Frederick v. Emig

57 N.E. 883, 186 Ill. 319
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 883 (Frederick v. Emig) 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
Frederick v. Emig, 57 N.E. 883, 186 Ill. 319 (Ill. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Upon a hearing of the petition of plaintiff in error for dower in two hundred and sixty acres of land in Clinton county the circuit court dismissed the petition. The facts were not contested, and the question presented on this review is whether the conceded facts entitle plaintiff in error to dower.

Petitioner was married to John Frederick, and he bought the land February 15, 1864, from Alvah Lewis, giving Lewis a mortgage, in which petitioner did not join, for $4100,- the unpaid part of the purchase money. On August 9, 1865, petitioner joined with her husband in a conveyance of the land to his brother, Nicholas Frederick, releasing her dower therein, and Nicholas Frederick on the same day conveyed the land to petitioner. At the May term, 1869, of the circuit court of Clinton county, the mortgage was foreclosed by scire facias at the suit of Lewis, for the use of William Nichols, and the premises were sold October 9, 1869, by the sheriff, under special execution, to Nichols for $4244.62, the amount due on the mortgage and for costs. The premises were not redeemed by petitioner or her* husband during the year allowed to them for redemption. Afterward,- Nichols consented to a redemption, although the time had expired, because the application was made by a woman, and on November 9, 1870, petitioner and her husband executed a trust deed on the premises and borrowed money with which the amount due Nichols was paid November 11, 1870. He wrote his name on the back of the certificate and delivered it to a broker acting for petitioner. An assignment was filled up over the signature in favor of Adam and Peter Karr, who furnished to petitioner the money with which the redemption was made, and they held the certificate as further security for the loan with the trust deed. On October 25,1872, petitioner’s husband, John Frederick, was adjudged a bankrupt, on his own petition, by the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Illinois, and his estate, both real and personal, was assigned to John Swaggard, his assignee. In 1874 G-. W. Remick, a creditor of the bankrupt husband, filed a bill in said District Court of the United States to set aside the conveyances of the land made August 9, 1865, to Nicholas Frederick, and from him to petitioner, on the ground that they were fraudulent and void as against creditors. The bankrupt and petitioner were made defendants, and on April 6, 1874, a decree was entered setting aside the deeds and declaring the lands to be assets of the husband’s estate. Afterward, said District Court ordered the assignee to sell the lands for the benefit of the creditors. On June 4, 1874, Adam and Peter Karr obtained a deed from the sheriff on the certificate of purchase. On June 13, 1874, the assignee sold the lands under an order of the District Court to defendant in error Adam Emig for $13,500, their full value. On June 18, 1874, the Karrs conveyed the premises to petitioner. Emig having been put in possession of the premises under his purchase, petitioner brought suits in ejectment and forcible detainer against him to be restored to possession. Emig then filed his bill in the circuit court of Clinton county to enjoin her from prosecuting her suits, and to have the deeds from the sheriff to the Karrs and from the Karrs to her canceled and declared clouds upon his title. The bankrupt court had made an order to discharge the lien of the purchase money mortgage out of the purchase money paid by Emig, and he claimed that she had redeemed from the mortgage, while she asserted that she had bought the certificate of sale from Nichols, who assigned it to her, and that she held superior title to the land. On November 26, 1875, the circuit court decreed in favor of Emig and set aside the deeds and perpetually enjoined her from prosecuting her suits upon the payment to her of the amount which she had paid to redeem the lands, with interest thereon. She sued out a writ of error from this court to reverse that decree, but it was affirmed. It was held that the transaction between her and Nichols was a redemption of the land; that the certificate became null and void, and that it could not be used, and was not intended by the parties to be used, as a basis of title. (Frederick v. Emig

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 883, 186 Ill. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-v-emig-ill-1900.