

65 Ill. App. 83, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 16, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Ill. App. 83 (Yarnell v. Brown) 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
Yarnell v. Brown, 65 Ill. App. 83, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Me. Justice Wall

delivered tiie opinion oe the Court.

This is an appeal from a- decree correcting a mortgage as to the description of the land therein conveyed and foreclosing the mortgage as corrected.

On the 1st of September, 1876, James S. Wooley and wife executed the mortgage in question for the purpose of securing the payment of one thousand dollars, borrowed money, to the appellee five years after date, with interest to be paid annually, intending thereby to convey the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 18, T. 11, N., B. 1 east 3d P. M., but by mistake the land was described as being in range 1 west.

Christian county, in which the land is situate, contains land answering both descriptions.

The land which should have been described was a part of a farm of 137 acres lying near the city of Pana, then owned by said Wooley and occupied by him and his family.

The other ninety-seven acres had been mortgaged some time before to secure a note held by one Spaulding, of Boston, Mass., who also held an unsecured note of said Wooley.

Electa W. Yarnell was the only child of said Wooley and wife, and with her husband James H. Yarnell, lived with her parents on the farm at the time the mortgage in question was executed. The mortgagee, Mrs. Brown, was a sister of Mrs. Wooley and lived in the State of Michigan. The negotiations which resulted in the loan were conducted by correspondence.

Mr. Yarnell, who was an attorney at law and a notary public, procured an abstract of title, the land being correctly described therein, which was sent to Mrs. Brown for examination.

She returned it without objection, and he prepared the mortgage, which was executed by Wooley and wife and acknowledged before him as a notary public. After the mortgage was recorded, at Mrs. Brown’s request he made a memorandum of it at the foot of the abstract. The mortgage and the abstract were held by Mrs. Brown until August, 1890, when they were placed in the hands of her attorney for legal proceedings.

Mrs. Yarnell and her husband continued to reside with her parents until the death of her mother which occurred in 1877. Then the relations between the father and daughter became (and have ever since been) unfriendly, and she and her husband moved to Pana, where they have since resided. In the year 1880, or 1881, Mr. Wooley removed from Illinois and has since resided in Hew Hampshire.

In 1889 Mr. Spaulding, as a gift, transferred to Mrs. Yarnell his note, and mortgage on the 97 acres, and also the unsecured note, which was for $600.

She transferred the mortgage and the note it secured to W. B. Yarnell, her husband’s father, who began foreclosure proceedings thereon and afterward in July, 1889, she began a proceeding by attachment on the note for $600 and caused the writ to be levied on the land, in dispute.

In June, 1890, a decree of foreclosure was obtained by W. B. Yarnell and she recovered a judgment in the attachment suit, and thereupon, in order to secure her attorney, William L. Gross, for what she then owed him and might thereafter owe him on account of his services and advancements of costs and expenses in said litigation—both cases—she assigned her judgment to him by an instrument in writing which was duly filed with the clerk and placed among the papers in the case.

Both of said cases were contested by Wooley and were carried to the Appellate and then to the Supreme Court— but the decree and judgment were affirmed in each of said courts.

Wooley paid the interest on hisindebtedness to Mrs. Brown until 1889. Prom the indorsements it appears the payment was made promptly on the 1st of September in each year except 1889, when it was made on the 4th of November. The interest for 1890, due September 1st, was not paid, and on the 7th of November of that year the original bill in this case was filed for the foreclosure of the mortgage, making said Wooley, Electa W. Yarnell, W. R. Yarnell and Wm. L. Gross parties defendant.

At the March term, 1891, the appearance of said Wooley was entered in writing, the bill was dismissed as to the other defendants who had not been brought into court, default was taken as to Wooley, and an order of foreclosure was entered for the amount due. At the August term, 1891, on the motion of complainant, the order entered at the March term was set aside and the cause was continued. At the following November term an amended bill was filed in which the mistake in description was alleged with prayer for correction and that the mortgage so reformed might be foreclosed.

The said Electa W. Yarnell, William L. Gross and W. R. Yamell were made parties defendant and filed their answers to the amended bill, in which they denied all knowledge of the matters alleged, set up the judgment in the attachment suit and the assignment thereof to said Gross, and averred that on the 19th of June, 1891, the said Gross had bought the land at a sale by the sheriff under a special execution issued on said judgment and had received a certificate of purchase therefor, he having bid the amount due on the judgment, interest and cost, $1,434.24, and that when he took said -assignment he tvas without notice that complainant had or claimed any lien on said land.

At the March term, 1892, leave was given to file amended answers by June 1st, and the cause was continued.

Amended answers were filed by Mrs. Yarnell, W. R. Yarnell and W. L. Gross, in which it was alleged that a decree had been obtained at the March term, 1891, on the original bill, and that the court had no right or power at the next term to set aside said decree, and that it had no jurisdiction to permit the bill to be amended or to require these defendants to answer the same.

A motion was filed to strike the amended answers from the files, but no action was taken upon the motion. At the November term, 1892, the said James S. Wooley filed his answer admitting all the allegations of the amended bill. At the March term, 1895, the cause was heard and a decree was entered according to the prayer of the bill as amended, it being found that Mrs. Y arnell had notice of the equities of the complainant and that her interest as well as that of defendant Gross was subject to the lien of complainant, and ordered a sale of the lands for the payment of the amount found due the complainant with costs.

As to W. E. Yarnell, it was found he had no interest in the premises, and he was dismissed with his costs.

From this decree Mrs. Yarnell and William L. Gross have prosecuted the present appeal.

The first point presented by the brief of the appellants is that the court had no power at the August term, 1891, to set aside its decree rendered at the March term preceding.

It may be admitted it is a well settled rule of practice that generally the court can not set aside a decree rendered at a former term for mere error of law, and that the proper course is by bill of review. It appears, however, that no decree, such as the court intended to render, was ever entered upon the record. The entire entry, as it appears, is as follows :

“ This day comes the complainant, by J. C. Essick, his solicitor, and the appearance of J. S. Wooley is entered in writing. Eule on J. S.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. App. 83, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarnell-v-brown-illappct-1896.