Bliss v. Clark

39 Ill. 590
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 Ill. 590 (Bliss v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bliss v. Clark, 39 Ill. 590 (Ill. 1864).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This record presents the question, whether the ordinary lien of a judgment attaches to the lot of ground owned and occupied as a homestead, by a debtor who is protected by the act creating the exemption. The act declares that it shall be exempt from levy and forced sale under any process or order from any court of law or equity in this State, occupied as a residence, and owned by the debtor, being a householder, and having a family, to the value of one thousand dollars. It also provides, that such exemption shall continue after the death of such householder, for the benefit of the widow and family, some one of them continuing to occupy such homestead until the youngest child arrives at twenty-one years of age, and until the death of the widow. It likewise provides, that a release or waiver of-such exemption shall not be valid unless it shall be in writing, subscribed by the householder and acknowledged as conveyances of real estate are required by law to be acknowledged. And the amendatory act of 1857 declares that the wife, if he have one, shall join in the waiver or release, to render it effectual.

It is agreed that Edward B. Conklin was, on the 2d day of December, 1857, the owner of the premises in controversy, in fee simple; that, on that day, plaintiff in error and others recovered a judgment against him in the McHenry Circuit Court, for the sum of $746.11; that within one year an execution was issued upon the judgment and was returned unsatisfied; that, on the 6th day of July, 1861, an alias fl.fa. was issued, and the premises were levied upon, which were sold on the 31st day of that month, and purchased by plaintiff in error, and a deed was afterward executed to him by the sheriff. It also appears that when this judgment was rendered Conklin was a married man, having a wife and family, who resided upon the premises, and occupied them as a homestead, and that the property was worth less than $3,000.

It is also agreed that on the 20th day of October, 1860, one Ira D. Whipple recovered a judgment against Conklin in the same court for $810, and on the 10th day of December, 1860, an execution was issued upon this judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff, who on that day levied upon the property; and on the same day Conklin and wife executed and delivered a release and waiver of their right to claim the homestead to Whipple, and the same was sold and a deed given by the sheriff to plaintiff in execution. That at the date of the release and sale, Conklin and family were occupying the premises as a homestead. Afterward, Whipple conveyed the premises to defendant in error, who was in possession when this suit was commenced. It is likewise agreed that neither debt was contracted for the purchase, nor for- improvements or repairs on the property, and that they were contracted after the* 4th day of July, 1851.

A lien may be defined to be a charge on property for the payment of a debt or duty, and for which it may be sold in discharge of the lien. Can it be said that the homestead is charged with the debt, and it may be sold to discharge the lien, when the statute has declared that it shall neither be levied upon nor sold while it is thus occupied ? It is exempted from such a sale, which repels the idea that it is charged with the debt. It is true, that it may be levied upon and sold when it ceases to be a homestead within the meaning of the act, and so may personal property after the execution has come to the hands- of the officer, but no lien can exist on the latter description of property until it is created by the delivery of the writ to the officer to execute.

At the common law the lien on personal property was created in the same manner, but it related back to the test of the writ. But to prevent hardship and injustice, the act of the 29 Car. 2, ch. 3, § 16, provided that a fieri facias or other writ of execution should bind the property of the goods of the defendant only from the time the writ should be delivered to the officer to be executed. But the lien neither at the common law nor under the statute, was created by the right to subject property to sale in satisfaction of the debt, but by the delivery of the writ.

The statute has authorized execution to issue upon a judgment of the Circuit Court, to any county in the State, and when so issued the debtor’s lands may be levied upon and sold, yet the judgment creates no lien beyond the limits of the county where the judgment is rendered. Until the execution is received by the officer, a lien does not attach to the lands in the hands of the debtor, nor as to bona fide creditors and purchasers until the officer has made and filed a certificate of levy with the recorder, as required by the twenty-fifth section of the chapter regulating judgments and executions.

At common law a judgment created no lien on real estate, nor could it be sold on execution. -But as trade became developed and was fostered by the government, it was found necessary to subject it to the payment of debts. The first enactment having that object was the statute of Westminster 2d, adopted the 13th Edward I, ch. 18, which was usually called the statute de mercatoribus. It authorized the judgment creditor to sue out the writ of elegity by which the sheriff was required to have all of the debtor’s goods liable to execution appraised and delivered to the creditor in satisfaction of his debt, and if insufficient for the purpose, to deliver to him a moiety of his freehold estate until he should have execution of his judgment. The court in analogy to a fieri facias held that this writ created a lien on the real estate of the debtor from the test of the writ. Thus it will be seen, that it was the writ and not the judgment which created the lien. It is true, that the writ under the ancient English practice bore test of the date of the judgment, but still it was the writ and not the judgment which created a lien on the debtor’s property. Then if the analogies of the law •are to be observed, real estate not liable to a judgment lien or sale on execution until the happening of a particular contingency would, like the lien under the statute of Westminster 2d, become such only upon the delivery of the writ.

In the case of Green v. Marks, 25 Ill. 221, this court held, that the judgment lien did not attach to the homestead; that its exemption from levy and sale placed it beyond the operation of a lien. It was also held, that, while it remained exempt, it was in the same situation as though the judgment had never existed. The question then presents itself, when does a. lien attach? If the analogies of the law are followed, it, like personal property, or lands in a different county from that in which the judgment is recovered, becomes bound by the delivery of the writ to the officer to execute, after the exemption has ceased, and this without reference to the dates of the judg ments. Land lying in a different county from that in which a judgment is obtained, like the homestead, is not affected by a lien; yet, before the statute required a certificate of levy, the levy by the officer created a lien without reference to the date of other judgments similarly situated. So with the homestead, after the exemption has from any cause ceased to exist, and it has become liable to levy and sale, the first levy by the officer' will bind the property, whether the writ is issued on a senior or junior judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Ill. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliss-v-clark-ill-1864.