West Suburban Bank v. Lattemann ( 1996 )


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  •                              No. 2--95--1545

                                           

    ________________________________________________________________

                                        

                                     IN THE

      

                           APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

      

                                 SECOND DISTRICT

    ________________________________________________________________

      

    WEST SUBURBAN BANK,             )  Appeal from the Circuit Court

                                   )  of Du Page County.

        Plaintiff-Appellee,        )

                                   )  

    v.                              )  No. 91--CH--0538

                                   )

    GUNTER LATTEMANN; JUDITH        )

    LATTEMANN; SPIRO RESEARCH BY    )

    USA, INC.; OLD KENT BANK,       )

    N.A.; A&B WIRE FORMS            )

    CORPORATION; and UNKNOWN        )

    OWNERS,                         )

                                   )

        Defendants,                )

                                   )  Honorable

    (Costas Kappos, Intervenor-     )  Rodney W. Equi,

    Appellant).                    )  Judge, Presiding.

    ________________________________________________________________

      

        JUSTICE GEIGER delivered the opinion of the court:

      

        The intervenor, Costas Kappos, was the purchaser at a sale

    held pursuant to a judgment foreclosing a second mortgage on

    residential real estate.  The plaintiff, West Suburban Bank, was

    the mortgagee.  This court vacated the judgment and the sale as

    void because the plaintiff failed to serve one of the mortgagors.

    We also ruled that Kappos was entitled to the $80,000 he paid for

    the property and remanded the cause for further proceedings.  West

    Suburban Bank v. Lattemann, No. 2--94--0229 (1995)(unpublished

    order under Supreme Court Rule 23).  

        On remand, the plaintiff tendered Kappos the $80,000 and moved

    for a voluntary dismissal of its foreclosure complaint (see 735

    ILCS 5/2--1009(a) (West 1994)).  Kappos moved for interest on the

    $80,000 as part of the restitution to which he was entitled upon

    the vacatur of the foreclosure judgment and sale.  The trial court

    granted the voluntary dismissal and held that Kappos' demand for

    interest was thereby moot.  Kappos timely appealed.

        Kappos argues that the trial court erred in refusing to award

    him interest on the $80,000 the plaintiff was required to refund.

    He argues that allowing the plaintiff to retain the interest it

    earned on money to which it never had a right would deny him full

    restitution, frustrating this court's decision and unjustly

    enriching the plaintiff.

        We hold that the trial court erred in refusing to consider

    Kappos' motion for interest on the refunded purchase price.

    Because case law supports awarding interest in these circumstances,

    insofar as it is equitable to do so, we reverse the denial of the

    motion for interest and remand for a hearing thereon.

        We briefly recount the relevant facts.  On June 20, 1991, the

    plaintiff filed its complaint to foreclose a second mortgage on the

    property.  On July 16, 1992, the trial court entered a judgment of

    foreclosure.  On August 25, 1992, Kappos bought the property for

    $80,000 at the sheriff's sale; on September 2, 1992, the trial

    court approved the sheriff's report of the sale.  

        In May 1993, Kappos filed his "motion to vacate" the September

    2, 1992, order, asserting that the foreclosure sale was invalid.

    He claimed that the plaintiff had perpetrated a fraud by getting a

    federal district court to shorten the redemption period for the

    first mortgage on the property.  As a result, the redemption period

    expired before the foreclosure sale.  With no equity of redemption,

    the second mortgage had no value.  Thus, according to Kappos, he

    paid $80,000 for what the plaintiff knew (and he did not know) was

    a worthless interest in the property.  The trial court dismissed

    his motion, and Kappos appealed.  

        Without reaching Kappos' fraud claim, this court held that the

    judgment of foreclosure was void because the plaintiff had failed

    to properly serve one of the defendant mortgagors.   We vacated the

    July 16, 1992, order of foreclosure and the September 2, 1992,

    order confirming the sale to Kappos and remanded the cause to the

    trial court "for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion."

    Lattemann, No. 2--94--0229, slip op. at 10.  On June 13, 1995, we

    entered our mandate, which also stated that the two orders were

    vacated and that the cause was remanded for further proceedings not

    inconsistent with our order.

        On remand, the following events ensued.  On July 11, 1995, the

    plaintiff moved for the voluntary dismissal of the foreclosure

    suit.  The trial court allowed Kappos to file objections to the

    motion and for the plaintiff to reply, and it continued the matter

    to August 30, 1995.  On July 16, 1995, Kappos filed a motion for

    interest on the $80,000, which had been in the plaintiff's custody

    since the foreclosure sale.  He argued it would be inequitable for

    the plaintiff to retain the benefit of money to which it had no

    right.  He maintained that the restitution to which our order

    entitled him would not be complete unless it included both the

    $80,000 principal and the interest that accumulated while the

    plaintiff improperly held the money.

