Heirs of Hastings v. Dorrance

2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 300
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 300 (Heirs of Hastings v. Dorrance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heirs of Hastings v. Dorrance, 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 300 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Tuley, J.:—

In 1843 Hiram Hastings purchased the E. % of lot 2, block ■5, frac. sec. 15, addition to Chicago, and occupied the same .as a homestead until the buildings thereon were destroyed by the big fire of 1871.

In the fall of 1875 he commenced the erection of the present building thereon, and before its completion occupied a portion of it for his homestead until his decease in the year 1880. Since then his widow has been and is now occupying "the same, claiming homestead rights therein.

In the superior court of Cook county, on the 12th day of •January, 1876, Edwin D. Messenger obtained a judgment against Hastings and sold the said E. % of lot 2, May 6, 1876, with the buildings, for the sum of $350, that being the amount •of the judgment, interest and costs. The building on' the lot covered the entire front, was four stories in height and in appearance was two distinct buildings of 40 feet front each, with stores below and separate entrances and stairs leading to the upper stories. Although the property had been mortgaged as two separate 40 feet lots, and was clearly susceptible of a division into two parts, it was sold en masse and without regard to the homestead rights of Hastings, if any he had. "Whether or not Hastings had a homestead in this property at the date of this judgment is about the only question of fact in this- ease..

"Without going into any analysis of the evidence, I will only state my conclusion, which is, that he had at that date a homestead right in the lot and buildings thereon. His ceasing to live there in 1871, was involuntary, and his intent to retain the lot as a homestead must therefore be presumed. Although there is some evidence to show an abandonment, yet the weight of evidence tends to aid the presumption of the law of an animus revertendi. Howard v. Logan, 81 Ill. 383. My conclusion also is, that he was actually occupying the new building as a homestead at the date of the judgment.

On the 18th day of August, 1877, the execution sale ripened into a deed to Edwin D. Messenger, the purchaser at the sale. He quitclaimed an undivided three-fifths interest to his partner, William D. Messenger, on the 20th day of August, 1877, and the two joined in a deed to the defendant Dorrance, on the 30th of same month, which was filed for record in a few days thereafter. The consideration of the last mentioned deed was $2,123.42 cash, and the balance of the consideration of $13,000, was prior indebtedness.

The sheriff made a demand of payment before the levy, but there is no evidence to show that Hastings knew of the levy and sale or subsequent deeds thereunder, until a few days after the record of the deed to Dorrance.

This bill was forthwith filed by Hiram Hastings, to set aside the levy, sale, sheriff’s deed and the subsequent deeds as clouds upon his title, upon the ground that the premises were occupied as a homestead, and none of the requirements of the statute as to the appointment of commissioners to set off the homestead, etc., having been complied with, the same was unauthorized and void; and also upon the further ground that the sale was irregular inasmuch as it was sold en masse, when it was susceptible of division into two parcels.

The defendant Dorrance files a cross-bill and offers to pay $1,000 for the homestead interest, if the court finds there was a homestead interest, and prays that he may be declared the owner of the property free therefrom.

The following questions of law arise:

1st. The lot of ground being occupied by Hastings as a homestead, and none of the requirements of the homestead act having been complied with, was the sale unauthorized and void, and therefore failed to pass any right, title or interest to the purchaser at that sale?

2d. The equity of Hastings in the property — the same being under mortgage — being of the value of $25,000 at the time of the sale, is Dorrance entitled to the relief prayed by his cross-bill?

"3d. If the sale passed the title to the property subject to the $1,000 homestead interest — does the fact that the sale was en masse and not in parcels entitle the complainants to have the sale and deeds set aside as against Dorrance, and if so, upon what terms?

4th. Have the complainants been guilty of laches?

It is evident that the decision of the first point in, favor of complainants would render it unnecessary to decide the others, for if the execution sale was made without regard to the requirements of the homestead act, and therefore the sheriff’s deed passed no title or interest in the property, it would be immaterial whether the sale was en masse or not. There could be no laches in asserting the exemption from levy and sale of the lot of ground occupied as a homestead.

“The law exempts the homestead, and the debtor is required to perform no act, to discharge no duty, nor even to manifest any intention to avail himself of its benefits. Hence the ordinary rules as regard laches, in parties failing to make their defense at law, or to bring suit in a reasonable time, are not applicable when homestead exemption claims are asserted.” Hubbell v. Canady, 58 Ill. 425; Pardee v. Lindley, 31 Ill. 174, 186.

As to the effect of this sale under the execution, some thirty odd decisions have been cited, and I have studiously examined them all, and others not cited. I find that in the following cases bills have been filed to set aside sales under judgment, because the provisions of the homestead act were not complied with in making the sale, and the relief prayed for was decreed. Green v. Marks, 25 Ill. 221; Hume v. Gossett, 43 Ill. 297; Conklin v. Foster, 57 Ill. 104; Hubbell v. Canady, 58 Ill. 425. The sale was set aside on motion in Stevenson v. Maroney, 29 Ill. 532, and the right to have it done on motion recognized in Haworth v. Travis, 67 Ill. 301. In Kerr v. South P’k Comrs., 8 Bissell, 276, s. e. Fed. Cas. No. 7733, an execution sale of homestead was held void, on the authority of Hartwell v. McDonald, 69 Ill. 293. Sales were set aside upon bills filed in the following cases where there had been sales; under foreclosure decrees, and in many of them the decrees; went by default against the homestead claimant. Hoskins v. Litchfield, 31 Ill. 137; Mooers v. Dixon, 35 Ill. 208; Cummings v. Burleson, 78 Ill. 281; Muller v. Inderreiden, 79 Ill. 382; and on motion in Moore v. Titman, 33 Ill. 57.

In Green v. Marks, supra, the court says, “The legislature intended not only to free it (the lot of ground) from liability to sale, but from all lien while it remains a homestead.” In Hoskins v. Litchfield, supra, where there had been a sale under a foreclosure decree without appointment of commissioners, etc., as required by the homestead act, the supreme court affirmed the decree of the lower court, “that the said premises stand in all respects as if no proceedings had been had under the mortgage.”

In Moore v. Titman, supra, the court held that: If the premises ordered sold are worth more than $1,000, the master must proceed like a sheriff on execution to sell in the manner provided by the statute. In Mooers v. Dixon, supra, after decreeing that the sale and the deed thereon be set aside, the master was ordered “to proceed to sell the premises in the mode pointed out by the homestead act.”

In Conklin v.

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Related

Black v. Curran
81 U.S. 463 (Supreme Court, 1872)
Green v. Marks
25 Ill. 221 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1860)
Stevenson v. Marony
29 Ill. 532 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
Hoskins v. Litchfield
31 Ill. 137 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
Pardee v. Lindley
31 Ill. 174 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
Mooers v. Dixon
35 Ill. 208 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1864)
Wing v. Cropper
35 Ill. 256 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1864)
Fishback v. Lane
36 Ill. 437 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1865)
Blue v. Blue
38 Ill. 9 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1865)
Bliss v. Clark
39 Ill. 590 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1864)
McDonald v. Crandall
43 Ill. 231 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1867)
Hume v. Gossett
43 Ill. 297 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1867)
Coe v. Smith
47 Ill. 225 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)
Hewitt v. Templeton
48 Ill. 367 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1868)
Wiggins v. Chance
54 Ill. 175 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Mix v. King
55 Ill. 434 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Conklin v. Foster
57 Ill. 104 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Linton v. Quimby
57 Ill. 271 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1870)
Hubbell v. Canady
58 Ill. 425 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1871)
Loomis v. Gerson
62 Ill. 11 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1871)

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