Court Opinion

ID: 7000930
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:41:55.646149+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:55.521985
License: Public Domain

Mr. Presiding Justice Sears delivered the opinion of the court. Error is assigned by plaintiff in error, in that the court denied the relief prayed by the cross-bill, viz., the vacating of the judgment at law obtained by the defendant in error upon the principal and interest note .in question. And cross-error is assigned by defendant in error in that the court denied the relief prayed by the amended bill of complaint, viz., the enforcement of the lien of the trust deed given to secure these notes, and in that the court ordered the trust deed to be canceled. We are of opinion that the trial court was right, and that it did not err in either of these respects. It seems clear from the evidence that plaintiff in error dealt with Schintz as the lender of the money, and the mortgagee in the conveyance which secured the loan. As between them there was no equitable claim against plaintiff in error under the trust deed, and hence, under the rule, well established by many decisions of this State, defendant in error acquired no equitable rights when the mortgage notes were transferred to him. Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill. 188; Walker v. Dement, 42 Ill. 272; Sumner v. Waugh, 56 Ill. 531; White v. Sutherland, 64 Ill. 181; Haskell v. Brown, 65 Ill. 29; Thompson v. Shoemaker, 68 Ill. 256; Towner v. McClellan, 110 Ill. 542; Himrod v. Gilman, 147 Ill. 293; McAuliff v. Reuter, 166 Ill. 500; Buehler v. McCormick, 169 Ill. 269. But this rule has no application to the rights of defendant in error to a legal claim, quite independent of any lien upon the premises in question, which legal claim was acquired by the defendant in error as purchaser of the notes for value and before maturity, and without notice of plaintiff in error’s defense. It can not be said that the execution of those notes was procured by fraud or covin in the sense that would make the notes invalid. Plaintiff in error executed the notes with full knowledge of just what they were, and there was nothing in the execution of them which could operate to bring them within the rule which applies only to instruments, execution of which is obtained by fraud. The fraud necessary to thus invalidate must be fraud in obtaining the execution of the instrument. Woods v. Hynes, 2 Ill. 103; Mulford v. Shepard, Id. 583; Adams v. Woodbridge, 4 Ill. 255; Shipley v. Corroll, 45 Ill. 285; Depuy v. Schuyler, Id. 306; Richelien H. Co. v. M. E. Co., 140 Ill. 248. Nor can it be said as against defendant in error that these notes were not fully delivered. Clarke v. Johnson, 54 Ill. 296. Nothing was lacking in matter of execution or delivery. The default of Schintz was in failing to deliver the old notes and release of the old trust deed. This failure operated to give plaintiff in error a complete defense to any obligation under the new notes as against Schintz, and in equity against enforcement of the lien of the mortgage by the purchaser from him, defendant in error. But it constituted no defense in law against the obligation of the notes themselves in the hands of a bona fide purchaser, before maturity and without notice. The judgment obtained at law could not be attacked in this proceeding simply because plaintiff in error had an equitable defense against the lien of the trust deed. No other ground is disclosed for the intervention of equity in relation to the judgment. Therefore the defendant in error was entitled to his judgment in law, and the court properly denied the prayer of the cross-bill to vacate it. The argument of counsel for defendant in error, that the equities of plaintiff in error as against the obligation of these notes did not exist when defendant in error bought them, but arose afterward when Schintz failed to return the old notes, and therefore that the doctrine of Olds v. Cummings, supra, does not apply, we regard as untenable. If Schintz was the money lender and the real mortgagee, then there was never any time when the equities of plaintiff in error did not exist as against the notes and the conveyance securing them, so far as Schintz was concerned— for there was never a time when the notes were enforceable in his hands. It follows that there was never any time at which he could have conveyed them to defendant in error so as to give the latter any equitable right to a lien under the mortgage. The decree is affirmed.