233 Ill. App. 572 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
A bill for foreclosure was filed by appellant in the Circuit Court of St. Clair county, setting forth that on November 12, 1918, appellees Joseph A. Voudrie and Laura Voudrie, his wife, executed and delivered to Henry T. Renshaw, trustee, their promissory note for $1,700.00, and to secure the same, executed on the same date a mortgage on a certain parcel of land, therein described; that thereafter Renshaw assigned said note and mortgage to appellee Frank W. Puderer, who later assigned the same to appellant, for a valuable consideration. The Voudries answered said bill, denying the execution of said note and mortgage, and charging that the same were forgeries.
A replication being filed to said answer, the cause was referred to the master to take the evidence and to report the same, with his conclusions of law and fact thereon. The master in his report recommended a decree of foreclosure as prayed. Exceptions were filed to the master’s report by the appellees, and, upon a hearing thereon, a decree was entered dismissing said bill for want of equity. To reverse said decree, appellant prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant charges in his bill that appellees Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie executed the note and mortgage in question, and delivered the same to the said Henry T. Eenshaw. This averment was specifically denied in the answer filed by said appellees. The master, on this issue, found that the said Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie did not sign said note and mortgage, and that the signatures thereto were forgeries. This finding was not excepted to by appellant, and was sustained by the finding of the Chancellor.
Appellant, however, contends that even though appellees Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie may not have signed said note and mortgage, that they acknowledged said mortgage, and received the benefits thereof, and, appellant being a bona fide holder for value, that appellees are estopped to deny the execution of said instruments. The master in his finding adopted appellant’s theory as above stated, and recommended a decree of foreclosure as prayed in said bill.
A complainant must recover on the case made by his bill. He is not permitted to state one case in the bill and make out a different one in the proofs. The allegations and the proof must correspond, McKay v. Bissett et al., 5 Gilm. (Ill.) 499; Walker v. Ray, 111 Ill. 315-321; Reed et al. v. Reed, 135 Ill. 482, 485; Dorn v. Geuder, 171 Ill. 362.
The law further is that a “decree cannot give relief that facts disclosed by the evidence would warrant where there are no averments in the bill to which the evidence can apply, and that if the evidence disproves the case made by the bill the complainant cannot be given a decree upon other grounds disclosed by the proofs, unless the court permits the complainant to amend his bill so as to present the case disclosed by the evidence.” Lang v. Metzger, 206 Ill. 475-488. To the same effect is Schmitt v. Weber, 239 Ill. 377-388.
The bill in this case is framed on the theory that appellees Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie executed the purported note and mortgage, and the relief sought is based thereon.
The evidence, in our judgment, conclusively discloses that these parties did not sign said note and mortgage. They each specifically testified that they did not so sign the same. Henry T. Benshaw, the party to whom said note and mortgage purport to have been given, also testified that they did not sign the same. All of the witnesses who testified in reference thereto, testified that the signatures in question were not the signatures of Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie. Appellant practically concedes that the evidence discloses that said signatures were not the signatures of Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie. The proof, therefore, did not support the averments of the bill.
Aside, however, from the question of the variance between the allegations of the bill and the proofs, we are of the opinion that the evidence fails to prove that appellees acknowledged said mortgage and received the benefits thereof, as contended for by appellant.
William Schrader, the notary who purported to have taken said acknowledgment, testified that Benshaw, introduced said parties to him, and that they acknowledged that they signed said mortgage. On the other hand, Mr. and Mrs. Voudrie both testified that they did not acknowledge said mortgage. Benshaw, whom the evidence discloses became insolvent after the date of said purported note and mortgage, and at the time of the taking of the evidence before the master was confined in the penitentiary, testified that he never introduced Mr. and Mrs. Voudrie to the notary; that he himself took the mortgage to the notary and procured his certificate thereto. This testimony, together with the fact that the note and mortgage were forgeries, we think proves beyond a reasonable doubt that said parties never acknowledged said mortgage. Proof of this character is sufficient to overcome the certificate of the notary. Post v. First National Bank of Springfield, 138 Ill. 559; Lewis v. McGrath, 191 Ill. 409; Herpich v. Williams, 300 Ill. 540-547.
It should also be borne in mind that the master found that said signatures were forgeries. This finding was not excepted to, and it is therefore conclusive as to that issue. Hurd v. Goodrich, 59 Ill. 450; Pennell v. Lamar Ins. Co., 73 Ill. 303; McClay v. Norris, 4 Gilm. (Ill.) 370; Singer, Nimick & Co. v. Steele, 125 Ill. 426; Cheltenham Improvement Co. v. Whitehead, 128 Ill. 279; Ennesser v. Hudek, 169 Ill. 494; Marble v. Thomas, 178 Ill. 540-541; Udstuen v. Illk, 291 Ill. 443-448.
On the issue sought to be raised as to whether appellees Joseph A. Voudrie and Laura Voudrie received the benefits of said purported mortgage, the record discloses that Vivian Voudrie, the daughter of Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie, had been promised by her parents that they would convey to her certain premises, being a part of the premises covered by the purported mortgage in question, and that she applied to Benshaw for a loan, to be secured by a mortgage thereon. The deed, for some reason, was not executed to the said Vivian Voudrie, and no mortgage was given by her to Renshaw. The evidence, however, tends to show that Renshaw loaned Vivian Voudrie the funds with which to erect said building, on her personal note, and that a large part of the principal thereof had been repaid by her to Renshaw, prior to the filing of said bill. Even though the bill were framed on a theory which would malee said evidence admissible, it would not be sufficient to warrant a decree of foreclosure in this case.
It was further contended by appellant that Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie had signed a mortgage in blank and delivered it to Renshaw, and that by so doing they empowered him to fill in the same, and that they would be bound thereby. The only evidence in the record with reference to this transaction is the testimony of Renshaw. He testified that said parties did sign a mortgage in blank, but that by reason of some misdescription in the premises or otherwise, he did not use the same. He did not claim, however, that said parties had authorized him to sign their names to the note and mortgage here in question. In fact, no one testified that appellees Joseph A. and Laura Voudrie had ever authorized anyone to sign their names thereto, but they expressly testified that they did not do so. The evidence therefore wholly fails to sustain appellant’s contention in this regard.
Appellant further insists that the Voudries ratified the note and mortgage in question. There is some testimony in the record to the effect that, after the insolvency of Renshaw, appellant applied to the Voudries for payment of the interest of said note, and that Joseph A. Voudrie stated that he wanted appellant to be lenient with him. Voudrie himself testified that he told appellant that he did not sign said mortgage, but in effect that he had stated that if appellant could prove that he did, he would want him to be lenient with him. None of the witnesses, however, testified that the Voudries admitted that the signatures to the note and mortgage in question were their signatures, but that in each instance they denied that said signatures were theirs.
The bill is not framed on the theory that appellees had ratified said note and mortgage. ' Even if it had been so framed, the evidence is not sufficient to warrant a finding in favor of appellant on that ground.
In Chicago Edison Co. v. Fay, 164 Ill. 323, the Supreme Court in discussing a question of this character, at page 329, says: “While this court has held that a forged note may be ratified by the principal so as to bind him, (Livings v. Wiler, 32 Ill. 387, Hefner v. Vandolah, 62 id. 483, and Hefner v. Dawson, 63 id. 403,) it has not, to our knowledge, been held in any case that a ratification of a forged instrument can be implied from a doubtful state of facts.”
For the reasons above set forth, we are of the opinion and hold that the Chancellor did not err in dismissing said bill for want of equity, and the decree will accordingly be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.