delivered the opinion of the court:
Cоunterplaintiff-appellant Beneficial Systems, Inc. (BSI), appeals from the trial court’s order denying its motion for summary judgment and granting summary judgment in favor of counterdefendantsappellees Banco Popular as successor trustee (BPT) and Marsha Azar (Marsha), and third-party defendant-appellee Banco Popular as successor mortgagee (BPM). BSI asserts that the trial court erred in its decision in several respects, including that Marsha’s failure to respond to BSI’s request to admit facts resulted in judicial admissions that prevented her, as well as BPT and BPM, from presenting evidence during the summary judgment hearing; that these facts were sufficient to entitle BSI to summary judgment; and that even if it was proper for the court to consider other allegations, these raised genuine issues of material fact that precluded summary judgmеnt. BSI asks that we reverse the grant of summary judgment in favor of Marsha, BPT and BPM and enter summary judgment in its favor or, alternatively, vacate the judgments entered and remand for trial. Because we find issues of fact as to whether there was actual and constructive knowledge on the part of BSI of Marsha’s, BPT’s and BPM’s interests in the property and because we find issues of fact as to the propriety of the levy and sale, we reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand.
BACKGROUND
George and Helena Kaltezas (the Kaltezases) owned property located at 1767-75 West Greenleaf in Chicago, Illinois, that contained a building on the premises. By 1994, the property had fallen into disrepair. The City of Chicago instituted a building code violation case against the Kaltezases, resulting in the filing of a lis pendens notice with the recorder’s officе in 1995.
The Kaltezases hired Morris Reynolds (Reynolds) to do work on the property. Eventually, Reynolds filed a complaint against the Kaltezases alleging breach of contract and seeking to place a lien on the property. On January 17, 1996, judgment was entered for Reynolds against the Kaltezases. This judgment was recorded with the Cook County recorder of deeds on May 3, 1996.
However, several months before the judgment, on March 30, 1995, the Kaltezases executed a quitclaim deed conveying all interest in the property to Marsha, through her nominee Saul Azar (Saul). The deed, which was delivered on May 13, 1995, stated that Marsha had “the right of equitable ownership in the property and building even if it is not recorded by way of deed conveying and vesting such legal ownership.” Saul and Marsha paid all taxes to redeem the propеrty as well as the water bill and brokers’ commissions, placed a sign in the building’s window that their company, Westridge Realty and Construction Co., was managing the property, changed the name of the tax addressee to Westridge, repaired the building, dealt with the local police department and alderman’s office in rehabilitating the property,
After judgment was awarded to Reynolds against the Kaltezases, Reynolds assigned it to BSI on June 1, 1996. BSI’s president, Dexter McClure (McClure), searched the records of the recorder’s office, and although he found the lis pendens notice regarding the building code violation case on the property, he did not review the court file or inspect the property itself.
On August 6, 1996, Marsha finally recorded her deed from the Kaltezases. In conjunction with this, Marsha recorded a deed in trust on the property as well as a mortgage in favor of Pioneer Bank, the predecessor trustee to BPT and predecessor mortgagee to BPM.
BSI delivered the judgment it received from Reynolds to the Cook County sheriff for levy and sale. BSI initiаlly did so on August 16, 1996; the process was conducted in mid-June 1997, against the “right, title and interest of the Defendants George Kaltezas and Helena Kaltezas.” On June 18, 1997, the property was sold, after notice by publication, to BSI as the successful bidder. BSI thereafter notified Marsha and BPT that the sale had occurred, what amount was bid and the date of redemption. The sale was later confirmed by the court, which ordered the sheriff to deliver the deed to BSI.
Marsha and BPT filed suit against BSI to set aside the sheriffs deed. BSI filed a countersuit to quiet title and establish its priority over BPM’s mortgage. BPM, in turn, brought suit against BSI.
During this litigation, BSI submitted a “Request to Admit Facts and Genuiness of Documents” (request to admit) to Marsha, BPT and BPM. Specifically, requests number 11 and number 13 dealt with the issue of BSI’s notice of Marsha’s interest in the property:
“11. That at no time prior to June 1, 1996, was there any public record or notice of the interest of Marsha Azar or [BPT] in the subject property.
