39 Ill. App. 93 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1890
The first question presented here is a motion by appellees to dismiss the appeal because, as they allege, there is a freehold involved. Under the facts of this case we are unable to see that there is any freehold involved, although we can not feel perfectly sure that such is not the case, so variant have been the decisions of the Supreme Court on the question. In C., B. & Q. R. R. v. Watson, 105 Ill. 217, it was held that “ a freehold is never involved unless the primary object of the suit is the recovery of a freehold, and the judgment or decree will, as between the parties, result in one party gaining and the other losing his estate.” In the case of Sanford et al. v. Kane, 127 Ill. 591, appealed from this court, that rule was disapproved and the decree of this court in that case reversed because, as the court held, there was a freehold involved. In the latter case the rule was laid down that a freehold is involved “where the title to a freehold is so put in issue by the pleadings that the decision of the ease necessarily involves a decision of such issue, although the judgment or decree does not result in one party gaining and the other losing the estate.”
In Kerchoff v. Union Mutual Life Ins. Co., 128 Ill. 199, where the complainant alleged the execution of a deed conveying certain real estate to the defendant, coupled with an oral agreement that the complainant should be permitted to redeem two of the lots conveyed upon certain prescribed terms and prayed that he be let in to redeem from such absolute deed on its face by paying the alleged stipulated sum, it was held that no freehold was involved. A similar holding was had in Lynch v. Jackson et al., 123 Ill. 360. Hollingsworth v. Koon et al., 113 Ill. 443; see same case, 13 Ill. App. 158. In Kerchoff v. U. M. L. Ins. Co., supra, the court say: “Unfortunately our rulings have not been entirely harmonious as to what is meant by ‘ involving a freehold,’ as that term is used in the section above referred to; but without deeming it necessary to review the several cases, we think it may be said that where the question has been considered by the court and decided, the .decision has in general (though there has been one exception and perhaps more) proceeded upon the understanding that the word freehold means as that word was known to and defined by the common law, and that it does not include the mere right to that which in equity will entitle a party to a ‘freehold.’”
In the Sanford case, supra, it was said, “ it is the rule that bills to foreclose mortgages, or establish other liens upon land, do not ordinarily involve freeholds, because-the defendant may in such cases, by the payment of the money necessary to discharge the lien, prevent the decree from being so executed as to divest him of his freehold, and usually the only question litigated is the existence of the. lien, the title itself not being put in issue. The same may be said of bills to redeem where the right to redeem is the only question litigated. But in such cases, when the pleadings raise adverse claims of title between the parties which must necessarily be adjudicated in order to a decree, a freehold is involved.”
How the case at bar is a bill to foreclose a mortgage and falls within the class of cases mentioned in the Sanford case, supra, quoted, where the respondents, in case the lien is established, may redeem by the payment of money necessary to discharge the lien and thus prevent the freehold from being divested.
There is no dispute but that the land originally deeded by Inks to William H. and Grace A. Headlee, his wife, was so deeded by mistake, instead of the E. -J-, S. E. 28; nor that the latter tract was intended; nor that Ileadlee and wife originally executed the mortgage dated October 11, 1882, on the land deeded by mistake, intending to mortgage the latter described land. The main issue in this case is as to whether the giving up of the original mortgage and notes, having Inks deed the title of the land to William H. Headlee after the death of his wife, Grace, and taking notes and a new mortgage from William H. on the land first intended to be conveyed and mortgaged, did not have the effect to release the interest which Mrs. Headlee had in the land from the equitable lien of the first mortgage, and also release her interest in the land from being first subject to a second mortgage executed by her and her husband, by a proper description, to appellant, from being a lien in the latter’s favor superior to his lien on the husband’s interest in the land described under the first mortgage, i. e., whether or not her interest in the land should be first sold to satisfy the second' mortgage executed by her, before the husband’s interest in the land should be sold and applied on the second mortgage.
We think, then, clearly no freehold is involved; it is only a question of the existence and priority of mortgage lions. See also Patrick S. Ryan v. Sanford, Supreme Court, filed May 14, 1890, Ottawa; Hanks v. Rhodes et al., filed May 14, 1889, 21 N. E. Rep. 774, where the court took jurisdiction to decide a deed absolute on its face, to be a mortgage.
