Zwick v. Catavenis

162 N.E. 869, 331 Ill. 240
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1928
DocketNo. 18704. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 869 (Zwick v. Catavenis) 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
Zwick v. Catavenis, 162 N.E. 869, 331 Ill. 240 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error seeks a review of a judgment against him in an ejectment proceeding filed by him in the circuit court of Franklin county. He claims as the grantee of Henry Glinberg. He filed this suit against James Catavenis and Gus Vardas, doing business as the Union Lunch Room, who were tenants in the property, and against the National Iron Company as claiming some interest in the property. Later a non-suit was taken as to the National Iron Company. Service was had on the tenants. No defense was interposed by them, and at the May, 1925, term of the circuit court a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff in error. Later, during that term, defendants in error here, Christ Vassios, James Vardas and Gus Vardas, doing business as the Union Lunch Room, assignees of Catavenis and Vardas, the original defendants, filed a motion for a retrial under the statute in force relative to the trial of ejectment suits. Defendant in error the First National Bank of West Frankfort and B. Wides filed a motion for leave to intervene as defendants. This motion was allowed. At the February, 1927, term of the court the cause was tried before a jury. Plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, filed an affidavit of common source of title through Rolla M. Treece, as provided by statute. On the trial he proved a conveyance from Treece to Glinberg and from Glinberg to himself, and then proved the defendants’ title from Treece down to the First National Bank of West Frankfort. Defendants in error did not controvert on the trial the record evidence of title as offered by plaintiff in error, but offered evidence to prove that the deed from Glinberg to Zwick was made and taken in fraud of Glinberg’s creditors, and was therefore not effective as a title upon which to base an action in ejectment. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty, and judgment was entered on that verdict.

Plaintiff in error contends, first, that the court erred in permitting the defendants to plead after the expiration of a rule which had been entered against them to plead by a certain day. As to this objection it is sufficient to say that it was-not raised in the trial court but plaintiff in error proceeded to trial without objection and raises the point for the first time here. This point is not entitled to further consideration.

It is also contended that the First National Bank of West Frankfort had no title because the proceedings under which it claimed title were void and ineffective so far as the transfer of title to it is concerned. Defendants in error reply that under the record of this case it is wholly immaterial whether this point is good, for the reason that plaintiff in error must recover in ejectment on the strength of his own'title and not the weakness of the defendants’ title, and the record clearly shows that the deed from Glinberg to plaintiff in error, under which the latter claims, was ineffective to warrant recovery in an ejectment suit for the reasons hereinbefore stated.

It appears from the evidence that Rolla M. Treece was the original owner of the property in question. On August 4, 1921, he conveyed it by warranty deed to Henry Glinberg. On that day Glinberg and wife gave a first mortgage on the premises to the West Frankfort Bank and Trust Company for $5000 and a second mortgage on the premises to Treece for $2000, and on August 19, 1921, he gave to B. Wides and L. Roachman, doing business as the National Iron and Metal Company, a co-partnership, another mortgage for $5000. The notes of this last mortgage were assigned without recourse to Louis Silberman, who, in turn, assigned the same without recourse to the National Iron Company, a corporation. In October, 1922, Treece filed a bill to foreclose his mortgage, and the trust company and the National Iron Company filed cross-bills for the foreclosure of their respective mortgages. At that term the court rendered a decree foreclosing the three mortgages and finding the trust company mortgage to be a first lien, the Treece mortgage a second lien and the National Iron Company mortgage a third lien, and ordered the premises sold and the mortgages paid in accordance with such priority. Under this decree the master sold the premises to Treece for $9030. The foreclosure proceedings also made parties defendant certain judgment creditors of Glinberg. The .decree for sale ordered the payment of the mortgages within thirty days, and if not so paid the master to sell the premises and distribute the funds as herein indicated, and if the amount received from the sale was not sufficient to pay the liens found to exist, the master was to specify the deficiency in his report, and on the coming in and approval of the report of sale the Glinbergs were to pay the amount of such deficiency. The master sold the property and reported that he had sold it “for the sum of $9030, same being debt, interest and costs.” The decree of foreclosure, however, had found that the trust company, as first mortgagee, had a lien for $6052.13, Treece for $2631.48 and the National Iron Company for $5654.86, making a total of $14,338.47. No deficiency was reported by the master and no judgment of deficiency was entered against the Glinbergs. Later, in September, 1924, the National Iron Company, as third mortgagee, sued out an execution on the decree, levied on this property, and paid to the master in chancery the sum of $9960.31 for the purpose of redeeming the premises from the certificate issued to Treece as purchaser at the foreclosure sale. Treece accepted the money and released and discharged all interest in the premises which was vested in him by virtue of the master’s sale.

Plaintiff in error’s contention is that since no deficiency decree was entered against the Glinbergs, the effect of the release of the master’s certificate by the payment of the redemption money, to Treece and his acceptance thereof and release was to re-vest the title in Glinberg free of the liens of the foreclosure decree, and that since no deficiency decree was entered in the foreclosure proceeding against the Glinbergs, the execution sued out by the National Iron Company was void and it acquired no title under the sheriff’s deed, which had been issued to it after the expiration of the period of redemption, and that since this is so, Glinberg, when he conveyed to plaintiff in error, held the unincumbered title to the premises. This deed from Glinberg to plaintiff in error is the title by which the latter seeks to oust the First National Bank, which is in possession of the property through its tenant, the Union Lunch Room. While defendants in error, as defendants in the ejectment proceedings below, filed an answer to plaintiff in error’s affidavit of common source of title, in which they denied that Treece was the common source of title, no evidence was offered in support of that denial, but the defense was that the transfer from Glinberg to plaintiff in error was fraudulent as against creditors, and that, even if it be conceded that the property by these various transactions became re-vested in Glinberg free from liens, nevertheless in an ejectment proceeding, where plaintiff must recover on the strength of his title and not the weakness of the title of defendants, the fraudulent conveyance from Glinberg to plaintiff in error defeats the latter’s right of recovery.

The evidence shows that at the time of the transfer of this property from Glinberg to plaintiff in error the former owed approximately $40,000 to various creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 869, 331 Ill. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zwick-v-catavenis-ill-1928.