Gaskin v. Smith

30 N.E.2d 624, 375 Ill. 59
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 25764. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 N.E.2d 624 (Gaskin v. Smith) 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
Gaskin v. Smith, 30 N.E.2d 624, 375 Ill. 59 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Murphy

delivered the opinion of the court:

‘This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court of Will county setting aside a quitclaim deed given by Eva S. Smith and husband to Yelda May Dixon, and nullifying the effect of a redemption effected by Yelda May Dixon from a foreclosure sale, on the ground that such deed and redemption were fraudulent and void and made to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of Eva S. Smith.

In 1928, Eva S. Smith and husband mortgaged 120 acres of farm land located in Will county to secure the payment of $11,000, four-elevenths of the indebtedness being held by Joanna C. Gaskin and seven-elevenths by the Eirst National Bank of Joliet, as trustee, under two trusts for the benefit of the Silver Cross Hospital. The mortgagors defaulted and Mrs. Gaskin instituted a foreclosure proceeding. January 11, 1934, a decree of foreclosure was entered which directed the master in chancery to sell the premises and apply the proceeds on the costs and indebtedness. The sale was held March 20, 1934, and Joanna C. Gaskin received a certificate of purchase on her bid of $2500. The sale was approved by the court, and, after the usual deductions of costs, the balance of the sale price was prorated to Mrs. Gaskin and the First National Bank, as trustee. There was a large deficiency and on May 23, 1934, deficiency judgments were entered against Eva S. Smith and husband for the amounts, and to the creditors as follows: To Joanna C. Gaskin $3768.75, and to the Eirst National Bank, as trustee in the two trusts, $3893.22 and $2867.40, respectively. Executions were issued on each of said judgments the date they were entered. The execution on the Gaskin judgment was returned unsatisfied. The record does not disclose a return of the other two but no point is made of it in this case.

March 19, 1934, the day preceding the master’s sale, Eva S. Smith and husband executed the deed in controversy, which conveyed the equity of redemption to her daughter, Velda May Dixon. The deed was filed for record the following day, a few hours preceding the master’s sale.

March 5, 1935, Velda May Dixon, as grantee of Eva S. Smith, effected a statutory redemption from the foreclosure sale and paid the full amount necessary to redeem from the Gaskin certificate of purchase. Mrs. Gaskin accepted the money and executed a written approval of this redemption. Mrs. Dixon and her husband, Ralph M. Dixon, borrowed the money, used in the redemption, from a third party, giving a mortgage on the premises here involved to secure its payment. The Dixons paid this mortgage, February 11, 1937.

The same day Mrs. Dixon made the redemption, the First National Bank, as trustee, being released from its duties as such trustee, assigned the two deficiency judgments to appellee, Otis L. Jones, as successor trustee. An execution was issued on both judgments and a levy and sheriff’s sale was held under the judgment of $3893.22. Jones, as trustee, bid $2541.07 and, there being no further redemption, received a sheriff’s deed. The deed purported to convey all the interest of Eva S. Smith in the premises. The deficiency judgment was credited with the amount of the bid.

May 1, 1935, Joanna C. Gaskin began this action to set aside the deed from Eva S. Smith to Mrs. Dixon. Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Dixon and her husband, Ralph M. Dixon, were made parties defendant. Smith, the husband of Eva S. Smith, had died prior to said date. Jones, as trustee, intervened, and answered Mrs. Gaskin’s complaint and filed a cross-complaint. Mrs. Smith and the Dixons answered the complaint and cross-complaint.

The theories upon which the Gaskin complaint and the Jones cross-complaint were drawn were substantially the same, and, since the hearing and decree were upon the cross-complaint, no further reference need be made to the contents of the complaint. The court granted the prayer of the cross-complaint, but the decree entered did not dispose of the complaint of Mrs. Gaskin, neither does it appear that she was served with the notice of appeal and she has filed no brief, but there are statements in the record indicating she and Jones cooperated in the prosecution of the suit made by the cross-complaint and there is sufficient in the record, here, to hold her bound by the conclusions reached on the matters presented on this appeal.

After a hearing, a decree was entered, in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint, which ordered Yelda May Dixon to pay Jones, as trustee, within ninety days, $2500, and if said payment was not made within the time specified, she and her husband were directed to convey the premises to Jones, as trustee, and in the event of their failure to execute the deed, the master in chancery was to make the conveyance.

Mrs. Smith died during the pendency of the proceeding and her death was suggested of record, but there was no substitution of additional parties.

The Dixons perfected an appeal direct to this court claiming a freehold is involved. A jurisdictional question is presented. The decree found that the advance of any moneys by Mrs. Dixon for redemption purposes was done fraudulently and the moneys deemed to have been paid as a volunteer and that she was not entitled to reimbursement, but the decree further recites that Mrs. Gaskin and Jones had consented that she be given an opportunity “to recoup or to save the benefits therefor as hereinafter set forth.” The decree directed Mrs. Dixon to pay Jones, as trustee, $2500 within a specified time or lose her title. It is difficult to comprehend how a payment of $2500 by Mrs. Dixon to Jones would reimburse her for the $2500 she had previously paid as redemption money, all of which went to Mrs. Gaskin. However, the provision for her paying the $2500 to Jones, or being reimbursed for the money she had paid on the redemption, was not entered in adjudicating any issue in the case. A decision of this court against Mrs. Dixon’s interest would result in taking from her whatever title she acquired by the deed, plus the redemption from the foreclosure sale, which would take from her a freehold. To- remove her deed as a cloud on the title of appellee Jones would vest a freehold title in Jones, as trustee. The rule is, a freehold is involved on an appeal where the necessary result of the judgment or decree is that one party gains and the other loses a freehold estate. Swinson v. Sodaman, 369 Ill. 442; Lennartz v. Boddie, 304 id. 484; Peterson v. Peterson, 264 id. 121.

Consideration of. a few established rules in reference to the rights of the mortgagees, of Mrs. Gaskin, as holder of the certificate of purchase, and under their respective deficiency judgments, the rights of Eva S. Smith as the owner of the premises prior to the execution of the deed and the rights of Mrs. Dixon as the grantee of Mrs. Smith and as redemptor, will serve to clarify the relationship of the parties to the various transactions and the effect those transactions had upon their respective rights.

Prior to the beginning of the foreclosure action the title of the property was in Mrs. Smith, subject only to the lien of the mortgage and the rights of the mortgagees as set forth in the mortgage. She had the right to convey it subject to the mortgage for any consideration she might elect to accept, and such conveyance could not be fraudulent as to the mortgagees for their interests were protected by their mortgage lien. (Bradley v. Snyder, 14 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E.2d 624, 375 Ill. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaskin-v-smith-ill-1940.