Garlick v. Squires

45 Ill. App. 521, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 265
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Ill. App. 521 (Garlick v. Squires) 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
Garlick v. Squires, 45 Ill. App. 521, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 265 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright.

Hannah J. Squires was the owner in fee of five lots adjacent to each other, and occupied the same as a homestead, with her five minor children, the dwelling house standing upon two of the lots. On May 8, 1888, she mortgaged all said premises to the People’s Loil-n and Homestead Association, to secure the sum of $1,100, and in said mortgage properly waived and released her right of homestead. Afterward the appellants, Catherine Zipf, Fuller & Hart and J. & H. Yoigt, filed in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court, transcripts of judgments obtained by them before justices of the peace, against her. The mortgagee filed a bill to foreclose said mortgage, making the judgment creditors defendants with Mrs. Squires. At the January term, 1890, a decree was entered directing a sale of the premises for the payment of the amount due on the mortgage and costs, and by virtue of that decree the premises were sold April 10, 1890, in a body to said mortgagee for $1,365, the amount of debt and costs. Mrs. Squires did not redeem within the twelve months allowed to her for that purpose. -The appellants did not redeem as judgment creditors after the expiration of the twelve months and within fifteen months, as they had a right to do.

There was a redemption, however, within the fifteen months, by T. H. Burke, a judgment creditor of Mrs. Squires, who sued out an execution on his judgment June 12, 1891, and paid to the sheriff the amount necessary to redeem from the sale under the decree. The sheriff filed the proper certificate of redemption and advertised the premises for sale on the Burke execution. On July 11,1891, the premises were sold on Burke’s execution in a body for $1,501.42, the amount of redemption money and Burke’s judgment and costs, to George W. Young, acting as trustee for appellants. A certificate of purchase was issued to Young, and on the same day appellants sued out executions on their respective judgments. On the same day L. D. Garlick, another judgment creditor, sued out execution on his judgment and redeemed from the sale to Young on the Burke execution, by paying to the sheriff the amount necessary to redeem therefrom. The sheriff filed a certificate of redemption accordingly, and advertised the premises for sale on the Garlick execution. On August 8, 1891, the premises were again sold in a body on the Garlick execution for $2,128.68, to said George W. Young, still acting as trustee for appellants, and Young received a certificate of purchase therefor. Before this sale appellants had directed the sheriff to levy their executions on any surplus that might arise from the sale, and the sale yielded a surplus of $508.26, over and above the redemption money, and the amount of Garlick’s execution and all costs. After the sale appellants ordered, the sheriff to levy their executions on this surplus. Mrs. Squires had no personal property except a small amount of household furniture not exceeding in value §50, which was exempt, and she still continued to occupy the premises with her five minor children, as before. She notified the sheriff that she claimed the surplus as the proceeds of her estate of homestead in the premises, and filed her petition in the case of Garlick v. Squires, in which the execution issued, asking for an order on the sheriff to pay the same to her. On a hearing of the petition the foregoing facts appeared by stipulation, and an order was made for the payment of the surplus to Mrs. Squires, and from that order this appeal was taken.

The question raised by the petition was whether the premises occupied by Mrs. Squires and sold on the Garlick execution were at that time owned or rightly possessed by her so that she could have an estate of homestead therein which would attach to the surplus. Appellants contend that she had lost her estate and ceased to have any right or interest in the premises on account of her failure to redeem from the sale under the decree of foreclosure within twelve months from said sale. As she could not thereafter redeem from that sale and the title of the purchaser would become perfect and her title be divested after the expiration of the period of redemption upon a conveyance of the legal title by the master in chancery, it is claimed that she had ceased to have any interest whatever in the property. The question is, does the homestead continue after a mortgage sale and failure of the debtor to redeem and pending the period of redemption before the purchaser has received a deed ? Appellants rely upon the decisions of the Supreme Court of this State, in Smith v. Mace, 26 N. E. Rep. 1092, and Herdman v. Cooper, 28 N. E. Rep. 1004, cited and approved in Schroder v. Bauer, 29 N. E. Rep. 560, as establishing the doctrine contended for by them.

In the case of Smith v. Mace it was said that by the' legal effect of a mortgage releasing the homestead right the mortgagors authorized their homestead to be sold, and the purchaser at the sale to acquire all the title thereto that they had, reserving to themselves only the right to redeem from the sale within twelve months, and that it must follow, when they failed to make the redemption, their rights were gone; that to allow a judgment creditor to redeem after the expiration of twelve months deprives the debtor of nothing that he would otherwise have, and that the sale, on the execution of the redeeming creditor, is of nothing that belongs to the debtor. In Herdman v. Cooper, there had been a foreclosure sale to Watson of property mortgaged to him by the Herdmans and they had failed to redeem within twelve months. There was a redemption by a judgment creditor, and it was said that the redemption and the purchase by the judgment creditor at the sale under his execution was of nothing which then-belonged to the Herdmans, but of that only which but for that redemption, would have belonged to Watson. It is claimed that these cases are decisive of the proposition, that after the expiration of twelve months from the sale under the decree, the homestead and all rights of Mrs. Squires were gone. The language of those decisions must, however, be limited in its application to the same question being considered when it was employed. To enlarge the statement beyond the question considered and make it a general rule applicable in solving other questions would produce results not perhaps intended by the Supreme Court. The question in those cases was what title the purchaser acquired at the redemption sale and whether he took such title free from the estate of homestead. An effort was made to assert the homestead estate against such title, and it was held that the redeeming creditor was substituted for the purchaser at the first sale when the homestead was sold, and that it could not be asserted against such purchaser. In this case there is no question as to the title or right acquired by Young by his purchase at the sale when the surplus was created. It is conceded that he succeeded to the right of antecedent purchasers to whom the homestead was sold. He would acquire the full title upon receiving a deed of the premises. The point decided in those cases is not in question here. If it is to be understood in all cases that a sale on the execution of a redeeming creditor is a sale of nothing that belongs to the debtor, then no part of the proceeds of any such sale could belong to the debtor, and no matter how large a surplus might remain after satisfying all claims against him, he would have no right to it, because it is produced by, and stands in the place of land in which he had no right, and was the price of nothing which belongs to him.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ill. App. 521, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garlick-v-squires-illappct-1892.