Citation Numbers: 110 Ill. App. 117
Judges: Ball
Filed Date: 10/15/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/24/2022
delivered the opinion of the court.
January 10, 1893, Anthony Kozel owned lot 2 and all of lot 1 except the east 21 5-12 feet thereof, in a certain subdivision situate in the city of Chicago. On that day he and his wife by trust deed conveyed said premises to Moses E. Greenebaum to secure the payment of their note for the sum of $4,500. April 5, 1893, Kozel and his wife deeded these premises to Marie Kucaba. The next day she and her husband by three trust deeds conveyed the same property to said Kozel, each securing the payment of a separate note made by them to him, aggregating the sum of $2,800. Afterward the three last mentioned trust deeds were foreclosed, and pursuant to decree the master on June 13, 1898, sold said lot 2 to appellee. Vanek, and lot 3, except the east 21 5-12 feet thereof, to Charles Vesely, who assigned his certificate to appellant, Senft. Upon the expiration of the equity of redemption the master deeded said lot 2 to appellee, and lot 1, except the east 21 5-12 feet thereof, to appellant. Each lot was still subject to the Greenebaum trust deed.
In' May, 1900, Greenebaum filed a bill to foreclose his trust deed. Under a decree of sale entered in that cause on August 16, 1900, the master offered said premises for sale, and appellee became the purchaser of lot 1, except the east 21 5-12 feet thereof, for $6,178.56, that sum being the amount of the decree with interest and costs. The report of sale was duly approved by the court.
The effect of these proceedings was to release said lot 2 from the Greenebaum incumbrance, and to compel appellant to pay the whole of that incumbrance if he redeemed lot 1, except the east 21 5-12 feet thereof, from such sale. The fractional part of lot 1 owned by appellant is alleged to be worth $400 only, while lot 2 is valued at $10,000.
Appellant filed a bill, which, as finally amended, set up the foregoing facts in great detail, and prayed (among other things) that the purchase by appellee of the fractional part of said lot 1 be decreed to be a payment of the lien upon all of such real estate, and that upon the payment by appellant to appellee of the proportion of such purchase price which equitably rested upon appellant’s fractional portion of said lot 1, the same be released from the effect of such purchase. The bill also contains the general prayer for relief.
A general demurrer was filed and sustained, and the bill was dismissed for want of equity. From this order the pending appeal was perfected.
It appears from the foregoing statement that the parties here contending became purchasers of their respective lots at the same judicial sale, and therefore stood on a level, neither having a preference over the other. Each owned his lot in severalty. Each took title subject to the payment of the Greenebaum incumbrance. Neither of them at any time became personally liable to pay that debt. Although they owned adjoining lots, subject to a common incumbrance, so far as concerned the matters involved in this suit, they were strangers, neither owing the other any duty in the premises, for no privity of estate or of contract existed; nor ivas there any relation of trust or of confidence between them. Each was bound to see that the mortgage debt Avas satisfied under penalty of losing his lot at the judicial sale. The master followed the proper practice in offering the lots separately. That he first put up the fractional part of lot 1, is not a cause for complaint. When that lot sold for the entire debt, it became the duty of the master to stop the sale and to report his proceedings to the court. Upon the confirmation of the sale lot 2 was released by the extinguishment of the indebtedness, and the sole right remaining in appellant, if he Avished to retain his lot, was to redeem from such sale in the manner provided by the statute. This he did not do. Had an entire stranger to these proceedings bid the mortgage debt for either of these lots at such sale, thus freeing the other lot from the mortgage lien, nothing would remain in the oAvner of the lot so sold other than the right to redeem. If he failed to make redemption, he would have no remedy against the owner of the other lot for contribution or by way of subrogation, Avhich right is confined to-the relation of principal and surety, and to guarantors, or to cases where a person, to protect his own junior lien, is compelled to remove one Avhich is superior, or to cases of insurers paying losses. Bishop v. O’Conner, 69 Ill. 437. At such judicial sale appellant and appellee stood at arms’ length. By a purchase thereat, either Avould acquire the same rights in the property purchased as Avould a stranger, and by such purchase neither incurred any other liability than Avould a stranger.
The facts of this case make it one of hardship for appellant, but there is no element of fraud, accident or mistake in it, nor xvas there any violation of confidence, nor any privity by contract or of estate between the parties; and therefore equity is powerless to relieve appellant.
The decree of the Superior Court is affirmed.