We now come to the main questions in the case. First, did the appellant release the intended mortgage lien on the land sold by Inks to William H. Headlee and wife and intended to be mortgaged to appellant by the intended grantees? It is clear in our minds that appellant never intended to release his mortgage, either as to William H. Headlee’s interest or Grace A. Headlee’s interest. The evidence shows that it was his intention to perfect his lien on the entire title. He procured the deed to be corrected by having the entire interest in the land deeded to William H. Headlee and then taking a new mortgage on the entire title to secure the original debt. It is insisted that the original mortgage was released of record and fully discharged, and the mortgage given by Mrs. Headlee, so far as her interest in the land in question was concerned, was thereby discharged. We do not so understand the transaction. The land described in the mortgage in error was owned by one Kasbeer, who desired to have the cloud removed from the title. It did not belong to the Headlees, and never had, nor to Ink, and neither of them had any claim on it; neither had appellant. It was proper and right that appellant should release the mortgage of record, for in reality it was only an apparent mortgage. He received no pay for it, nor any part of his debt. This action could not be regarded in the light that he intended to release his equitable right to have his mortgage corrected and to embrace the land intended. The fact that appellant released Kasbeer’s land had no importance whatever, further than to show that an act of justice was done to him. If no new notes and mortgage had been taken no claim could with any show of reason be made that the release of Kasbcer’s land could affect his equities as against Mrs. Headlee’s heirs and the land in question. The release claimed then may be laid out of the question entirely. It is insisted, though, by attorneys for appellees, that inasmuch as the appellant took the new mortgage, and delivered up the old notes of Mrs. Headlee and her husband, the heirs’ equitable interest in the land was released; that she was only security for her husband, and that appellant must be held to legal notice of that fact because his agents, to loan the money, had knowledge of the fact that Mrs. Headlee had furnished her part of the money, $2,000, and her husband furnished $200, and borrowed $3,000 of appellant, and that she in fact was security for her husband’s part. It is uncertain from the evidence just what relation she bore to her husband in the matter. She had an intended deed for an undivided one-half. Whether she was intended to have that interest does not appear. If it was she could not have been-security for her husband for all the amount, for she should pay $800 more. Hext, the evidence does not disclose that Miller & Piper, the loan brokers, who procured the money from appellant, were in a legal sense their agents. The Headlees employed them to procure them the money on the market and agreed to and gave them the sum of §30 for their services.
In this employment whatever knowledge the agents had was obtained from the Headlees. Miller & Piper then applied to appellant for the loan and got it on their representations as to the security. If there was any agency it was a limited one. The evidence only discloses that Piper, of the firm of Miller & Piper, told his brother that Miller made out the papers and looked up the title; that he loaned the money for his brother to accommodate him; thought he could make a few dollars himself. He further testified that he did- not know that “ you could call that being his agent.”
How it may be inferred from this, that appellant trusted Miller to see that the title was all right and the papers properly made out, as amere accommodation. It was really not necessary that appellant, should know for his own security Avhat relationship as to security existed between Headlee and wife. All appellant need know was that the land was good security and that the papers Avere all right. The fact of Mrs. Headlee furnishing $2,000 was learned by Miller & Piper as Headlee’s agent, and Ave do not think that appellant- should be held to knoAvledge, as the investigation of this fact Avas not within the scope of the agency of Miller & Piper, if any existed; all he xvanted to knoiv Avas that the title was right and the papers properly made. In Herrington v. McCormick, 73 Ill. 483, and McCormick v. Wheeler, 36 Ill. 116, it was held that where one party employed an attorney and he obtained certain information from his client as such attorney, and afterAvard was employed by another party as an attorney, the last party Avas not held to notice of the facts obtained from the first clients by virtue of his last employment. The rule may be based on the ground that communications between attorney and client are privileged; but as we think the appellant’s employment, if any, did not call for the disclosure of such facts, andas the agent’s duties Avere to his clients, the Headlees, .good faith did not require such disclosures.
Perry Piper, the brother of the appellant, after being employed by the Headlees, went to his brother and got the money from him, for the Headlees, he trusting his brother to pay it over and take the notes and mortgage, Miller being trusted to look up the title. This appears to be the extent of the agency of Perry Piper and Miller on appellant’s part, and this appears to be what was meant by appellant when he says he loaned the money through Miller & Piper and that the latter got the money to invest for him. It appears clear, however, that appellant had no actual notice of Mrs. Headlee’s position as security, if she was such, till long after the attempted correction of the mistake, and we think he could not be held to constructive notice except that the deed from Inks was intended to be made to the Headlees jointly. He therefore had good right to suppose that the note was given jointly as principals, especially as the land was deeded to them jointly or intended so to be. The law is that“ the payee or indorsee of negotiable paper takes it free from conflicting equities between the makers or obligees, of which he had no notice.” Booth v. Storrs, 73 Ill. 439; Neimcewicz v. Ghar, 3 Paige Ch. 651; same case on appeal, 11 Wend. 323.
