108 Ill. 143 | Ill. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the Court:
In the month of October, 1865, Samuel J. Walker, being the owner of certain real estate in the city of Chicago, conveyed it to Henry H. Honoré, who, on the same day, executed a mortgage on the premises to Walker, to secure the payment o'f two promissory notes of the same date, executed by Honoré to Walker, for $18,000 each, due in one and two years after date. They bore eight per cent interest. The mortgage recited that the notes were given for part of the purchase money. The deed and mortgage were recorded on the 30th day of December, 1865. Soon after, Walker sold one of the notes to Wilshire & Co., of Cincinnati, and left the other with them as collateral security for any sum he might afterwards owe them. The notes and mortgage have ever since remained in their possession or control. When the note due in twelve months matured, Walker paid an amount equal to the amount due, which, with the other note not then due, he pledged as collateral security for any sum they might afterwards advance to him. Wilshire & Co. still held the note and mortgage, and they also purchased other commercial paper, from time to time, from Walker, indorsed and guarantied by him, until the fall of 1872. In November of that year Wilshire & Co. placed the mortgage, and the indorsement thereon, dated in 1866, on record in the proper office. In 1871 Walker procured from Honoré a quitclaim deed of the premises embraced in the mortgage, which he had recorded, but of this Wilshire & Co. had no other notice than the record. Walker, at all times, after he assigned the mortgage to Wilshire & Co., was indebted to them, and to secure which they held the Honoré notes and mortgage. In 1877 George Wilshire, as surviving partner of the firm, commenced proceedings Jby scire facias in the Superior Court to foreclose the mortgage, against Honoré, which resulted, at the September term of that year, in a judgment. In 1878 appellants sued out a writ of error from this court to reverse that judgment, but on a hearing it was affirmed, and appellants then filed the original and cross-bills to enjoin the sale of the mortgaged premises under the judgment in scire facias. On. a hearing, the court below found that the notes and mortgage were pledged to secure indebtedness from Walker to the Wilshires, and the amount of such indebtedness was $65,000, and directed the sale óf so much only of the property covered by the Honoré mortgage as remained unsold and in the hands of "Walker at the date of the recording of the assignment of the mortgage to the Wilshires, under the scire facias judgment, and that the property be sold in the inverse order of its alienation.
The question presented, and upon which this controversy must turn, is, whether the conveyance by Honoré, the mortgagor, to Walker, the mortgagee, operated for all purposes as a merger and extinction of the mortgage previously assigned to and held by the Wilshires. Whether it operated as a merger as between Honoré and Walker is unimportant, and we will not stop to inquire. The question is, what effect did it have on the rights of the Wilshires, and purchasers of a portion of the lots embraced in the mortgage, after the assignment was spread on the record. That Walker was indebted to the Wilshires, and they held the Honoré notes and mortgage, assigned to them as security for indebtedness Walker owed them when he procured the quitclaim deed from Honoré, there seems to be no question, and it would seem to be an incontrovertible proposition that the conveyance, without the consent of the Wilshires, did not, nor could it, have the slightest effect on their rights. The lien they then held was in every particular legal and equitable, valid and binding. This being true, there is no known means by which Walker or Honoré, or both combined, could, without the consent of the Wilshires, or at least by some omission of duty on their part, in the slightest degree affect or impair their rights.
As between Walker and the Wilshires, there can not be the shadow of a doubt that after Honoré quitclaimed the property to Walker it was competent for Walker and the Wilshires to keep the mortgage alive to secure money the former owed then, or might subsequently owe the latter. There is not the slightest evidence that Walker intended to merge the mortgage with the fee, so as to extinguish it, so far as the pledge to the Wilshires was concerned. On the contrary, the inference is that it was intended to be kept in full force as a security for the money Walker owed the Wilshires. Walker so treated it when he subsequently obtained advances on the mortgage and notes as security. Nothing was said or done which negatives the conclusion that for that purpose all parties to the transaction regarded it as a subsisting security. Had Walker, after acquiring the equity of redemption, mortgaged the property to the Wilshires to secure existing indebtedness as well as future advances, and the mortgage been recorded, no one would have questioned that it would have become a lien that would have held the property against all subsequent purchasers. Then why could not Walker pledge that mortgage as security for such loans ? As between the parties there can be no question that he might do so, and the act would be valid.
Here was a mortgage given to secure two notes, that ivas legal and valid. These notes and mortgage ivere legally assigned to secure a bona fide debt. The assignment of the mortgage was recorded in the proper office, and became notice of the lien to the whole world. There is no pretense that these notes were ever paid or the mortgage ever in fact satisfied, and we have seen the mortgage was not merged with the fee, because the parties did not intend a merger, and it would be inequitable and unjust to hold that the conveyance to Walker operated to extinguish the mortgage. Walker, in equity, was not the mortgagee when Honoré conveyed to him. The Wilshires ivere, in equity, the mortgagees, and the two titles did not unite in the same person, and never have. Had Honoré conveyed to the Wilshires, there would have been more plausibility in claiming there was a merger,—and even then, if equity had required it to promote justice, it would not have been treated as a merger. Whether the union of two such titles in one person shall operate as a merger, depends on the intention of the parties and the equities of the case.
The Wilshires then holding a valid lien on the lots in controversy, and the mortgage and its assignment being on record and notice to all persons, those purchasing after the assignment was recorded did so subject to the lien of the mortgagee, and at their peril. The record was full notice of appellee’s claim, and having so purchased they must be held to have done so in view of all of appellee’s rights, and the property purchased of Walker after the assignment must be held subject to sale under the scire facias judgment.
The fact has been alluded to that in the absence of William Wilshire in California, his brother George made a conditional arrangement to surrender the notes and mortgage and to take another mortgage on other property, and the notes and mortgage were left with Kerfoot. The evidence clearly establishes the fact that this arrangement was not consummated, and was not to be unless it was approved by William Wilshire on his return from California, and on his return he refused to sanction the arrangement. All must know that such an incomplete arrangement could have no effect on the rights of appellee.
It is also urged that the court below erred in granting affirmative relief to appellee without a cross-bill. We do not see that any relief of any kind was granted, unless it was the dismissal of the bill and permitting the property to be sold to satisfy the judgment. Appellee, in the absence of any decree, was required to sell in the inverse order of alienation, and only to sell such portion of the property as was purchased after the assignment of the mortgage was recorded. This was the right of appellee, independent of the decree. It conferred on him no right he did not possess before. Nor did it deprive appellants of any rights. It simply permitted appellee to proceed to obtain satisfaction under an execution on his judgment at law.
Having discussed the questions deemed important to the decision of the case, we dismiss the others without further consideration.
Failing to perceive any error in the record, the decree of the court below'is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.