13. That at no time prior to June 1, 1996, neither [BSI], its shareholders, officers, agents nor its attorneys had any actual or constructive knowledge of the interest of Marsha Azar and/or [BPT] in the property ***.”
Both BPT and BPM timely filed their objections and responses to this request. Marsha, however, never replied to this request.
BSI moved for summary judgment, asserting that because judgment on the lien was entered before Marsha recorded her deed, its interest in the property superseded hers, BPT’s and BPM’s. BSI also claimed that Marsha’s failure to respond to its request to admit resulted in judicial admissions that BSI did not have actual or constructive knowledge of her interest in the property when it received the lien. Marsha, BPT and BPM also moved for summary judgment, arguing that because the Kaltezases no longer had an interest in the property once the deed was delivered to Marsha on May 13, 1995, Reynolds’ lien against the Kaltezases entered in 1996 and later assigned to BSI was a nullity that in no way affects Marsha’s title in the property.
BSI now appeals, presenting several arguments for our review. BSI contends that the trial court erred in finding that the judgment lien, obtained before Marsha recorded her deed, did not attach to the property. Moreover, BSI argues that the court erred in not binding Marsha, BPT and BPM to Marsha’s “admission,” resulting from her failure to respond to BSI’s request to admit, that BSI lacked actual and constructive notice of her interest in the property. BSI insists that because of this admission, the court was required to disregard any contrary testimony regarding notice, thereby resulting in summary judgment in favor of BSI. Alternatively, BSI argues that if it was proper for the court to consider the issue of notice, then this constituted a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment and this cause must be remanded. On their part, Marsha, BPT and BPM 1 contend on review that the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in their favor was proper because, since the Kaltezases sold the property prior to the entry of judgment lien, the judgment lien did not attach to the property and the levy and sale to BSI were void. In the alternative, they argue that BSI had actual and constructive knowledge of Marsha’s, BPT’s and BPM’s interests in the property; that because BSI did not notify them of the levy and sale, those could not be legally effective; and that Marsha’s failure to respond to BSI’s request to admit is immaterial.
In disposing of this cause, we first address whether, based on the circumstances presented, the judgment lien attached to the property. Second, we examine the consequences of Marsha’s failure to respond to BSI’s request to admit and this failure’s effect on BPT and BPM. Finally, we analyze the propriety and validity of the ultimate levy and sale of the property.
ANALYSIS
“The purpose of summary judgment is to determine whether a question of fact exists ***.” West v. Northeastern Illinois R.R. Corp.,
A. The Judgment Lien
The first issue we address on appeal involves the priority of a judgment lien creditor over a prior purchaser who failed to record his deed. Primarily, we are asked to resolve the question of whether the judgment lien, which was obtained and registered after the Kaltezases conveyed the property to Marsha but before Marsha recorded her deed, attached to the property thereby giving Reynolds (and BSI) an interest superior to that of Marsha (and BPT and BPM). BSI argues that pursuant section 30 of the Conveyances Act (Act) (765 ILCS 5/30 (West 1998)), Reynolds was a creditor without notice of Marsha’s interest in the property and Marsha’s deed became effective as to Reynolds only after she recorded it; therefore, Marsha, BPT and BPM took their interest subject to the judgment lien. BSI asserts that the issue of what interest the lien attached to must ultimately be governed by the issue of notice, an issue which presents genuine questions of material fact. Marsha, BPT and BPM, however, argue that the judgment lien never attached to the property because the Kaltezases did not own the property at the time Reynolds received the judgment lien on it; since the Kaltezases had already sold the property to Marsha, there was nothing upon which to impose a lien. Marsha, BPT and BPM further contend that, as a matter of law, section 30 of the Act does not apply here because Reynolds was not a creditor at the time the Kaltezases and Marsha executed the deed, and the fact that Reynolds recorded his lien before Marsha recorded her deed is “immaterial” bеcause Reynolds, even if he were a creditor, could not have greater rights in the property at that time than the Kaltezases, as debtors. We agree with BSI and conclude that summary judgment was improper.
