MEMORANDUM OPINION
This adversary proceeding is before the court on the cross-motions of First American Bank, SSB (“FAB”) and Randall Plaza Center Associates, L.P. (“Randall Plaza”) for summary judgment on the adversary complaint filed by FAB against Randall Plaza. For the reasons stated below, the court grants FAB’s motion for summary judgment and denies Randall Plaza’s cross-motion.
I. Issues
The debtor, Randall Plaza, owned the beneficial interest in a land trust that owned a shopping center. FAB held a mortgage and assignment of rents for the property, foreclosed, and is now the owner of the property. The question presented is whether FAB or Randall Plaza has the right to collect unpaid rent on the prime space in the shopping center. To resolve this question, the .court must determine whether the assignment of rents to FAB was valid and, if so, whether FAB took the proper steps to enforce the assignment and obtain the right to collect rents. The court concludes that the assignment of rents was valid and properly perfected, that FAB took all the appropriate steps to *136 enforce its lien, and that FAB is now the lessor under the lease. FAB is therefore entitled to collect all rent due from the date Randall Plaza received a notice of default in September 2000 forward.
II. Background and Facts
The relevant facts are undisputed. Randall Plaza was the owner of the beneficial interest in a land trust that owned Randall Plaza Shopping Center (the “Property”). In early 1999, Randall Plaza directed the land trust to execute a mortgage of the Property in favor of Southern Pacific Bank as security for a $3.1 million promissory note. FAB is Southern Pacific Bank’s successor in interest to this mortgage. Article 2 of the mortgage “assigns and transfers to Mortgagee all rents” and further states that upon default of the mortgage, the mortgagee “shall have the right ... [to] collect the rents and profits, including those past due and unpaid.... ”
A portion of the shopping center was leased in 1986 to Lucky Stores, Inc. (“Lucky”). This lease terminates in 2013 and was assigned in 1987 to Eagle Food Centers, L.P. (“Eagle”). However, Lucky was not released from its liability on the lease. Lucky was later acquired by American Stores, which was then purchased by Albertson’s. Eagle filed for bankruptcy protection in April 2003 and rejected its lease of Randall Plaza. Albertson’s has failed to pay rent, real estate taxes, or its share of the operating expenses since October 2003. FAB estimates that Albert-son’s owes approximately $504,130 for past due rent, taxes, and operating expenses and $3,626,000 in future payments for rent, taxes, and expenses. The dispute in this case centers on who is entitled to collect from Albertson’s.
In June 2000, Randall Plaza defaulted on its mortgage. On September 22, 2000, FAB gave a Notice of Default to Randall Plaza and demanded immediate delivery of all rents. In February 2001, an Illinois state court appointed a receiver for the property; a few months later, Grubb & Ellis Management Services, Inc. (“Grubb & Ellis”) was appointed substitute receiver. However, this action by the Illinois court was later held void, forcing FAB to file a second action in 2002 to appoint a receiver and foreclose on the mortgage. This action did not name Lucky, American Stores, or Albertson’s as defendants. The state court again appointed Grubb & Ellis receiver and granted FAB a second judgment of foreclosure on May 14, 2003.
Randall Plaza filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on July 1, 2003. The case was converted to Chapter 7 in March 2004. In February 2004, this court granted FAB relief from the automatic stay to continue foreclosure proceedings on the Property and to pursue its interest in collateral. FAB continued its foreclosure action, was the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale held in March 2004, and took title to the property in April 2004.
In September 2004, FAB filed this adversary proceeding against Randall Plaza seeking a declaration that it is entitled to collect rents and profits derived from the Property from September 22, 2000 forward. Randall Plaza asserts that it is entitled to collect any amounts due under the Albertson’s lease. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
In its motion, FAB contends that it has a valid assignment of rents that it perfected by initiating foreclosure proceedings, having a receiver appointed, and ultimately taking title to the Property. Randall Plaza asserts that it has the right to collect unpaid rents due under the Albertson’s lease for four reasons. First, it contends that FAB’s assignment of rents was not valid because it was executed by the land trustee and not Randall Plaza, the benefi *137 ciary of the land trust. It therefore claims that FAB has no right to any rents due before it became owner of the Property through foreclosure in April 2004. Second, Randall Plaza claims that, even if the assignment of rents was valid, FAB is not entitled to the rents due before April 2004 because a mere security interest in rents does not entitle FAB to payment of the rents. Third, Randall Plaza maintains that, even if FAB had a valid and perfected lien on rents, the debt Randall Plaza owed was extinguished by merger when FAB took ownership through foreclosure, so there is no more debt to support the security interest in the rents that accrued before FAB became the owner of the Property. Finally, Randall Plaza asserts that, because FAB did not name Albert-son’s as a defendant in the foreclosure action and failed to specifically foreclose on the lease, Randall Plaza is still the owner of the lease and can collect rents even though FAB owns the real property.
As discussed below, none of these arguments has merit. Instead, the court concludes that FAB had a valid and perfected lien on the rents in question, took the appropriate and necessary steps to enforce its lien, and has the right to collect all rents owing from September 22, 2000 forward. Summary judgment will be granted on the adversary complaint in favor of FAB and against Randall Plaza.
III. Standard on Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to á judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7056; see
also Bellaver v. Quanex Corp.,
IV. Assignment of Rents Was Properly Executed
Randall Plaza first seeks judgment on the basis that the assignment of rents executed by the land trustee as part of the mortgage documents was not effective. Randall Plaza argues that only the beneficiary of a land trust, not the trustee, has the right to receive rents and that the land trustee cannot transfer rights that it does not have. Illinois law does not support this argument. 1
Land trustees hold both legal and equitable title to real property and are authorized to contract for their beneficiaries when directed in writing to do so by the beneficiaries.
