53 Ill. 490 | Ill. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It appears from the record in this case, that one Levi Crane was indebted to one Peter B. Hudson, and on the thirty-first day of December, 1859, the former executed to the latter a chattel mortgage on a portable saw and grist mill and engine, with a lot of other'personal property. It was duly recorded on the same day. Afterwards, on the sixteenth day of February, 1860, Crane, being indebted to complainant, executed to him a mortgage on the same property. The note due to Hudson not having been paid at maturity, he, on the day it fell due, took possession of the property mentioned in the mortgage, and after advertising it, sold the same in pursuance to the power contained in the mortgage, and one Meade Vaughn became the purchaser. Vaughn being the owner, on the first of April, 1862, sold the same to one Pliney G. Hays for $300, who took and remained in possession until the twentieth of the following October, when he sold the engine and saw mill and appurtenances to defendant, Massey, for $600. He denies all knowledge of complainant’s claim. Massey took possession in December following his purchase, he having purchased previously to that time the grist mill of Vaughn, and had remained in possession until this bill was filed. Massey denies that he ever claimed any portion of the remainder of the property, and states in his answer that a portion had died and that the balance had been taken out of his possession.
This bill was filed to subject the property in Massey’s possession, and which he purchased of Vaughn and Hays, to salé for the satisfaction of complainant’s mortgage, and for an account of the rents and profits arising from the use of the property by defendant, Massey. On the hearing in the court below, the bill was dismissed at complainant’s costs.
It is first urged, that the court below erred in permitting defendant, Massey, to amend his answer. Such amendments have ever been a matter of discretion in the chancellor, and will always be allowed in the promotion of justice, and where injury can not result to the opposite party; and in cases where injury might be the result unless time is given to the opposite party to meet the change in the case produced by the amendment, the court should always refuse leave to amend or give reasonable time for the other party to meet the amendment. In this case there was no such change in the pleadings produced by the amendment, as could have worked the least injury to plaintiff in error. There is no force in this objection.
It is next urged, that the court below erred in dismissing complainant’s bill, and in refusing the relief sought. Defendant in error, Massey, sets up a paramount title in himself, superior to the claim of plaintiff in error, and it is insisted that it devolved on him to prove it, and that he has failed. He has shown that Crane, the common source of title, gave to Hudson a prior mortgage, and that it was foreclosed under the power contained in the mortgage, and has proved that he derives title from the purchaser at that sale, of a part of the property, and from a grantee of the purchaser at that sale, of the remainder; and the evidence fails to show that his purchase was made in fraud of the rights of plaintiff in error. Hudson’s mortgage, being the elder, and not having been shown to have been fraudulent, when it was foreclosed, barred and foreclosed the equity of redemption, both of the mortgagor and plaintiff in error.
The oath of defendants in error was not waived, and Massey answered under oath and shows what title he holds, and how it is derived, and his answer stands uncontradicted, and is sufficient to sustain the decree. It is true, an amended bill was filed, and an oath was waived to the answer it called for, and it was so filed. But by the amended bill plaintiff in error could not avoid the effect of the answer called for and made under oath to the original bill. Plaintiff in error having so called for and obtained it, he could not thus escape its effect. The answer to the original bill was therefore evidence on the hearing of the cause, so far as it was responsive to the bill, and it proved Massey’s title to the property.
Again, Hudson swears that he sold the property under the mortgage, and that Vaughn became the purchaser, when the note fell due; that the sale was at public auction, and Vaughn became the purchaser. It will be observed that the power of sale contained in the mortgage does not require a notice to be given, and in the absence of such a requirement, the mortgagee had the option to give notice or not, as he might choose, and he might sell at public or private sale; but as between the mortgagor and mortgagee, to be binding, the sale should have been fair. It is also urged, that inasmuch as Vaughn had received an assignment of the mortgage on a previous purchase from Hudson, the latter thereby became the mortgagee, and as such, could not purchase at Hudson’s sale so as to bar the equity of redemption. This may be true as far as Hudson and Vaughn are concerned, had Crane or plaintiff in error filed a bill to redeem before Vaughn sold the property to a bona fide purchaser, but it is unnecessary to discuss that question in this case, as it depends upon other principles.
Massey purchased, as he swears, in good faith, of a person claiming title, in possession of the property, under a purchase on a sale to foreclose, or from his grantee. He pays a valuable consideration, and, as some of the witnesses swear, its full value. He purchased without notice of any adverse claim of any kind, as he swears, and there is no evidence to the contrary. Under such circumstances, it would operate with great hardship if his title should be required to yield to that of the mortgage of plaintiff in error, junior in date, and which has laid dormant for four or five years.
Again; Massey purchased of Vaughn and Hays long after the mortgage to plaintiff in error fell due. It became due on the first of January, 1861, Avhile Massey purchased the grist mill of Vaughn in the spring of 1861, and the saw mill, etc. of Hays, in the autumn of 1862, and they were both in possession at the time he purchased. Thus it is seen that plaintiff having failed to reduce the property to his possession for such a length of time after its maturity, it became fraudulent as to creditors or purchasers in good faith. Had any person examined the mortgage of record, they would have seen that it only authorized the mortgagor to retain the possession until its maturity.
Again, a bona fide purchaser, without notice, from the purchaser at such a foreclosure sale, is not required to inquire whether the sale has been regular, but must be protected. If required to do so, it would operate as a great hindrance to the free circulation of personal property, as there is no record evidence of the foreclosure as in mortgages on real estate, and hence a purchaser could not usually ascertain whether the mortgage was or not legally foreclosed. If irregular, the mortgagor or his assigns, or creditors, , should take steps to enforce their liens, or to make a redemption, before the rights of innocent purchasers have intervened, or.be barred in their rights.
It is urged that the court below should have rendered a decree against Crane for the balance of the debt due to plaintiff in error. If, after failing to establish a right to equitable relief against the property, he was entitled to such a decree, having, as he had, a complete remedy at law, he should have asked for the decree. Such relief was not prayed for in the bill, and to have received it he should have asked for it under the prayer. If entitled to receive it, and he had asked for it, the court below would have granted it. The decree of the court below is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.