The general rule, as outlined by our supreme court in East St. Louis Lumber Co. v. Schnipper,
“All deeds, mortgages and other instruments of writing which are authorized to be recorded, shall take effect and be in force from and after the time of filing the same for record, and not before, as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers, without notice; and all such deeds and title papers shall be adjudged void as to all such creditors and subsequent purchasers, without notice, until thesame shall be filed for record.” 765 ILCS 5/30 (West 1998).
Under this section, then, a judgment creditor is given priority over the holder of an unrecorded conveyance if the creditor is without notice of the holder’s interest. See East St Louis,
These principles were again affirmed by our supreme court in Echols v. Olsen,
In the instant case, it is undisputed that the Kaltezases executed a deed to the property to Marsha in March 1995 and delivered it in May 1995. The record also indicates that judgment on the lien petition was entered for Reynolds in January 1996 and was recorded in May 1996. It was not until August 1996 that Marsha finally recorded her deed. Thus, while Marsha was the holder of an interest prior to that of Reynolds, that interest was not recorded at the time Reynolds’ judgment was entered and recorded — all parties agree that the Kaltezases appeared of record as the owners of the property in 1996 when the lien was entered and recorded. Under the general rule of liens and conveyances as noted above, Reynolds’ lien would have been limited to the Kaltezases’ interest in the property at the time of the lien in 1996 — which, due to the 1995 deed to Marsha, was none. However, the circumstances present here fit those outlined in section 30 of the Act and may well qualify Reynolds for the exception to the general rule. Marsha is the holder of a prior unrecorded interest, and Reynolds is a judgment creditor who, though he obtained his lien after Marsha received her interest, recorded his interest before she recorded hers. The ultimate question left to be answered, then, is whether Reynolds had other notice of Marsha’s interest notwithstanding her failure to record her deed before Reynolds recorded his lien. See Miller v. Bullington,
The
Marsha, BPT and BPM rely heavily on Echols for the proposition that Reynolds was not a creditor. They contend that because Reynolds obtained a judgment against the Kaltezases only after they had conveyed the property to Marsha, the lien never attached since, at the time the lien was created, the judgment debtor no longer had any interest in the property. The facts in Echols, however, are distinguishable from the instant case and, in fact, support the legal view that under section 30, Reynolds may well be preferred to Marsha regarding interest in the property. In Eсhols, a husband and wife were record and registered owners of real estate under “An Act concerning land titles” (the Torrens Act or Torrens) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 30, pars. 45 through 148). When they decided to divorce in 1966, the husband executed a quitclaim deed conveying his interest to the wife. The wife recorded this deed in 1966 but did not register it with the registrar of titles, as required under Torrens, until 1971. Meanwhile, in 1969, a bank obtained a judgment against the husband, and before the wife registered her quitclaim deed, the bank memorialized its judgment with the registrar and created a lien on the property, which appeared of record with the registrar to still be jointly owned by both the husband and the wife. The wife brought suit asking the court to order the registrar to remove the judgment lien of the bank and instead quiet title solely in her. The registrar argued that the memorialized interest of the bank, as a judgment creditor, was superior to the interest of the wife, as the holder of a prior unregistered deed.
