Beam v. Scroggin & Sawyer

12 Ill. App. 321, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 205
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 7, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Ill. App. 321 (Beam v. Scroggin & Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beam v. Scroggin & Sawyer, 12 Ill. App. 321, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 205 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

McCulloch, J.

This was a bill in chancery brought by appellees, as judgment creditors of Samuel C. Beam, the husband of appellant, to obtain satisfaction of their judgment. The bill as framed seems to have a double object in view ; first, to discover assets not subject to levy and sale under execution ; secondly, to remove fraudulent conveyances out of the way of their execution, and to subject certain interests in the property in controversy in this suit to levy and sale. That a bill may be sustained for either one of these purposes is beyond dispute. Newman v. Willetts, 52 Ill. 98. As the first object of of the bill has been fully attained, and no appeal taken from the decree by any one entitled to raise that question, we are not called upon to say whether or not both these objects may be embraced in one bill. The bill, as framed, contains sufficient allegations to give the court jurisdiction to remove any fr¡ ud dent conveyances, and to place the judgment creditors in the same situation they would have been in had no such conveyances been made. The errors complained of relate wholly to this branch of the case.

The bill alleges and the court so finds in substance that, prior to and at the time of the rendition of the judgment, said Samuel C. Beam and his wife Mary L. Beam, the appellant herein, were the owners in fee simple of a certain lot of ground particularly described, as tenants in common, said Samuel owning the undivided five twelfths and said Mary L. Beam the remaining seven twelfths thereof. Samuel 0. Beam having died during the pendency of the suit, the same interest descended to his heirs who thereb)T became tenants in common with his widow, and so their respective interests remained at the time of the decree. The widow alone appeals.

There are some allegations in the bill to the effect that, prior to the rendition of appellees’ judgment, the tenants in common, Beam and appellant, had made certain fraudulent conveyance of other premises, but the court does not find any fraudulent conveyances as to this property. On the contrary it finds the legal title to be as before stated. This being so there would seem to be no occasion to call in the aid of a court of chancery, to enable appellees to obtain satisfaction of their judgment out of this property, as this undivided interest of the husband is subject to levy and sale, with all the equitable interests thereunto belonging. R. S. 1874, Ch. 77, Secs. 1-3. Should the purchaser under such a sale succeed to the title, equitable as well as legal, of said Samuel C. Beam, then on application to a court of chancery for partition all his rights so acquired could be fully protected. Louvalle v. Menard, 1 Gilm. 39.

Appellees, however, seek to anticipate such a course, and, by this bill, to have certain equities existing between the tenants in common, settled, so as to draw to the legal title of said Samuel 0. Beam in the undivided five twelfths, a certain supposed claim for improvements made by him upon the said lot, and in this manner to 'cause such improvements to pass by sale under the execution. It is difficult for us to see how an original bill brought for that purpose alone could be maintained, for if a decree should be rendered to that effect, and a sale under execution be made, the purchaser would still have only the title of Beam to the undivided five twelfths of the premises, and if he sought more than the legal title would give him, his remedy would be by bill in equity for partition. We are unable to see what other effect such a decree would have than to estop the co-tenant from litigating the same question over again, and such we apprehend would be the extent to which the decree rendered in this case would avail appellees, if it could be said to go even so far as that.

It is contended on the part of appellees that, the court having acquired jurisdiction for the purpose of discovery, and it having been disclosed by the answers that the house and other improvements equitably belonged to the husband, on account of his having furnished all the money to erect the same and the wife none, the court can by its decree subject all the improvements upon the lot to sale under said execution. This view of the case seems_ to have been adopted by the court below. Having found that appellant was entitled in her own right to an undivided seven twelfths of the lot, exclusive of the dwelling house and other improvements thereon, and in addition thereto to a homestead of the value of one thousand dollars, and dower unassigned in the remainder of said lot, the court rendered a decree that after deducting her interests, so found, from the value of said premises, the remainder should be subject to the execution of appellees, issued or to be issued upon their said judgment.

It will be observed that the only fact, found by the decree, upon which appellees’ claim to a lien upon all the improvements ttpon the lot in question is founded, is that Samuel 0. Beam furnished all the money to erect and make the same, and that appellant furnished none. It further appears from the record that the said improvements consisted largely of a dwelling house in which said Beam during his lifetime, and appellant since his death, resided with their family; that they were householders, and the head of the family, and therefore they had a homestead in the lot in question,

It is the doctrine in equity, in this and many other States, that in a suit for partition between tenants in common, where one has advanced money to improve the property sought to be partitioned, the court will, if practicable, allot to him the portion so improved without taking into the account the value of the improvements, or where such division can not be made, will allow him a reasonable remuneration for the increased value of the premises caused by the same. Louvalle v. Menard, 1 Gilm. 39; Dean v. O’Meara, 47 Ill. 120; Maloney v. Maloney, 65 Ill. 406; Hall v. Piddock, 211 N. J. Eq. 211; Green v. Putnam, 1 Barb. (S. C.) 500; Freeman on Co-tenancy and Partition, Secs. 509-11. But there is no foundation in law for any such claim. It must be addressed solely to the conscience of the chancellor, and, if allowed at all, it will be allowed altogether for equitable reasons and upon equitable terms. Where one tenant in common improves the estate with his own means, his co-tenant at once becomes seized of the improvements in the same proportion in which he is seized of the land. In certain cases he may be called upon to contribute to the making of necessary repairs, and if he refuse, an action at law will lie for his share of the expense incurred in making them. But for betterments in the way of permanent improvements he can not, so long as the tenancy in common continues, be called upon either in law or equity to contribute. if or can a court of law, even in a suit for partition, wherein it acts 'wholly upon the legal title of the respective co-tenants, by severing the tenancy in common and assigning to each a part in severalty, render any compensation to the party making such improvements, but if'he asks any he must resort to a court of equity. Louvalle v. Menard, supra.

When an equal partition can not be made, courts of equity may order that a certain sum be paid by the party to whom the most valuable purparty has been assigned. This is done from the necessity of the case and in furtherance of justice. Freeman on Co-tenancy and Partition, Sec. 507.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ill. App. 321, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beam-v-scroggin-sawyer-illappct-1883.