116 Ill. 216 | Ill. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The bill in this case is of a two-fold character. It is a bill of review for errors apparent upon the face of the decree sought to be reviewed, and an original bill in the nature of a bill of review impeaching such decree for fraud. The latter aspect will be considered first.
On February 21, 1865, William Ebert, and Magdalena, his wife, executed a mortgage, with power of sale and waiving homestead rights, to Charles Bell, to secure a note for $975, due three years after date. The property mortgaged was the west half of the south-west quarter of lot 7, in block 12, in Ottawa. The title was in William Ebert, and the mortgage was recorded February 22, 1865. On October 26, 1866, the said Ebert alone, his wife not joining, made a mortgage to mie Heinrich Gerding, on the same lot, to secure a note for $1000, due in three years after date. The latter mortgage was recorded November 5, .1866. In May, 1871, Heinrich Gerding filed his bill in the circuit court of LaSalle county, to foreclose the second mortgage, setting up that in order to protect his lien he had paid the amount due on the first mortgage, and had thereby become subrogated to the rights of the parties owning the same. He makes defendants to the bill, William Ebert, Magdalena Ebert, Solyman Bell and Charles II. Beckwith, the latter having obtained judgment against Ebert in July, 1868, and levied upon these premises on April 14, 1871, and prays for a decree of foreclosure for the amount due on the second mortgage, and the amount advanced on account of the first mortgage. It is the decree on this foreclosure proceeding which is attacked by the bill in the case at bar, as erroneous in law and fraudulent in fact.
Many charges of fraud are made, but none are proven. One circumstance appearing upon the face of the record is urged as indicating a fraudulent intent, and that is the fact that although the bill was filed on May 21, 1871, and the defendants were served on May 37, 1871, no default was entered against William Ebert and Magdalena Ebert until January 15, 1877. It is difficult to see how Gerding committed any fraud against Ebert and his wife by allowing them a period of- more than five years in which to answer his bill. The return of the sheriff shows that they were duly served, and if they had desired to contest the suit they should have come in and answered, and in case complainant proceeded too slowly, should have moved to dismiss for want of prosecution. The record, however, shows that Gerding was not idle during all the time from the beginning of the suit until the final decree on July 20, 1877. Beckwith answered the bill, and proofs were taken upon the issue made by such answer. There was a contest between the mortgagee and the judgment creditor, and the order pro confesso against the defendants not answering, was postponed until that contest was ended.
It is charged, however, that the court had no jurisdiction to render any decree against Magdalena Ebert, by reason of an alleged failure to get service upon her. The return of the sheriff upon the summons shows that she was duly served by a delivery to her of a copy of the summons; but it was proposed, upon the trial below, to contradict the return. Appellants offered to prove by Henry Ebert, one of the complainants below, that he was present when a copy of the writ was delivered to his father, William Ebert, by the sheriff, but that his mother, Magdalena, was up-stairs, sick, and that no copy .was left with her, or with any member of the family for her, and so, that she was not served. Objection was made to this testimony, which the court below sustained. Henry Ebert was not a competent witness, under the second section of chapter 51 of the Eevised Statutes, entitled “Evidence and Depositions.” William Ebert, and Magdalena Ebert, and Heinrich Gerding, all died before this bill was filed. Appellants are heirs and devisees of said William and Magdalena, and appellees are heirs of said Heinrich. Appellees are adverse parties, defending as heirs of their deceased father. Henry Ebert is a party to the suit, and directly interested in its event, and the matters about which he was called to testify occurred before the death of Heinrich Gerding. The rule in Pigg v. Carroll, 89 Ill. 205, does not apply to this case. That was a proceeding for partition of land between heirs, and for an adjustment of matters of advances made to some, and the husband of one of the parties was held to be a competent witness in behalf of his wife. The matters there involved were the relative rights of heirs or devisees as to the distribution of an estate, in proceedings by which the estate itself was in no event to be reduced or impaired. In Mueller v. Rebhan, 94 Ill. 142, this court, in explaining Pigg v. Carroll, said that the statute “was intended to protect the estates of deceased persons from the assaults of strangers, and relates to proceedings wherein the decision sought by the party testifying would tend to reduce or impair the estate. ” Here appellants are strangers assaulting the estate of Heinrich Herding. The decision sought by Henry Ebert would tend to reduce and impair the estate inherited by appellees from their deceased father. Kershaw v. Kershaw, 102 Ill. 307.
The first error complained of by appellants under their bill, as a bill of review, has reference to the subrogation of the second mortgagee to the rights of the first mortgagee. The decree rendered in Gerding’s favor finds that Charles Bell, under the power of sale contained in his mortgage, sold the lot in question on August 10, 1868, to Solyman Bell, and executed a deed to him on September 12, 1868, in pursuance of such sale; that before the sale Charles Bell agreed with the mortgagor, William Ebert, that the equity of redemption should not be cut off, but that Ebert should, notwithstanding the sale, have a reasonable time within which to pay the mortgage, in such sums as he might be able, from time to time, to raise ; that Solyman Bell paid no money at the sale, and it 'was understood between him and his brother Charles that he was not to pay any purchase money, the deed being made to him to enable him to raise funds by mortgaging the lot, in case Ebert should fail to redeem by discharging his indebtedness, as agreed; that on August 10, I860, Herding paid to Solyman Bell the amount necessary to discharge the first mortgage, and thereupon Solyman Bell conveyed all his interest in the property to Ebert; and the decree adjudged that Ebert pay the amount due on the second mortgage, and the amount advanced by Herding on account of the first mortgage.
