41 N.E.2d 476 | Ill. | 1942
Nellie M. Conerty brought suit in the circuit court of Cook county to foreclose a trust deed executed by Richard J. Richtsteig and Marie Richtsteig, his wife. The trust deed was foreclosed and a deficiency judgment for $5442.42 was tendered against the Richtsteigs and others. The Richtsteigs appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District which affirmed the decree and we have granted leave to appeal.
The undisputed facts are that on July 1, 1920, Richard J. Richtsteig purchased the property located at the northeast corner of Congress and Sangamon streets, Chicago, for $15,000. As part of the purchase price he and his wife executed their joint promissory note for $9000, dated July 1, 1920, due July 1, 1925, with interest until maturity at six per cent per annum, and after maturity, at seven per cent. *362 To secure payment of this note the Richtsteigs executed a trust deed on the property which contained, inter alia, the following provision: "The grantors covenant and agree * * * to pay said indebtedness and the interest thereon, as herein and in said notes provided, or according to any agreement extending time of payment." On February 6, 1923, the Richtsteigs sold the mortgaged property to Hecht Nielsen for $18,000. Nielsen assumed the first mortgage of $9000, gave the Richtsteigs $5300 in cash and a second mortgage for $3700. The interest on the note was paid until maturity July 1, 1925. A few days before the maturity of the note, the agent for the owner of the note and Nielsen and his wife executed an agreement whereby payment of the principal debt was extended for five years, or until July 1, 1930, and the rate of interest was increased to six and one-half per cent. At the time of this extension the mortgaged property was reasonably worth from $18,000 to $20,000. In 1930, the note was extended until July 1, 1935. The interest on the mortgage debt was paid by Nielsen until July 1, 1936. Upon default in payment, the holder of the note, Nellie M. Conerty, filed this foreclosure suit September 4, 1936. The Richtsteigs did not have personal knowledge of either of the above extensions, and had no connection with the property or the loan from the date they sold the property to Nielsen in 1923, until they were served with summons in the foreclosure suit on September 11, 1936. As stated above, the trust deed was foreclosed, the property sold, and a deficiency judgment of $5442.42 was rendered against the Richtsteigs.
The appellants contend that the Statute of Limitations has run as to them; that the holder of the note was guilty of laches; that the provision in the trust deed quoted above did not authorize an extension of the time of payment without their consent and that the extensions made to Nielsen did not prevent the Statute of Limitations from running as to them. *363
The decision of these questions depends upon the effect to be given to the provision in the mortgage, above quoted, on the liability of appellants. The note was executed and delivered on July 1, 1920. It was due on its face July 1, 1925. Nielsen assumed the payment of the mortgage debt by his acceptance of the deed to the property. This deed was dated February 6, 1923. It is conceded in the record that appellants did not make any payments on the note after that date. This suit was brought on September 4, 1936. A cause of action on the note against appellants was therefore barred at the time the suit was brought unless the extension agreements entered into between the holder of the note and Nielsen were binding on appellants.
After the date of the deed to Nielsen and with knowledge of the fact that he had purchased the property and assumed the debt, the holder of the note accepted and treated Nielsen as the principal debtor and dealt with him as such. In this situation, the relation of the parties to the indebtedness was definitely changed. As a result of this transaction, Nielsen became the principal debtor and appellants sureties. The relation of appellants to the debt was thereafter solely that of suretyship with all its incidents and limitations. This rule is well established by the decisions of this court. In the case ofPrudential Insurance Co. v. Bass,
"This rule is well established. While the courts of a few jurisdictions have held contrary views, a large majority of them have adopted the principles announced in the foregoing rule. The reason for the rule is, that the mortgagor on paying the mortgage debt has a right of subrogation, but by such subrogation he acquires only such rights as the creditor himself actually has. Where the creditor extends the time of payment, the surety, on paying the debt, cannot sue the principal debtor until the extended period has expired. Without such extension he had the right to sue the principal debtor at any time after maturity of the debt. When he is deprived of this right by a contract of the mortgagee with the principal debtor extending the time of payment without his consent the law releases him from liability. (Asbell
v. Marshall Building Ass'n,
Under the above rule there was a complete change of the relation of the parties to the contract of indebtedness as written in the note. (Webster v. Fleming,
It is insisted by appellee that appellants, by the provision in the mortgage which recites that the mortgagors agree to pay the mortgage debt, "according to any agreement extending the time of payment," consented to any extension of the time of payment, although appellants were not parties to such extension agreement. This argument assumes that the note and mortgage constitute one instrument, and that any agreement relating to the indebtedness contained in the mortgage became a part of the note, although no such provision is found in the note itself. Here, there is no provision in the note making any of the terms of the mortgage a part of the note. The better rule seems to be, that the note and mortgage are separate undertakings. The note relates to, and contains the contract of the maker to pay the debt and is wholly independent of the mortgage. The mortgage is not dependent upon the note executed by the mortgagors, for its validity. The note which is the evidence of the indebtedness may be made by third parties, or a mortgage may be valid where there is no note given. The mortgage relates only to the real estate pledged as security for the payment of the debt.
