184 Ill. 100 | Ill. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court:
As to appellants’ first contention, it is a sufficient answer to say that, no objection being made in the trial court, the question cannot be for the first time raised on appeal.
In support of the second contention, counsel for appellants relies on the cases of Fulton County v. Mississippi and Wabash Railroad Co. 21 Ill. 337, Smith v. McDowell, 148 id. 51, Brown v. Scottish-American Mortgage Co. 110 id. 235, Goodwin v. Bishop, 145 id. 421, and Mix v. People, 116 id. 265.
Sections 20, 21 and 24 of chapter 22 of the Revised Statutes are as follows:
“Sec. 20. When a bill, supplemental bill, bill of review, revivor or cross-bill, shall be filed in the court of chancery, other than for discovery only, the complainant may waive the necessity of the answer being made on the oath of the defendant, defendants or any of them; and, in such cases, the answer may be made without oath, and shall have no other or greater force as evidence than the bill.
“Sec. 21. Every answer shall be verified by an oath or affirmation, except as provided in the foregoing section.
“Sec. 24. When an answer shall be adjudged insufficient, the defendant shall file a further answer within such time as the court shall direct, and on failure thereof, the bill shall be taken as confessed; if such further answer shall be likewise adjudged insufficient, the defendant shall file a supplemental answer, and pay all costs attendant thereon; if that shall be adjudged insufficient, the defendant may be proceeded against for a contempt, and the like proceedings be had thereon, to enforce the order of the court, as in other cases of contempt.”
In James T. Hair Co. v. Daily, 161 Ill. 379, this court has construed the above sections of the statute, and after commenting on the above cases cited by appellants say (p. 385): “Under this legislation the defendant is required to answer all allegations and interrogatories of the complainant, whether the answer on oath is waived or not; and the practice as it formerly existed, by which exceptions to an unsworn answer could not be filed, is no longer the rule in this State by reason of this statute. Exceptions may be filed to an answer, whether sworn to or not.” Under this authority appellees might except to the answer of the appellants for insufficiency.
This brings us to the real question of contention, viz., whether, under the averments of the answer and cross-bill, the former lien of Farrand, notwithstanding the formal release of the same of record and the surrender of the notes and mortgage by him, should be revived and re-iustated for the amount due him thereunder, and as shown by the recitals in the bond for a deed given after the acceptance by him of the deed from Thomas S. Long.
The exceptions being sustained and the cross-bill being dismissed, there was no hearing on the matters set up under them and-no adjudication of the facts, and we are only called on to determine as to the sufficiency of the pleadings of appellants. From the facts as thus set forth the conclusion is irresistible that Farrand acted in ignorance of the facts, and was passively, at least, misled thereunto, and it is clear that a strong case was made out for the interposition of a court of equity.
Where a mortgage is made to secure notes, and subsequently new notes and a new mortgage are taken for the same debt, the change in the evidence of the debt, or a change in the evidence of a security for the debt, has not canceled the old debt. Whether the old debt or the security therefor was released or canceled is a question of intention, and unless the intention is to abandon the lien on the land, if a release of the mortgage has been made through fraud or mistake the mortgagee is entitled to relief in having the old mortgage retained. In Campbell v. Trotter, 100 Ill. 281, in a similar case, it was said (p. 284): “Campbell took his mortgage with knowledge of Trotter’s first mortgage of March 19, 1869, and as a second mortgage subordinate to Trotter’s, and it should be held subordinate to that mortgage. There has nothing occurred since, which, in equity, should displace its priority. The taking the new mortgage of August 30, 1877, and entering satisfaction of the first mortgage, was, as designed by the parties, but in continuation of the lien of the first mortgage. The whole purpose was only an extension of the time of payment. The transaction was entirely irrespective of Campbell. No consideration moved from him. It was with no reference to his benefit, and should not be made to redound thereto by the advancement of his mortgage to a priority over the lien of Trotter for the unpaid portion of the purchase money for this land he sold to Wright. The entry of satisfaction of the first mortgage and surrender of the first notes was but a formality, as regarding any essential right of the parties; but it gives to Campbell’s mortgage an inequitable advantage which it ought not to enjoy. It was through ignorance, in fact, of the existence of Campbell’s mortgage that Trotter entered satisfaction of the first mortgage and surrendered the notes, and which he would not have done had he known of Campbell’s mortgage. This Trotter testifies to, and the nature of the transaction itself would satisfy one that such must have been the case.”