This applies to equities between surety and principal as well as other equities, and-if the payee has no notice of suretyship there is no equitable obligation to protect the surety resting on him; he is justified as treating them both as principals. Therefore we think that even if Mrs. Headlee was security as between herself and husband as to the §3,000 notes and mortgage, yet she was not released nor was her land released by the taking of new notes and the extension of time of payment, as to a portion of the notes, unless the new notes were taken in payment of the old ones, of which we think there is no proof. The circumstances of this case gave appellant a strong equity to have this mortgage satisfied out of the land intended to be conveyed and mortgaged as against Mrs. Headlee and her heirs, even though she had signed the notes as surety. As between Inks and her and her husband this $3,000 would have occupied the position of purchase money and forelosure enforced on equitable grounds, and it would have made no difference that she had advanced a portion of the purchase money. The title would have been burdened with the full payment. Without the expected payment in full, the owner of the land would not have parted with the title and she could have enjoyed no part of the land; hence equity gives the grantor a lien on the land conveyed, called a vendor’s lien, for the payment of the purchase money. The case of appellant is not much, if any, different in principle, as regards his equities, from what that of Inks would have been had he taken the S3,000 mortgage as did appellant. Instead of Inks giving the credit, appellant places himself in his position, advances the money for the title, has it conveyed, or intended to be, to Headlee and wife jointly, and then by intention takes a mortgage hack to secure such purchase money so advanced, all being at the same time and one entire transaction. As far as the equities of the parties are concerned, we must treat this case as though there had been no misdescription in Inks’ deed and in appellant’s mortgage; for it is an equitable maxim that “thatin equity is treated as done that should have been done.” A case very nearly in point is Curtis v. Root, 20 Ill. 54. It is there said : “ In point of right and principle it can make no difference whether the mortgage is given to the vendor of the purchase money or to another who actually advances the means to pay the purchase money to the vendor.” The same doctrine is affirmed in Roane v. Baker et al., 120 Ill. 808.
By taking the new notes and mortgage, it was undoubtedly the intention of appellant to release the estate of Mrs. Headlee from any persona] liability on the notes; but he was striving his best to hold the mortgage lien, and if a court of equity doesmot interfere as against William H. Headlee and appellant in favor of the heirs of Mrs. Headlee to recover the title to her share in the land, there can be no question but the new mortgage would be all that is necessary to secure the balance of the purchase money. When these heirs come in by their cross-hill and ask this relief, they should not he allowed to do an inequitable thing by taking Mrs. Ileadlee’s share 'free from the lien of the purchase money. It appears that in taking the new notes and mortgage the debt was not increased and only the time extended as to the payment of a portion of it. The entering satisfaction of a mortgage and taking a new one, when designed by the parties to be a continuation of the first mortgage, is not a satisfaction but a continuation of the first mortgage, and as to an. intervening judgment creditor of the mortgagor, does not give him priority. Campbell v. Trotter, 100 Ill. 281.
It makes no difference whether appellant’s relief is granted on the new or old mortgage, so -that the amount is not increased beyond what would have-been due on the mortgage of 1882. Even if Mrs. Headlee’s interest in the land had been released from the mortgage of 1882, the court below erred in holding that William H. Headlee’s interest in the Inks eighty acres should be first sold in order to satisfy the §4,000 mortgage, given by Mr. and Mrs. Headlee as a second mortgage on this tract to secure the purchase money of another tract included in the same mortgage.
The appellant had a prior mortgage on the Inks eighty, and if William H. Headlee’s interest be first sold to satisfy the second mortgage then he loses his security to that extent on his first mortgage. The appellant undoubtedly had a right to the satisfaction of his first mortgage first, out of the land therein pledged. It was first given and should be first satisfied. When Mrs. H. gave the second mortgage on the Inks eighty she knew of the first mortgage, and must have known that appellant had a prior lien, and she can not complain, nor her heirs, that the Inks land be sold to pay that first.
Even if her portion of the Inks eighty is released, that can not change her relation to the first and the second mortgages which she had signed. A great advantage would accrue to her by her land being released from the first mortgage, but why should this entitle her to another by changing appellant’s first mortgage into a second one and making it subsequent to the second, and thereby compelling the selling of William H. Headlee’s interest in the Inks eighty, first to apply on second mortgage, so as to release her interest in the Inks eighty to that extent from the lien of the second mortgage? We can not see any justice in this.
From what we have said it will be seen that we hold that the interest of the heirs of Grace A. Headlee in the Inks eighty so called was not, nor was that of their mother in her lifetime, released from the mortgage of October 11,1882, by the taking of a new mortgage by appellant from William H. Headlee alone, and the land therein named is liable to be sold to satisfy the notes named in the second mortgage given for the purchase money to correct mistake, not to exceed in amount the original notes and interest, William H. Headlee’s interest being first sold and applied; that this mortgage is entitled to the priority of all others; that the twenty fifty-second interest of the heirs of Grace A. Headlee, if any remains after the satisfaction of the purchase money of the Inks eighty-acre tract, secured by the first and third mortgages, be applied in payment of the mortgage of 1885 for $4,000 and interest after the other land contained in the latter named mortgage is sold and applied to its satisfaction, and after all of William H. Headlee’s interest is applied, if any remains after satisfying the mortgage of 1882.
The decree of the court below is therefore reversed and cause remanded with directions to the court below to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded with, directions.