177 Ill. 620 | Ill. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a bill in equity, begun in the superior court of Cook county by the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, against Edward J. Stopp and Charles T. Wilt, Jr., in the nature of a bill of interpleader, to determine the respective rights of the defendants in and to the sum of §2000, to be paid by complainant in response to'a judgment rendered by the superior court of Cook county in an action by complainant to condemn a part of lots 20 and 23, in block 3, of Johnson, Roberts & Storr’s addition to Chicago. The defendants appeared and waived formal pleadings, and submitted the case to the court on a stipulation as to the facts.
The facts involved in the contention of the respective parties may be briefly stated, as follows: On December 24, 1895, the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company filed a petition against appellant, Edward J. Stopp, in the superior court of Cook county, to condemn a part of the above described property, together with the improvements thereon. This property stood at the time in the name of and was owned by appellant. On March 30, 1896, he entered into a written agreement for the sale of this entire property to Charles T. Wilt, Jr., for a consideration of §12,000, providing for a certain cash payment and the balance of §8000 to be secured by a mortgage on the property by Wilt to Stopp. On April 8, 1896, appellant, Edward J. Stopp, and his wife, in pursuance of the contract of March 30, 1896, executed a conveyance of the property to Wilt, who In turn made certain payments of the purchase price and executed eight notes of §1000 each, bearing interest at six per cent per annum, payable ten years after date, all secured by lots 20 and 23. At the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, appellant, Stopp, executed an instrument, as follows:
“Whereas, said parties did, on March 30, 1896, enter into a contract for the purchase, sale and exchange of certain property; and whereas, said contract has this day been consummated by the delivery of deeds thereunder and the payment of purchase money and the execution of the note and mortgages therein referred to; and whereas, also, the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company brought a condemnation suit, to which said parties were parties defendant, to condemn a portion of said lots 20 and 23, etc., being the same property described in said contract of March 30, 1896; and whereas, also, it was a part of the understanding and agreement between the parties that all the rights, causes of action and remedies which said Edward J. Stopp might have or be entitled to against said railroad company in the above entitled suit, or elsewhere or otherwise, should, as a part of said sale and transfer, pass to the said Charles T. Wilt, Jr.: Now, in consideration of the premises, said Edward J. Stopp ¿Loes hereby set over, assign, and transfer to the said Charles T. Wilt, Jr., all his right of action, causes of action, claims and demands of every sort whatsoever which he may now have against said Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company, or which he had on the 25th day of December, 1895, by reason of the condemnation suit aforesaid, or which he may be hereinafter entitled to, being as compensation for the taking of a portion of said premises, by condemnation or otherwise, for the construction of said road, and also for damages to the remainder of said premises not taken, by reason of said construction.”
On September 29, 1896, a judgment was rendered in favor of Stopp and Wilt, under a stipulation that their interests should be tried together as one, for $725.90 as compensation for the premises taken, together with the improvements thereon, and $1274.10 for damages to the part not taken, and the improvements thereon. The court found that the part of the lots condemned was a strip off the rear end, and the stipulation showed it was occupied by a stable building used by Wilt in his business; that the taking of this strip would necessitate the destruction of the stable and the re-construction of the premises to afford to Wilt the same facilities for room as he had before, and that to restore this property to as valuable a condition as before would require the expenditure of more than the amount obtained from the condemnation, after deducting expenses of collecting that judgment.
On the hearing of the cause Wilt tendered a bond for $2500 to secure the use of the condemnation money in restoring the premises to as valuable condition as before the condemnation. This bond was accepted by the court and ordered filed. The chancellor then rendered a decree in favor of appellee Wilt, directing the fund in dispute to be paid to him, and also directing appellant to release the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company from the mortgage on the property condemned. The Appellate Court affirmed the decision of the lower court awarding the fund to Wilt, holding that after the transaction by which Stopp deeded the property to Wilt and took a mortgage back in part payment of the purchase price, Stopp relinquished all interest in the condemnation proceeding to Wilt. The Appellate Court further held that the Northwestern Elevated Railroad Company was not entitled to a release from the mortgage by Wilt to Stopp, because the effect of the judgment in the condemnation proceeding was to remove the lien.
It is earnestly insisted on behalf of appellant that the contract between Stopp and Wilt of March 30, 1896, did not relinquish the right the former had to the condemnation fund, the argument being, that while he might have waived his right to have this fund reserved for his security there is nothing in the agreement to this effect; that the execution of the relinquishment was founded on the same consideration as the agreement to convey and was a part of the consideration of that agreement, and was made simply to avoid any question that might arise as to the right of Wilt to proceed with the condemnation suit. It is undoubtedly true that, as a general rule, the fund would stand in place of the mortgage, and the mortgagee would be entitled to have it applied on the mortgage debt, (Calumet River Railway Co. v. Brown, 136 Ill. 322, and cases cited,) and there seems to be force in the contention of counsel that this contract was not intended to relinquish that right. The language is, however, susceptible of the construction placed upon it by the Appellate Court. If, however, that court was correct in the view that the chancellor properly ordered the fund to be expended by Wilt, in re-building the barn, for the benefit of the property, as we think it was, the construction of the contract insisted upon becomes immaterial. Certainly, appellant could not claim the money to be applied on his mortgage debt and at the same time Wilt be required to restore the premises to their former value. If this is done by Wilt, as the bond tendered and accepted provides, Stopp will have suffered no diminution of the security given him by his mortgage, and we see no reason why in this action the equities between the parties may not be adjusted in this manner.
We agree with the Appellate Court that it was unnecessary, under the circumstances of the case, for the mortgagee to execute a release of his mortgage to the railroad company to perfect the latter’s title. The condemnation proceedings were sufficient.
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.