It is claimed that Herding was not entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the first mortgagee, because his payment was not made to Charles Bell, nor ratified by him, but was in fact made to Solyman Bell. By the agreement between Charles Bell and Ebert, which gave the latter the right to redeem and discharge his. indebtedness, even after the sale was made, the mortgage was virtually kept alive, and equity will regard the deed from Charles to Solyman Bell as an assignment of the incumbrance to the latter. The conveyance to him was made to enable him to borrow money in case Ebert should fail to pay up. Gerding came forward and paid up for Ebert. Charles, by putting the title in Solyman, under the circumstances found in the decree, thereby constituted Solyman his agent. Gerding, being a junior incumbrancer, was forced, in order to protect his own security, to discharge the prior lien of the Bell mortgage, and thereby became subrogated to the rights of Bell under that mortgage. In such cases the person discharging the superior lien is treated as its purchaser or assignee, unless the facts show that it was intended as an absolute payment. (Bishop v. O’Conner, 69 Ill. 431.) According to the English practice the substance of the pleadings was recited in the decree, arid so in bills of review for errors apparent on the face of the decree, the decree is understood to include not only the final judgment of the court, but the pleadings also, and in passing upon any such errors in bills of this character the court will look through the bill and answer. (Griggs v. Gear, 3 Gilm. 2.) Beading the pleadings and the decree together, in the proceedings here under review, it is evident that the discharge of the first mortgage by Gerding was not intended to be an absolute payment. Where a mortgagee has been compelled, for his own'protection, to pay the amount' of a prior mortgage upon the property, and the latter is discharged of record instead of being assigned to him, he is nevertheless entitled to indemnify himself for this payment out of the mortgaged estate. (Jones on Mortgages, sec. 878.) It has been held that a party loaning money on a trust deed, and paying off a prior trust deed to make his security good, would be subrogated to the rights of the holder of such prior trust deed, although the same was formally released and not assigned. Tyrrell v. Ward, Receiver, 102 Ill. 29.
Appellants claim that in some particulars, which it is not necessary here to detail, the findings of the decree complained of are not sustained by the evidence. But in bills of review the question is not whether the facts found in the decree under review are in accordance with the evidence, but whether the court rendering such decree has correctly applied the law to the facts as found by it. (Evans v. Clement, 14 Ill. 206.) If the findings of the court upon matters of fact are not supported by the proofs introduced in the case, the remedy is by appeal or writ of error, not by bill of review.
The next error complained of has reference to the subject of homestead. In the mortgage to Charles Bell there was a waiver of homestead and dower rights, but in the mortgage to Gerding there was no waiver of the homestead. The objection is made that the decree treats the latter mortgage as though it contained such a waiver. The defendant Ebert is decreed to pay a total amount, which is made up of the amount due on the second mortgage, and oalso of the amount paid on account' of the first mortgage; but the decree specifically states, in separate figures, first, the sum advanced by Gerding on account of the Bell mortgage, and next, the sum due on his own mortgage. • The decree is one which foreclosed both mortgages—the one containing the waiver, and the one which does not contain the waiver. When Gerding paid the amount due on the Bell mortgage, and became subrogated to all the rights of Bell thereunder, he acquired the right to cut off the homestead by his foreclosure, just as Bell himself could have done.
In Silsbe v. Lucas, 36 Ill. 462, a bill was filed to foreclose two mortgages,—one, which had been executed prior to the passage of the Homestead law, and not being subject to its provisions, was the same as though it contained a waiver; and the other, which had been made after the passage of the law, and did not contain a release of the homestead. In that ease this court says: “What, then, were Noble’s rights in this eighty-acre tract ? He had foreclosed under a mortgage executed long before the Homestead law was enacted. It is true that he also foreclosed, at the same time and in the same suit," a junior mortgage on the same property, which was given after the adoption of that act; but the sale having been made in satisfaction of that mortgage, as well as the other, and defendants in error having failed to redeem from the sale on the elder mortgage, it passed a title free from all claim to the homestead exemption. If the junior mortgage had not been foreclosed and a sale made under a foreclosure of the elder mortgage, no person would doubt that the sale would have been free from all claims of a homestead exemption. Then, as it was sold under the prior mortgage and free from such a claim, we are unable to perceive how the foreclosure of a mortgage which was subject to the homestead exemption could in any manner affect the rights of the holder of the prior mortgage, or those purchasing under it. ”
As to the deed dated January 17, 1877, from Solyman Bell "to Magdalena Ebert, the grantor and grantee therein were parties to the suit under review, and the grantee, if a purchaser at all, was a purchaser pendente lite. Moreover, the decree finds that Solyman Bell had previously deeded his interest in the premises to William Ebert. The validity of the deed of January 17, 1877, could only be sustained upon the theory that the mortgagee’s deed from Charles Bell to Solyman Bell was valid, and made in pursuance of a bona fide sale, under the power in the Bell mortgage; but the record shows that on June 29, 1869, William Ebert, the father of appellants, filed a bill in the La Salle circuit court attacking the sale under the Bell mortgage, claiming the deed from Charles to Solyman to have been null and void, and setting up the same agreement made between himself and the mortgagee, to the effect that he should have time to redeem the lot after the sale, as is found by the decree herein complained of. Magdalena died April 13, 1881, and her rights of dower and homestead died with her. William Ebert died June 2, 1881, and his right of homestead died with him. They lived nearly four years after the decree of July 17, 1877, and were both parties to it, and yet, during their lives, they made no attack on it. Appellants allege in their bill and have proven that they are still in the occupancy of the premises as a. homestead. No one has disturbed their possession, although the master’s deed made under the decree of July 17, 1877, and in pursuance of the sale therein ordered, was executed more than two years before the filing of this bill of. review. The youngest of appellants is now eighteen years of age. We can not see that they have been injured.
The decree of the court below is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.