Bogardus v. Moses

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The only question in this case is, whether the order discharging the receiver was properly entered by the court below. Although the application for the appointment of the receiver was made before the decree of sale was entered, his appointment was not actually made until after the decree of sale was entered. When the sale took place under the decree of foreclosure, the property was bid in by the complainant in the bill for the amount of the decree and interest and costs. Under the doctrine laid down in Davis v. Dale, 150 Ill. 239, it would seem to follow, that the receiver should have been discharged as a matter of course. In Davis v. Dale, supra, we held, that the grantor in a mortgage or deed of trust, or the owner of the equity of redemption, is entitled to the possession of the premises, and to receive the rents, issues and profits thereof after the sale and until the time of redemption expires; and we there said: “And it follows necessarily, that where the property is bid off at the foreclosure sale for the full amount of the decree, interest, and costs, as was here done, the necessity for continuing the receiver ceases, and he should be discharged, and the possession restored to the owner of the equity of redemption.” This is true, as well when the purchaser at the sale is the holder of the secured indebtedness, as when such purchaser is a stranger and outsider. In such case, when the lien of the mortgage has been enforced by the sale of the property, and such sale has realized the whole amount of the debt, interest, and costs which are due, the mortgage has expended its force, and the property is no longer subject to its provisions. (Ogle v. Koerner, 140 Ill. 170; Seligman v. Laubheimer, 58 id. 124; Davis v. Dale, supra).

Counsel for plaintiff in error seem to claim, that the receiver should have been continued, in order to raise money enough, out of the rents collected by him to pay plaintiff in error what, according to the allegations in the petition filed by him on December 20,1897, he agreed to pay to the complainant in the foreclosure proceeding. Plaintiff in error alleged in his petition, that the complainant would not have bid the full amount of the debt, interest and costs, if plaintiff in error had not agreed to pay the over-due interest and costs, amounting to §1065.99, and interest on the principal of the encumbrance in case the premises should not be redeemed. It is argued that plaintiff in error became thereby subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee, and by reason thereof, was entitled to continue the receivership. *

In the first place, no evidence whatever was introduced to prove that any such agreement, as is set up in the petition, was made. If it were true, however, that the plaintiff in error agreed to pay the complainant in the foreclosure proceeding a part of the amount due by the terms of the foreclosure decree, this would not have entitled him to a continuance of the receiver as against the defendant in error, Moses, who was owner of the equity of redemption. Whatever part of the decree plaintiff in error may have paid to the complainant to induce her to bid the full amount of the decree, and thus prevent a judgment against himself for the deficiency, he would get back in case of the redemption of the premises from sale by defendant in error, Moses. In case the premises should not be redeemed, he would be entitled, under the agreement alleged, to an interest in the title acquired by purchase at the master’s sale. Defendant in error, Moses, was not a party to the agreement in question, and whether the plaintiff in error was subrogated in whole, or in part, to the rights of the mortgagee, the rights of Moses, defendant in error, would remain the sarpe. The right of subrogation, if it existed, could confer no greater rights upon the plaintiff in error than were possessed already by the mortgagee, who was the complainant in the decree; and the mortgagee, whether she owned the whole decree, or transferred a part of it to the plaintiff in error, would not be entitled to a continuance of the receiver after the sale of the property tor the whole amount of the debt, interest and costs.

It may have been otherwise, if the property had not been sold for the whole amount of the debt, interest and costs, and if there bad been a deficiency for which the plaintiff in error was personally liable. In Haas v. Chicago Building Society, 89 Ill. 498, it was held, that, under certain circumstances, a receiver to collect the rents and profits of mortgaged premises may be appointed after the final decree of foreclosure and sale. But, in thp,t case, the premises were sold for less than the amount due by the terms of the decree of foreclosure, and there was a deficiency of more than $9000.00; and we there said (p. 506): “If there had been no deficiency, those rents would have belonged to the owner of the equity of redemption. But the mortgagee had an equitable right to such rents to pay the deficiency, which right could only be enforced by an application to the court to appoint a receiver.” So, also, in Oakford v. Robinson, 48 Ill. App. 270, where, as here, the rents and profits of the land, as well as the land itself, were pledged by the mortgage for the security of the debt, and where a receiver was appointed after the entry of the decree of foreclosure, it appeared that the property was sold at the master’s sale for less than the amount of the debt, interest and costs due under the decree, so that there was a deficiency; and it was there held, that, by the appointment of a receiver, an equitable lien was acquired on the rents and profits of the land during the statutory period allowed for redemption for the payment of the deficiency. (2 Jones on Mortgages,— 5th ed.—sec. 1531 a). In the case at bar, however, there was no deficiency as the result of the sale, and consequently the doctrine of„ the case of Davis v. Dale, supra, is precisely applicable.

