Brokaw v. Ogle

48 N.E. 394, 170 Ill. 115
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 394 (Brokaw v. Ogle) 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
Brokaw v. Ogle, 48 N.E. 394, 170 Ill. 115 (Ill. 1897).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The farm in question consisted of 160 acres. When Zachariah Ogle, who owned the fee simple title to it, died on December 14, 1888, he occupied the house upon it as a residence. The house so occupied by him was upon the west half of the farm. Before and at his death, he was a householder and had a family, and was entitled to an estate of homestead to the extent in value of §1000.00 in the farm and buildings thereon. His homestead, and all right and title therein, were exempt from attachment, judgment, etc., as provided in section 1 of the Exemption act. (2 Starr & Cur. Stat.—2d ed.—p. 1865).

Frances Ogle, the wife of Zachariah Ogle, survived him, and continued to live in the house upon the west half of the farm. “Such exemption” continued after the death of her husband for the benefit of herself, as long as she continued to occupy the homestead, and of her children, until the youngest child became twenty-one years of age, in accordance with the provisions of section 2 of the Homestead act. (2 Starr & Cur. Stat.-—2d ed.—p. 1871). It appears that in October, 1891, all of her children, and her grandson, were of age. At that time Malcolm Ogle, her youngest son, and James E. Fowler, her grandson, conveyed their two-fifths interest in the farm to their older brothers, Alexander Ogle and Hiram Ogle. On May 29, 1893, her daughter, Haney J. McMullin, conveyed her one-fifth interest to said Alexander and Hiram. At the latter date, Alexander Ogle and Hiram Ogle owned the whole farm, each an undivided one-half thereof, subject to a mortgage thereon, dated May 21, 1893, for §950.00, drawing seven per cent interest, executed by them to one Crawford, and subject to the dower of the widow, Frances Ogle, and to her right of homestead.

On May 29, 1893, Mrs. McMullin, who had a husband and family, lived in her own home, and not with her mother. Hiram Ogle lived with his family in a house upon the east half of the farm. Whether this house was built before his father’s death, or thereafter, does not appear; but he lived there in pursuance of an oral agreement for partition between himself and his brother, Alexander, by the terms of which he was to take the east half and Alexander the west half of the farm. The right of Alexander to the west half was subject, however, to the right of occupancy thereof by his mother as long as she lived. Alexander Ogle in 1893, and for some years prior thereto, cultivated a farm in what is called the “Sny bottom,” about eight miles from the home farm above referred to. This farm he did not own, but had leased it from the owner thereof. He lived upon it with his wife and children most of the time, although he also lived with his mother in the house upon the west half of the home farm a part of the time. Malcolm Ogle was a single man, and lived in the same house with his mother a portion of the time before her death, which occurred on April 10, 1894, but just when he lived there is not shown by the evidence; it is clear, however, that he did not live there while the premises were in the occupancy of one Frank Black, a tenant of the widow, Frances Ogle, as hereafter stated.

The appellant obtained a judgment against Alexander Ogle for $116.00 before a justice of the peace on June 16, 1893, and, after execution returned nulla bona, a transcript was filed in the circuit court of Pike county on December 11,1893, and an execution was issued and levied upon the undivided one-half interest of said Alexander Ogle in said farm. The premises so levied wpon were sold by the sheriff on February 24,1894, for $145.45 under the execution aforesaid to appellant, and, not having* been redeemed from such sale within the statutory period, were conveyed to appellant by sheriff’s deed, dated May 27, 1895.

Appellant seeks partition, as being the owner of an undivided one-half of the premises in question by virtue of his sheriff’s deed. Appellee, Alexander Ogle, claims that the sheriff’s sale was void upon the alleged ground, that, when the transcript from the justice of the peace was filed in the circuit court, and when the levy and sale were made, he was occupying the premises as his homestead, and said premises were worth less than $1000.00. No steps were here taken to set off the homestead in the manner prescribed by the statute.

A sale on execution of the homestead of the judgment debtor without observing the requirements of the statute in that behalf is void so as to convey no title, capable of being asserted in a court of law. (Bullen v. Dawson, 139 Ill. 633, and cases there cited). Where the homestead premises are not worth more than §1000.00, a judgment against the owner is no lien upon them, and, when the debtor sells them, the purchaser takes them to that extent free from all judgment liens. The debtor’s homestead to the extent of §1000.00 in value is exempt from levy and forced sale. (Asher v. Mitchell, 92 Ill. 480; Leupold v. Krause, 95 id. 440; Halliday v. Hess, 147 id. 588; Bach v. May, 163 id. 547).

The testimony is not altogether clear as to the value of the interest levied upon; Alexander and Hiram Ogle paid about §900.00 for the three-fifths interest purchased by them in 1891 and 1893, that is to say, about §300.00 for each one-fifth. No other proof of value appears in the record. At these figures, the value of the whole farm would not be over §1500.00, and after deducting the mortgage of §950.00 and interest, the undivided half levied upon would be worth only about $500.00; and counsel for appellees estimates the value of the whole premises upon the basis of the amounts at which these purchases were made.

There is conflict in the authorities upon the question, whether there can be a homestead in an undivided interest in land, or, in other words, whether an estate in co-tenancy will support a right of homestead in one of the co-tenants, or whether homestead can only exist in an estate in severalty. (Thompson on Homestead and Ex. secs. 180-189; Waples on Homestead and Ex. pp. 134-138). We are inclined to the opinion, that an undivided interest, accompanied by exclusive possession, will support the homestead right. (Herdman v. Cooper, 29 Ill. App. 589; Kaser v. Hass, 27 Minn. 406; Freeman on Co-tenancy and Par. sec. 54; Thompson on Homestead, and Ex. sec. 181). The objection, usually urged against allowing a homestead estate to attach to an undivided interest, is, that, in setting off the homestead, the rights of the co-tenants maybe interfered with, and the particular part, set off as a homestead, might, on partition, fall to one of the other co-tenants. But this is a matter of which the other co-tenants alone can complain, and, if their rights are respected, persons who are not co-tenants, cannot object. The object is to protect the portion set off from judgment levies and sales, and not to give an assured title thereto. The co-tenant of the claimant of a homestead cannot question the latter’s “right to acquire a homestead interest in the property, so long as such co-tenant is allowed to enjoy all his rights and privileges in and to said property as a co-tenant.” (Tarrant v. Swain, 15 Kan. 149).

We do not, therefore, regard the fact, that Alexander Ogle’s interest in the farm was an undivided one-half thereof, as militating against his claim to a homestead, if in other respects his right thereto is established.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 394, 170 Ill. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brokaw-v-ogle-ill-1897.