See In re Grocerland Coop.,
Randall Plaza admits that it directed the trustee of the land trust in writing to execute the Mortgage and assignment of rents, but it asserts that the trustee had no right to the rents and so could not assign them to FAB. This argument is presumably based on the fact that land trust agreements provide that only the beneficiary, not the trustee, has the right to receive rents from property held in trust. However, this contractual allocation of rights as between the land trustee and the beneficiary does not prevent the trustee from executing a valid assignment of rents. Under common law, the owner of real property holds the right to collect rent.
See e.g., Bellows v. Ziv,
Randall Plaza cites no case holding that only a beneficiary can execute a valid assignment of rents or that a land trustee cannot execute such an assignment. Instead, it relies on two cases, neither of which addresses this issue. First,
Levine v. Pascal,
Randall Plaza also relies on
Henry W. Kenoe, Kenoe on Land Trusts
§ 5.18 (1989). In § 5.18, Kenoe cautions that,
*139
when drafting a lease of property held by a land trust, if “the contractual aspects of the lease will be performed by the beneficiary, [the lease] may not be enforceable against the beneficiary since it is clearly established that the trustee is not the agent of the beneficiary and cannot bind him to any undertaking.” Kenoe cites two cases for this proposition, including
Conkling v. McIntosh,
More importantly, the Kenoe passage cited by Randall Plaza addresses whether a land trustee can bind the beneficiary to perform contractual duties under a lease. It does not address the question at hand— whether a trustee can assign rents in connection with mortgage documents executed at the written direction of the beneficiary. In fact, Kenoe expressly recognizes that land trustees typically execute assignments of rents in connection with financing transactions for land trusts and provides a form for this purpose. In § 5.32, Kenoe states that assignment of rent “instruments are ordinarily executed by the land trustee subject to very carefully constructed exoneration provisions and a disclaimer on the part of the land trustee of any obligations to implement the document or to sequester the rents or income from the property.” Kenoe, supra, at § 5.32. Kenoe also notes that a question may be raised if the beneficiary of the land trust does not specifically sign the assignment of rents when the beneficiary (rather than the trustee) executes a lease, because a tenant may question an assignment of rents by someone other than the lessor. Id. § 5.33, at 5-129. However, that concern is not relevant here. Instead, as the parties have stipulated in this case, the trustee of a land trust that previously owned the Property executed the lease in question, so the trustee of the successor land trust is the proper party to execute a valid assignment of rents.
Randall Plaza cites no authority requiring a beneficiary of a land trust to execute an assignment of rents in any circumstances, let alone when the beneficiary has specifically directed the land trustee in writing to execute the assignment and the leases were executed by a predecessor land trust, not the beneficiaries. The court concludes that the assignment of rents executed by the trustee is valid and enforceable.
V. FAB Is Entitled to the Assigned Rents
Randall Plaza next argues that, even if the assignment of rents is valid, FAB is not entitled to rents due before it took ownership of the Property because a mere security interest in rents does not convey title to them. While this may be true, it makes no difference here because FAB took the appropriate steps to own the right to collect the rents.
A. Procedure for Enforcing Assignment of Rents
In Illinois, an assignment of rents creates a valid lien on rental income.
In re Wheaton Oaks Office Partners Ltd. P’ship,
However, while an assignment of rents “creates a security interest in rents that is perfected as to third parties[,] ... [a]s between the mortgagee and the mortgagor, ... the mortgagee is not entitled to the rents until the mortgagee or a receiver appointed on the mortgagee’s behalf has taken actual possession of the real estate after default.”
Bank of Edwardsville v. J.D. Monarch Dev. Co. (In re J.D. Monarch Dev. Co.),
A mortgagee need not actually possess the property in order to collect on its assignment of rents. Rather, the modern trend is to permit a “mortgagee to collect rents once it has taken constructive, as opposed to actual, possession of the property.”
Comerica Bank-Illinois v. Harris Bank Hinsdale,
B. FAB Took Proper Steps to Enforce its Right to Receive Rents
In this case, FAB is entitled to collect rents on the property because a valid assignment of rents was executed in its favor and it took appropriate steps to enforce its lien. The Mortgage granting FAB an assignment of rents was properly recorded in February 1999, giving FAB a security interest in Randall Plaza rents.
See First Nat’l Bank of Joliet,
VI. Merger Does Not Preclude FAB from Collecting Past Due Rent
Randall Plaza’s next argument, that FAB’s purchase of the Property extinguished both the Mortgage and the lien on rents, is also without merit. When a mortgagee becomes the owner of mortgaged property, “[t]he merger extinguishes the debt for which the mortgage was security.”
In re Ozier,
While FAB’s purchase of the shopping center cancelled the debt owed by Randall Plaza to FAB, it did not affect the rents due from the lessees under their leases for the shopping center. An express pledge of rents is not extinguished by a foreclosure sale which merges the title and the debt in the same party.
Liss v. Harris,
VII. FAB Need Not Separately Foreclose on the Lease
Finally, Randall Plaza contends that it still owns the Albertson’s lease, including the right to collect rent under it, because FAB did not specifically foreclose on that lease. Randall Plaza cites no law supporting this assertion. A mortgagee need not institute a separate foreclosure proceeding on a lease, because a purchaser of property steps into the shoes of the previous owner and takes the property subject to existing valid leases.
Belloios,
VIII. Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the court concludes that FAB is entitled to collect the rents of Randall Plaza from June 2000 forward. The “Assignment of Rents and Profits” clause in the Mortgage assigned to FAB created a valid lien on these rents which FAB properly enforced by seeking a receiver and foreclosing on the Property. Summary judgment is therefore granted to FAB on its adversary complaint. Randall Plaza’s cross-motion is denied.
Notes
. The parties agree that Illinois law governs this dispute.