The plaintiff in error, in the petition filed by him on December 20, 1897, stated that a special tax had been levied by the city of Paxton upon the mortgaged premises for the purpose of paving a street in that city; and that this special tax was confirmed on August 5, 1897, and was for $157.20 with interest at six per cent from that date, the “tax to be paid as follows: $45.80 on or before two years; $55.70 on or before three years; $55.70 on or before four years.” We do not find any testimony in the bill of exceptions, or in the record anywhere, establishing the existence of this tax. Counsel for plaintiff in error insist, that the receiver' should have been retained until this special tax was paid off out of the rents of the property. We are not concerned with the question, whether or not this special tax, as set up in the petition, was payable in such installments as were required under existing statutes. No such question is here raised, and need not be determined. If, however, the tax was valid and payable in proper amounts and at proper times, the first installment was due on or before August 5, 1899. The time of redemption from the master’s sale expired on January 18, 1899. While it may be true that the defendant in error, Moses, the owner of the equity of redemption, would have been allowed to pay off the whole of the special tax in question at once, yet he was not legally bound to pay the same until long after the expiration of the period of redemption. It was not necessary to retain the receiver in office to pay a tax, which the owner of the equity of redemption was not legally bound to pay until after the expiration of the time of redemption. The object of appointing a receiver at the instance of a mortgagee is to preserve the security of the mortgage and apply the rents, when necessary, in the discharge of the indebtedness. The indebtedness, however, must be an existing indebtedness, which the mortgagor is liable to pay during the running of the period of redemption, and which he neglects to pay. “This right to have a receiver of the rents appointed pending the litigation depends upon the general principle of equity, that the purpose of such an appointment is to preserve the property, so that it may be appropriated to satisfying the decree of court.” (2 Jones on Mortgages, sec. 1516). The special tax in question was not a part of the decree. Neither the complainant in the foreclosure suit, Annie N. Carter, nor the plaintiff in error, paid the tax, or caused it to be entered up as part of the decree. The complainant in the bill had the privilege of paying the tax after the sale was made, and then, under the act of 1889, the party entitled to redeem would have been obliged to pay to the holder of the certificate of sale the amount of the tax with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, by proceeding as required by section 27a of the act in regard to judgments, etc. (Hurd’s Stát. 1897, p. 981). Payment of the tax, however, was not made by the complainant after the sale. If such payment had been made, it could have been recovered back in case of redemption, but, in case no redemption took place, the payment would have inured to the benefit of the purchaser. The question, however, is not whether the receiver should have been retained to raise money to pay the tax if the mortgagor had been bound to pay it during the running of the time of redemption. Inasmuch as the tax was not necessarily due during that time, we are of the opinion that the court was not obliged to continue the receivership.

It is, also, claimed by plaintiff in error that the court erred in not directing the receiver to pay out $9.65 on account of court costs incurred in the matter of the appointment of the receiver. Of course, the general rule is that the costs of the appointment of a receiver are entitled to priority of payment out of the funds realized by him. (High on Receivers,—3d ed.—sec. 809). But there is nothing in this record to show that all the costs, which were incurred in the matter of the appointment of the receiver, were not paid. A fee bill has been fastened into the record in this case, but is, in fact, no part of the record. If, however, it can be regarded as being a part of the record, it purports on its face to be a bill of fees incurred at the December term, 1897, and, so, evidently refers to costs incurred upon and under the petition filed by the plaintiff in error on December 20, 1897. The court ordered these costs to be paid, part thereof by plaintiff in errorzand part by defendant in error. No objection is made to this part of the court’s order, nor is it claimed that either of the parties hereto is pecuniarily irresponsible. The receiver here is not complaining about his costs. Moreover, the question of these costs does not appear to have been raised in the circuit court, and the fee bill is not made a part of the record by the certificate of evidence. In the petition filed by plaintiff in error on December 20,1897, praying for an order upon the receiver to make certain payments specifically named, the payment of the costs here referred to was not mentioned. We are unable to see that the court committed any error in discharging the receiver without requiring him to retain this amount in payment of his own costs.

None of the reasons, urg-ed by the counsel for the plaintiff in error against the action of the court below in discharging the receiver, are sufficient, under the circumstances detailed in this record, to justify us in holding that the court below committed error. Accordingly, the order of the circuit court, discharging the receiver, is affirmed.

0r(?6r affirmed.