Our state supreme court declared the issue to be whether, under Torrens, a judgment creditor who has registered his lien after the judgment debtor has conveyed his interest in the property acquires an interest superior to that of a prior grantee from the debtor who did not register his deed. The registrar urged the court to read into the Torrens system the same exception section 30 of the Act gave to judgment creditors, i.e., preference
Thus, while at first glance the facts in Echols may appear similar to those of the instant case, the outcome was clearly determinative of the special circumstances present in that case — namely, the rules under the Torrens Act, which governed Echols but do not apply here. In comparing the Torrens system to section 30 of the Act, our supreme court noted that these were markedly different. The Echols court explicitly stated that section 30, existing prior to Torrens, “provides that a judgment creditor, as well as a bona fide purchaser, who records his judgment in accordance with the provisions of the Conveyance Act [citation] acquires rights superior to those of the holder of a prior unrecorded interest.” Echols,
B. Marsha’s Failure to Respond to BSI’s Request to Admit
In determining whether an issue of fact exists with respect to other notice that Reynolds may have had of Marsha’s purchase of the property, we must first address BSI’s contention that consideration of that issue is barred under Supreme Court Rule 216 (134 Ill. 2d R. 216). BSI claims that Marsha’s failure to respond to its request to admit, particularly numbers 11 and 13 dealing with whether BSI had actual or constructive notice of her interest in the property at the time it accepted the judgment lien from Reynolds, effectively became a judicial admission that BSI did not have such notice. Initially, BSI argues that this was an irrevocable admission and binds not only Marsha, but also BPT and BPM because they all “speak with one voice,” and accordingly, the trial court could not have considered any evidence to the contrary and should have granted summary judgment in BSI’s favor. Alternatively, BSI argues that, at the very least, the admission bound Marsha as a matter of law and
Under Supreme Court Rule 216, a party to an action may serve another party to that action with a written request for his admission of any relevant fact set forth in the request. See 134 Ill. 2d R. 216(a); PR.S. International, Inc. v. Shred Pax Corp.,
In the instant case, BSI submitted its request to admit separately to Marsha, to BPT and to BPM. This request included number 11, stating that there was no “public record or notice” of Marsha’s or BPT’s interest in the property before 1996, and number 13, stating the BSI had no “actual or constructive knowledge of’ their interests. BPT and BPM both timely responded to the request, providing admissions, denials and objections to the questions/statements BSI posed. Marsha, however, never responded.
BSI initially contends that Marsha’s failure to respond must be imputed to BPT and BPM because they are Marsha’s grantees. We disagree. BSI presents no rule, statute or case which states that judicial admissions resulting from one party’s failure to respond to a Rule 216 request to admit must be imputed to other parties in the cause. In fact, Rowe v. State Bank of Lombard,
BSI urges a narrow reading of Rowe, insisting that its holding affects only parties on opposite sides of litigation whose interests are not identical; because BSI asserts that BPT and BPM are on the same side of litigation with Marsha and share her interеst in the cause, BSI contends that Rowe does not apply. However,
Thus, BPT and BPM are not bound by any admission possibly resulting from Marsha’s failure to respond to BSPs request to admit. Therefore, since their responses to the request, including numbers 11 and 13 dealing with actual and constructive notice, stand and contradict BSI’s assertions that it did not have notice, a question of fact remains regarding notice, at least in relation to these parties, that must be resolved by the trial court on remand. See Loyola Academy,
What must also be determined for purposes of remand, however, is whether Marsha’s failure to respond to BSI’s request resulted in judicial admissions regarding notice to which she herself is bound. As noted above, when a request to admit deals with a question of fact, even an ultimate fact which might give rise to a legal conclusion, a party’s failure to respond constitutes a judicial admission of that fact. See P.R.S. International, Inc.,
Marsha, BPT and BPM assert in their appellate brief that because the statements in BSPs request to admit dealing with whether BSI had notice of Marsha’s interest in the property (specifically numbers 11 and 13) asked for conclusions of law, Marsha’s failure to respond to them did not result in an admission that BSI had no actual or constructive notice. Aсcordingly, we must determine whether numbers 11 and 13 of BSPs request to admit called for admissions of fact or conclusions of law. See Hubeny,