        The trial court granted the plaintiff's motion for voluntary

    dismissal and did not award Kappos any interest.  The trial court

    found that the voluntary dismissal of the case mooted Kappos'

    request for interest.  The trial court denied Kappos' motion to

    reconsider, and Kappos appealed.

        We should also note that Kappos filed another suit against the

    plaintiff, seeking damages for its allegedly fraudulent conduct.

    The trial court dismissed the action as barred by res judicata

    because of the foreclosure judgment, which was on appeal before

    this court at the time.  However, this court reinstated the

    complaint, explaining that the pending appeal meant the foreclosure

    judgment was not final for res judicata purposes.  Kappos v. West

    Suburban Bank, No. 2--94--0822 (2d Dist. April 13, 1995).  As of

    the filing of the notice of appeal in this case, Kappos' fraud suit

    was still before the trial court.  Both suits seek interest on the

    purchase money, and Kappos acknowledges he may recover the

    requested interest only once.

        Our order in the prior appeal of this case did not explicitly

    state that Kappos was entitled to interest on the $80,000 that the

    plaintiff was required to refund him.  Our order and mandate stated

    only that the cause was remanded for proceedings "not inconsistent

    with" our ruling.  However, Kappos maintains that this was

    sufficient to require the plaintiff to pay interest on the sum due

    because interest is inherent in full restitution.   

        Upon the reversal of a judgment, a party that has received

    benefits from the erroneous judgment must make restitution.  Buzz

    Barton & Associates, Inc. v. Giannone, 108 Ill. 2d 373, 381-82

    (1985).  The trial court's power to order restitution is inherent

    in its jurisdiction over the case (Watkins v. Dunbar, 318 Ill. 174,

    178 (1925)), and the duty to enforce restitution does not depend on

    any direct order from the appellate court (Williamsburg Village

    Owners' Ass'n, Inc. v. Lauder Associates, 200 Ill. App. 3d 474, 483

    (1990); Rhodes v. Sigler, 44 Ill. App. 3d 375, 378 (1976)).  The

    purpose of restitution is to "restore, so far as possible, the

    parties to their former position."  Watkins, 318 Ill. at 178; see

    also Williamsburg, 200 Ill. App. 3d at 483; Robinson v. Robinson,

    100 Ill. App. 3d 437, 444 (1981).  

        In arguing that full restitution includes interest for the

    time he was deprived of the use of his money, Kappos relies on

    neither statute nor contract but on equitable principles.  Several

    Illinois cases do state, albeit mainly in dictum, that interest is

    part of the restitution required upon the reversal of a judgment.

        In Thompson v. Davis, 297 Ill. 11 (1921), on which Kappos

    relies, the appellate court reversed the foreclosure of a mortgage,

    holding that the loan on which it was based was beyond the

    authority of the corporate lender (the dock company).  The

    appellate court remanded the cause and the mortgagor's trustee in

    bankruptcy petitioned for restitution.  The trial court ordered the

    dock company to pay the trustee the proceeds from the foreclosure

    sale (to a third party) insofar as they were based on the invalid

    lien.  The court also ordered the dock company to pay interest on

    these proceeds.  The supreme court upheld the restitution order.

    The court reasoned that, upon the reversal of the foreclosure

    decree, the trial court was required to restore the parties to

    their rights by ordering the lender to surrender the advantage it

    had gained from the improper judgment.  Thompson, 297 Ill. at 15.

    The court approved the award of interest, stating:

             "The [trial] court allowed interest from *** the date of

        the foreclosure decree.  The decree drew interest of which the

        dock company had the benefit, and a court of equity will allow

        interest in a proper case although not within the precise

        terms of the statute providing for interest.  It was equitable

        that the dock company should account for interest."  Thompson,

        297 Ill. at 21.

        Other decisions also uphold the award of equitable interest as

    part of the restitution due a party upon the reversal of a

    judgment.  In Hutson v. Wood, 263 Ill. 376 (1914), the supreme

    court held that a mortgage foreclosure sale was void, entitling the

    purchasers to the return of the amount they paid to redeem the

    property plus interest from the date of the redemption.  As in

    Thompson, it appears that the purchasers' entitlement to interest

    on any money due them was not directly at issue.  The court also

    held that the purchasers were entitled to be compensated for any

    taxes and special assessments they paid and to receive interest

    from the date of those payments.  Hutson, 263 Ill. at 393.

