Smith v. Dinsmore

16 Ill. App. 115 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1885

Lacey, J.

We will first determine the right of Dinsmore to subrogation. It appears that upon the purchase of the two hundred and twenty acres of the land of Bressler, he went to the JEtna Life Insurance Company to procure a release of the mortgage on the land, and he found that in one bill and proceeding the company had procured a decree of foreclosure in the United States Circuit Court in the Northern District of Illinois, on all said ./Etna mortgages, though the decree was several as to each mortgage. He then made a contract with it to set aside its decree and allow him to pay up all the interest on all the mortgages and all costs and attorneys’ fees and a certain amount to be paid on the principal of the large mortgage, and it to release the land he had purchased from Bressler, which contract was carried out as agreed upon.

The seven thousand seven hundred dollars purchase money that he had agreed to pay to Bressler was applied in discharge of the /Etna mortgages and interest as follows: On the larger mortgage, covering the land in question, he paid on the principal the sum of $4,400 and two interest coupons of $574 each, making in all $5,548, paid on that note and mortgage, lie paid on the interest of the $6,500 mortgage two other coupons of $455 each, making $910 on that mortgage, and the last smaller mortgage of $6,000, two coupons for $420 each, making $840, making in all $7,298, leaving a balance of the $7,700 of the sum of $402, which we presume was the costs and attorneys’ fees incurred in the foreclosure suit in the United States Circuit Court.

We are clearly of the opinion that Dinsmore has the right to be subrogated to the position of the original mortgagee as far as he has paid and discharged the mortgages. After having purchased the land he was compelled, if he made his title good to the land which he had purchased, to pay off and satisfy at least the mortgage on the 410 acre tract, or by some arrangement, as he did make, to get his land discharged by the payment of a less sum.

As a part of the condition the company compelled him to pay all the interest due, and one year in advance on the other two mortgages, and all costs and attorneys’ fees.

It is claimed that Dinsmore took other security from Bressler to secure himself against the Smith mortgage, and for that reason has lost his right of subrogation. We do not think that he forfeited his right by the transaction to insist on his claim to be subrogated to the rights of the ¿Etna mortgage. What right has Smith to claim the benefit of any mortgage Dinsmore may have taken from Bressler? He was no party to the transaction and was put in no worse position by it. What matters it to him if he was in no worse position as regards the ¿Etna mortgage than he was before Dinsmore took the release? And what matters it that the form of the transaction between Dinsmore took the form of a release instead of an assignment?

What right has Martin to claim the benefit of Dinsmore’s money that paid off the ¿Etna mortgage? He wants to take the land from Dinsmore free from incumbrance created by ■ the JGtna mortgage, and deprive Dinsmore of the land and of the money he paid to .the ¿Etna company. What injustice that would be! It would indeed be a windfall for Martin, but at the expense of a man that owed him nothing.

The doctrine of subrogation is well supported and illustrated by the ophiion of the Supreme Court in the following cases, viz.: Young v. Morgan, 89 Ill. 200; Beaver v. Slanker, 94 Ill. 175. Those cases support the doctrine here announced.

There remains now the question whether Dinsmore has not been subrogated in too large an amount to his rights under the ¿Etna mortgage. And in that matter we think it is clear that he has been. The decree of the court requires the 220 acre tract of land to be sold and §8,292.86 paid to him on account of his interest in the mortgage. When a party is subrogated to the rights under a prior mortgage which he has been compelled to pay, he simply steps into the shoes of the mortgagee and takes the latter’s rights, and no more.

All that was p¿id on the §8,200 mortgage was the §4,400 and the two coupons of §574 interest on it, making §5,548, and the proportionate share of the expense, costs and attorneys’ fees in the United States Circuit Court, which, as we figure it, allowing the §402 to be divided between the three ¿Etna mortgages in- the proportion that §8,200 bears' to the other two, we make it $163.20, making $5,711.20. The last amount, as we understand the evidence, is all that can be charged to be the proper amount for subrogation on the §8,200 mortgage. But after the payment on the latter mort£ra$re had been made there would remain due the ¿Etna on the O r) mortgage the sum of $3,800 of the principal. How, adding the amount remaining dne to the /Etna Life Insurance Company to the amount the court allowed to Dinsmore, §8,292.86, the total sum would be §12,092.86. But the sum due on the mortgage at the time, and its accrued costs and attorney’s fee, was only §9,511.20, showing that the combined claim remaining due the /Etna company and Dinsmore by this decree is made to exceed the amount of the mortgage, costs and interest, by the sum of §2,581.66.

We do not think that by means of subrogation the amount of the mortgage can be increased. Subrogation is simply a kind of purchase recogn'zed by the law for the purpose of forwarding the ends of justice. A party who should purchase a portion of a mortgage can only claim the interest purchased, leaving to the party from whom he purchased the balance. We suppose that Dinsmore might claim his rights of subrogation out of the sale of the other two mortgaged premises for the amount of the interest, expenses, and costs he paid on them, if occasion required and when the time arrives. The substance of the transaction between Dinsmore and the /Etna company was that the former took an equitable assignment of a portion of the mortgage on 220 acres of the land. The consideration for this was the amount above shown, which he paid on the §8,200 mortgage and expenses. This was done by agreement with the /Etna company. If Smith or Martin, or both, are willing to accept this division of the mortgage and redeem from it and pay Dinsmore the amount he has paid and interest, or if the land is sold and that amount paid him, we see no objection, and Dinsmore can not complain. But if they insist that the division is not a proper or just one, they would have to redeem from the entire /Etna mortgage of §8,200 and interests and costs, and ask subrogation themselves if the court upon investigation should allow it after giving the /Etna company the right to be heard.

The decree of the court below is therefore reversed and the cause remanded with the directions to allow to Dinsmore no more than he appears to have paid for the release on the 220 acres, which was credited on the §8,200 mortgage, and interest and costs of the United States Court foreclosure and attorney’s fee paid, which by proper proportion would belong to it. The amount paid on the interest of the other two mortgages and their proportionate share of said costs and attorney’s fee should not be allowed him out of the sale of the 220 acres of land. We do not require the court to be governed by the calculations made by this court as to the amounts, unless they should prove accurate, upon a further hearing.

Decree reversed and remanded.

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