Appellees contend that under the deed from Long, Farrand’s mortgage lien became merged in the fee. As to innocent third parties without notice, dealing with the premises, the correctness of this contention can hardly be questioned. But appellees here are not in a position to interpose to prevent appellants’ true equities from being shown. They derive what, if any, interest they have, as heirs of Mary C. Long, who, under the averments in the cross-bill, was liable for the entire indebtedness due Farrand but has never contributed anything towards its payment, and who voluntarily created a lien upon her interest in the premises in question for the securing of the same, and which was an existing encumbrance on the lands when she died, and subject to which her interest, being a mere equity of redemption, passed to the appellees. Under the averments of Farrand’s cross-bill the deed to him and his bond for a deed were in the nature of a mortgage, merely, and were for the purpose of securing to him the payment of the entire indebtedness, which exceeded the value of one-half of the premises, as averred, by nearly $1000. The authorities of this and other courts are so numerous to the effect that the mortgage will, in such case, not be taken to have merged but will be retained, or that equity will treat the two estates as co-existing in the mortgagee when necessary for his benefit, that it would be only to unduly extend this opinion to refer to them. In Lowman v. Lowman, 118 Ill. 582, this court held, that although the parties have undertaken to discharge a mortgage upon the uniting of the estates of the mortgagor and mortgagee in the latter, the mortgage will still be upheld, in equity, as a source of title, when it is for the interest of the mortgagee, by reason of some intervening title or encumbrance, that i't should not be regarded as merged. It will be presumed, as a matter of law, that the mortgagee must have intended to keep his mortgage alive, when it was essential to his security against an intervening title or encumbrance. And this presumption applies, although the parties, throug'h ignorance of such intervening title or encumbrance, or through inadvertence, have actually discharged the mortgage of record and canceled the notes.
We are of opinion that there was no intention to release any security held by the mortgagee and that the action of the mortgagee was under a mistake of facts. His real interest in the land was not changed because of the execution of the deed and'the release of the mortgage. There was no intention to merge his interest, as mortgagee, in the conveyance of the land, and such merger does not result, as a matter of law, where it is to the interest of the mortgagee to have the same kept alive. We are of opinion that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill and in sustaining the exceptions to the answers of Farrand and Long'.
The last question for our determination is, what became of the dower rights of Thomas S. Long in the lands of his wife, as a result of his deed to Farrand? Appellants contend that as his dower had not been assigned he could not convey same, and that Farrand took nothing, as to his dower rights, by virtue of same. In the case of Fletcher v. Shepherd, 174 Ill. 262, the widow of the deceased, Mrs. Whipple, executed a deed to her daughter, Mrs. Shepherd, conveying all her interest in the whole tract of forty acres, Mrs. Whipple having a right of dower which had never been assigned and Mrs. Shepherd owning an undivided one-third of the fee. The court held that Mrs. Whipple had a right to release her interest in the one-third to Mrs. Shepherd, but that it did not operate as a release of her right of dower to the other heirs. The court say (p. 271): “There could not then have been a release of Mrs. Whipple’s dower in the two-thirds not owned by Mrs. Shepherd. To hold that there was such release would be to hold that a dowress can release her dower in favor of a person who is not the owner of the fee. We are inclined to the opinion that the deed executed by Mrs. Whipple only had the effect of releasing her dower in the undivided one-third interest owned by Mrs. Shepherd, and that she is still entitled to her right of dower in the one-third owned by the appellant, Mrs. Fletcher, and .in the one-third owned by the appellee, George Whipple.”
While it may be that on a hearing of this case the facts will develop otherwise than the pleadings before us indicate, still, as the case is presented by the pleadings filed, the whole transaction being in the nature of a mortgage only, for the purpose of securing to Farrand the amount of the original indebtedness, with interest, etc., it would seem clear that Long did not intend to part with "any dower rights he possessed, as his answer avers that he was ignorant of his wife’s .interest, and consequently of his dower rights, and that, subject to the Farrand indebtedness, he is entitled to dower in the undivided one-half of the premises. The question of the priority of lien between Farrand’s claim and the Seymour mortgage is not involved in this appeal.
The decree of the circuit court of Pike county is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.