        In Erlinger v. Freed, 347 Ill. 588 (1932), a valid judgment

    was the subject of an improper execution sale of property that was

    protected by a homestead law.  The supreme court held that the

    purchaser at the sale, who had in effect paid the judgment

    creditor's lien for the owner, was entitled to restitution from the

    judgment debtor.  Relying in part on Hutson, the court held (again

    without the matter of interest being directly at issue) that,

    before she could be declared the sole owner of the real estate, the

    debtor had to pay the purchaser what he paid to redeem the

    property, plus interest on that sum from the time of the

    redemption.  Erlinger, 347 Ill. at 595; see also Bennitt v.

    Wilmington Star Mining Co., 119 Ill. 9, 21 (1886).

        In more recent times, the appellate court has upheld the award

    of equitable interest as part of restitution for an improper

    judgment.  Ryan v. City of Chicago, 274 Ill. App. 3d 913 (1995),

    arose out of an earlier appeal in which the city was ordered to pay

    about $19 million in simple interest on money it had improperly

    withheld from several municipal pension funds.  The city settled

    with all but one of the pension funds; the remaining fund requested

    not only the wrongfully withheld interest but compound interest--

    interest on the interest--for the time before the initial judgment

    when the city improperly generated this compound interest.  The

    appellate court held that compound interest was proper not as

    statutory prejudgment interest but as part of full restitution.

    Ryan, 274 Ill. App. 3d at 919-20.  However, Ryan differs from this

    case (and the cases just noted) in that, as the court emphasized,

    the wrongful withholding was a breach of the city's fiduciary duty.

    Ryan, 274 Ill. App. 3d at 919, relying in part on In re Estate of

    Wernick, 127 Ill. 2d 61, 87 (1989).

        The doctrine of equitable interest has been sparsely applied

    of late, at least absent a fiduciary duty.  Nonetheless, we believe

    it is good law.  Hutson, Thompson, and Erlinger have never been

    overruled or disapproved.  Their reasoning is sound, and we  are

    reluctant to depart from it even if it is considered dicta.  Also,

    the general rule elsewhere appears to be that interest is part of

    restitution upon the reversal of an erroneous judgment.  See Globe

    Indemnity Co. v. Puget Sound Co., 154 F.2d 249, 250 (2d Cir. 1946);

    Muchmore Equipment, Inc. v. Grover, 334 N.W.2d 605, 608 (Iowa

    1983); Alexander Hamilton Life Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 550 S.W.2d

    558 (Ky. 1977); Lytle v. Payette-Oregon Slope Irrigation District,

    152 P.2d 934, 940 (Or. 1944); Restatement of Restitution §74,

    Comment d, at 307-08 (1937).

        In light of all of the foregoing, we hold that the trial court

    erred in refusing to consider Kappos' request for interest on the

    $80,000 that the plaintiff refunded him.  Although the amount of

    equitable interest depends on all the circumstances and is thus

    within the trial court's discretion (Thompson, 297 Ill. at 21;

    Ryan, 274 Ill. App. 3d at 919), it was improper for the trial court

    to refuse to exercise its discretion at all.  The trial court's

    explanation that the voluntary dismissal mooted whether Kappos is

    entitled to interest as part of his restitution is simply a non

    sequitur.  The power to award interest is inherent in the power to

    order restitution, and the plaintiff could not cut off any

    preexisting right to full compensation by obtaining the voluntary

    dismissal of the case.  The plaintiff cannot shelter a potential

    windfall so easily; this would undermine our judgment on the first

    appeal of this case.  Therefore, we remand the cause for a hearing

    on how much equitable interest is due Kappos.

        The plaintiff argues that Kappos waived any right to interest

    by failing to request it either in his original motion to vacate

    the foreclosure judgment or in his first appeal to this court.  We

    need not decide if this argument is well taken.  The waiver rule is

    an admonishment to the parties, not a limitation on our

    jurisdiction, and we may disregard waiver in the interests of a

    just result and a uniform body of law.  Geise v. Phoenix Co. of

    Chicago, Inc., 159 Ill. 2d 507, 514 (1994).  Also, the plaintiff

    suggests various reasons that the equities of the case do not favor

    awarding Kappos interest on the refunded purchase price.  These

    arguments are more appropriately raised in the trial court, which

    may consider them fully in the exercise of its discretion.

        We affirm the trial court's award of restitution of the

    principal sum, but we reverse its holding that it need not consider

    whether Kappos should receive equitable interest.  We remand for a

    hearing on Kappos' right to equitable interest on his refunded

    purchase money.  Because Kappos objects to the voluntary dismissal

    of the foreclosure suit only insofar as it affects his right to

    interest, the propriety of the order granting voluntary dismissal

    is now moot.

        The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is

    affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause is remanded.

        Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.

        BOWMAN and RATHJE, JJ., concur.