As pointed out, statement number 13 categorically asks Marsha to admit that ESI did not have any actual or constructive knowledge of her interest in the property from any source. Since actual knowledge is a proposition of fact, her failure to answer the statement in number 13 of the request must be regarded as a binding admission that ESI had no actual knowledge. However, the request to admit that ESI had no constructive knowledge calls for a conclusion of law, since by its very terms, the cоncept of constructive knowledge denotes knowledge by operation of law. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1088 (7th ed. 1999) (“constructive notice” is “[njotice arising by presumption of law from the existence of facts and circumstances that a party had a duty to take notice of ***; notice presumed by law”). Marsha’s failure to deny that proposition cannot be deemed an admission. See PR.S. International, Inc.,
For example, possession of property can be equivalent to the recording of a deed as to a judgment creditor who claims an interest in the property of which another has possession when the creditor secured the judgment. See Beals,
In the instant case, several actions taken by Marsha and Saul (who, it was alleged, was Marsha’s agent in relation to the property) were presented to the trial court which may indicate that Marsha had “possession” of the property before Reynolds obtained the judgment lien and before BSI was assigned this lien, thereby putting them on constructive notice of her interest. These include the following: Saul appeared in court during the building code violation case on the property — to which Reynolds too was a party — and filed an appearance and announced he was the new owner of the property; Saul and Marsha paid taxes to redeem the property, as well as the water bill and brokers’ commissions; they dealt with the local police and State’s Attorney’s office to resolve the building code case; they worked on the property and repaired it to have that case dismissed; they went to the assessor’s office and changed the records to reflect their corporation, Westridge Realty, as the new assessee on the property; they leased the property to tenants; they put a sign in the window of the building announcing that Westridge Realty was managing and rehabilitating the property; and Saul told Reynolds’ attorney that he had purchased the property from the Kaltezases. These facts may constitute “possession” of the property on the part of Marsha, thereby charging
C. The Levy and Sale
Finally, we examine the procedural propriety of the levy and sale. Marsha, BPT and BPM argue that the levy proceedings and sale of the property to BSI were “fatally flawed” because BSI was required to serve Marsha, BPT and BPM with notice of the proceedings before they occurred and its failure to do so interfered with their due process rights. BSI counters that the levy proceedings were properly conducted because it served the Kaltezases with notice оf the levy, published notice of the sale in the newspaper, recorded the certificate of sale and eventually sent notice to BPT. We find that issues of fact remain regarding the propriety of the levy and sale, further requiring the reversal and remand of this cause.
The Property Tax Code requires a tax purchaser to serve notice of sale of the property, by abode service and by certified mail, upon all those holding an interest in the property if their identities can be discovered by diligent inquiry. See 35 ILCS 200/22 — 15 (West 1998); In re Application of Ward,
The only evidence included in the record with respect to this issue is the deposition testimony of BSI’s president, McClure. That testimony turns in two directions. First, McClure testified that he learned about Marsha’s, BPT’s and BPM’s interests in the property some time after they were recorded. However, he does not specify when, in relation to the sheriffs levy and sale, he obtained such knowledge. McClure later testified in that deposition that he made periodic searchеs of certain public records at the time of the levy but did not discover any interest in the property listed. Accordingly, this testimony is inconclusive and, at best, is subject to conflicting inferences as to what BSI knew when the levy proceedings were initiated and conducted, and as to whether the requisite information was ascertained or ascertainable through exercise of due diligence. Therefore, because an analysis of what is included in the record here at best results in conflicting inferences, summary judgment was improper. See Amsted Industries, Inc. v. Poliak Industries, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, because we find issues of fact regarding actual and constructive notice on the part of ESI of Marsha’s, BPT’s and BPM’s interests in the property, and because questions of fact remain regarding the levy and sale, we reverse the holding of the trial court and remand this cause for further proceedings consonant herewith.
Reversed and remanded.
McNULTY and COHEN, JJ., concur.
Notes
We note for the record that Marsha and BPT have adopted the brief and arguments of BPM on appeal.
We note here that Marsha, BPT and BPM make a cursory argument in their appellate brief that because the deed the Kaltezases gave to Marsha stated that Marsha would own the property even if the deed was not recorded, Marsha’s failure to record the deed until after Reynolds and BSI obtained the lien is immaterial. However, section 28 of the Act states that provisions such as this have “no force and effect.” 765 ILCS 5/28 (West 1998).