Counsel have cited no cases, and we have found none, which are exactly in point on the facts here involved. *366
There are many cases, however, which are in point in principle. It was held by this court in Daub v. Englebach,
A provision in the mortgage in the form of a consent to an extension of the time of payment is no different in its legal effect from an agreement in a mortgage for the acceleration of the time of payment of the indebtedness, for waste or other defaults under the mortgage. The former relates to a postponement of the due date, the latter to an option to shorten the period of the time for which the credit was extended.
It has been held by the courts of several States that a provision in a mortgage for an acceleration of maturity extends only to the right to foreclose the mortgage and subject the property pledged to the payment or reduction of the debt, and that the mortgage and note are separate contracts. The mortgage is applicable to the right to apply the security to the discharge of the debt and the note to the *367
liability of the maker for the payment of that indebtedness.White v. Miller,
These cases hold that the acceleration of the time of payment when authorized in the mortgage does not accelerate the maturity date of the debt as provided in the note, or in any way affect the liability of the maker of the note, which constitutes the contract on which his personal liability is based. It is only by reason of our statute that his personal liability may be enforced in a suit to foreclose the mortgage. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 95, par. 17.) Under this statute a deficiency judgment may be entered in a foreclosure suit only against one "personally liable for the mortgage debt." The power to enter a deficiency decree or deficiency judgment in a foreclosure suit is purely statutory.Bouton v. Cameron,
Notwithstanding this statutory provision expressly authorizing the court to enter a deficiency judgment in a foreclosure suit, the rule is settled that if for any reason the holder of the mortgage cannot enforce his mortgage as against the property, the court has no power to enter a judgment in that suit on the personal liability for the payment of the debt. In Bouton v.Cameron, supra, it was said, "It is only by virtue of the statute that a money decree can be rendered by a court of equity in a foreclosure proceeding, and the statute provides only for a deficiency decree for the balance remaining due after a sale of the property has failed to produce the full amount found to be due. That a money decree can be rendered, in a foreclosure suit, for a deficiency only, has been decided by both *368
this court and the Appellate Court. In Cotes v. Bennett,
The rule to be deduced from the above cases is, that the note and mortgage constitute separate contracts, and that any provision in the mortgage with reference to the time of payment of the debt, not found in the note itself, is no part of the note and does not affect the personal liability of the maker.
This rule finds support in principle in other decisions of this court. The case of Oswianza v. Wengler Mandell, Inc.,
The personal liability of the grantee who accepts a deed in which he assumes and agrees to pay the mortgage debt, is based on his assumption agreement. Such grantee is not liable on the note. It is not his contract. His liability rests entirely on his agreement by which he assumed and agreed to pay the debt. He cannot be sued on the note because it is not his obligation. His liability can only be established by showing the making of the deed containing such agreement and his ratification and acceptance of the agreement by accepting the deed. This constitutes his contract. While it is a new contract between the grantee and his grantor, it is a contract made for the benefit of the *370 holder of the indebtedness. To this contract the holder of the indebtedness may or may not become a party. It is entirely optional with him. (Prudential Insurance Co. v. Bass, supra.) The election of the holder of the indebtedness to accept the contract made for his benefit may be manifested, and is conclusively established, when he thereafter deals with such grantee as the principal debtor. When he accepts the benefit of the contract made for his benefit this operates as a change of the original contract evidenced by the note. Any extension of the time of payment by the holder of the indebtedness to the new debtor with knowledge that he has assumed the debt operates to discharge the original maker who has thereby become only a surety. PrudentialInsurance Co. v. Bass, supra; Home National Bank v. Waterman,supra; Dean v. Walker, supra.
Under the above rules, and upon the undisputed facts in the record, the extension agreements were wholly ineffective as to appellants. They operated only to release appellants from liability to pay the indebtedness. Any cause of action against appellants for the recovery of the mortgage debt accrued on July 1, 1925. No payments having been made by them or by their authority on either the principal or interest, and there having been no extension which was effective as to them, no judgment could lawfully be entered against them under the pleadings and upon the facts in the record.
The circuit court erred in entering the decree for a deficiency judgment against appellants and the Appellate Court erred in affirming that decree. The decree of the circuit court and the judgment of the Appellate Court affirming that decree are reversed.
Judgment and decree reversed. *371