delivered the opinion of the court:
The initial question is, by the original transaction did Green pledge the policy of life insurance to Daly to secure his note, or was the transaction a sale of the policy to Daly, with a contract for its re-purchase by Green ?
It appears that Green applied to Daly for a loan; that in connection with the matter three instruments were executed, which must be construed together in determining what the_ original contract was. These instruments were, first, a promissory note for $800, given by Green to Daly, due in one year, with interest from date; second, an absolute conveyance of the policy from Green to Daly; and third, an assignment of the policy from Green to Daly with a defeasance, by the terms of which Green was entitled to have the policy re-assigned to him upon the payment of the promissory note when due. The only conclusion which can be reached from an inspection of these instruments is, that the policy was pledged to secure the payment of the promissory note and that it was not sold to Daly.
Appellant contends, however, that if it'be true that the original transaction was a pledge, still that prior to the time of Green's death the latter had abandoned, waived, or lost by laches„ the right of redemption, and that consequently Daly is now to be regarded as the absolute owner of the policy. It is argued, and cases are referred to as showing, that in instances where the property involved is personal in its character, courts will frequently hold the right of redemption barred by laches, or waived or abandoned, under circumstances where, if the property involved were realty, the right would still exist. The authorities cited below, while not directly in point, lead to the conclusion that the right to redeem from a pledge of personal property should not, in any event, be denied by the courts on the ground that it has been lost by laches or has been waived or abandoned by the pledgor, so long as that right is recognized by the. pledgee and the pledgor as still existing. Jones on Chattel Mortgages, 688; 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. p. 1520; Green v. Capps, 142 Ill. 286; Richey v. Sinclair, 167 id. 184.
At the time of Green’s death Daly had a bill pending in the circuit court of Massac county alleging that Green assigned and pledged the policy in question to Daly to secure the payment of the $800 note, praying for an accounting against Green as to the money due on that note and advances made by Daly to pay premiums on the policy, asking that Green be decreed to pay the amount due within a short day, and that in default thereof the “said pledged and assigned insurance policy” be sold to satisfy the claim of Daly. While that suit was pending Green applied to one J. F. McCartney for a loan to pay to Daly the amount due Daly and for which he held the policy as security. McCartney talked to Daly in regard to the matter, and the latter said he had brought the suit because Green didn’t pay him, and inquired whether McCartney was going to let Green have the money to pay him off with, and in response to an interrogatory from McCartney stated the amount required to pay him off. At all times up to the entry of the decree herein Daly retained possession of Green’s $800 note, and while this it not always conclusive, it is strong evidence that he, Daly, still regarded the relation of the parties as that of pledgor and pledgee. If at any time the policy had become absolutely the property of Daly and Green’s indebtedness to Daly had been extinguished, the right and natural thing for Daly to have done would have been to surrender to Green the evidence of the indebtedness. The purpose of the agreement of July 1, 1900, was, no doubt, to give Green, who was in failing circumstances, an opportunity to satisfy the indebtedness by the payment of a less sum than was actually due.
We are satisfied that up to the time of Green’s death both Green and Daly regarded Green as being the possessor of a right to redeem the policy by paying to Daly the amount of money loaned and the amount of money advanced by Daly, with interest. That being true, Green’s equity of redemption had not been waived or abandoned or lost by laches, and Daly will not be permitted, after Green’s death, “to better his hold” by claiming that he is now the absolute owner of the policy of insurance in question.
We are not unmindful of the fact that Daly sought to show, by his own testimony and that of the solicitor who filed the bill to foreclose the lien on the policy of insurance, (which bill was not signed nor sworn to by the complainant therein,) that Daly did not know precisely what the averments of that bill were; that he said to his solicitor, prior to the filing thereof, that he wanted the question of Green’s rights in the policy determined, and that he wanted a suit broug'ht for that purpose for the satisfaction of himself and the insurance company, and that he first learned at a date later than Green’s death that the bill which the solicitor filed was a bill to foreclose a lien. Waiving all question as to the competency of these two men to testify to the matters and things detailed by them which occurred before Green’s death, and which consisted, in part, of the relation by the solicitor of conversations between himself and Daly in the absence of Green, we find, on examination, that their testimony on this subject abounds in equivocation and evasion to such an extent that the circuit court may well have refused to give weight thereto.
By the decree from which Daly appealed, he was awarded the money he had loaned to Green, with interest thereon, and all the money he had advanced on account of the policy, with interest thereon, and he is entitled to nothing more.
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Vickers took no part in the decision of this case.