Horn v. White

127 Ill. App. 222, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 360
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 8, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 Ill. App. 222 (Horn v. White) 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
Horn v. White, 127 Ill. App. 222, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 360 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Pike County, directing John B. Horn, as administrator of the estate of Thomas Cochran, deceased, to sell certain real estate to pay debts.

Thomas Cochran died intestate June 18, 1876, leaving him surviving no child or children or descendants of any child or children, but leaving surviving his widow, Ethelinda Cochran, and certain collateral kindred. August 18, 1876, the appellant, John B. Horn, was appointed administrator of the estate of said deceased, by the County Court of Pike County, and entered upon his duties as such. Claims were allowed against the estate in excess of the personal assets, to the amount of about $3,600. At the expiration of two years from the granting of letters of administration to said Horn, some of the appellees herein, creditors of said Thomas Cochran, filed their petition in the County Court, for a citation against said Horn, to compel him to file a petition to sell real estate to pay debts, and upon the citation issued in pursuance of said petition the said Horn, on June 30, 1880, filed his petition as administrator, to sell real estate to pay the debts against said estate. At the October term, 1880, the County Court entered an order directing the administrator to sell a part of the south half of the southeast quarter of section 24, containing 75.75 acres and 32 acres off of the east side of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 2, all in township 5 south, range 7 west, subject to the dower interest of Ethelinda Cochran. In pursuance of said order, the said administrator, on January 22, 1881, offered said lands for sale, and the same were struck off to the highest and best bidders for $242.50, the 75.75-acre tract realizing $75 and the 32-acre tract realizing $167.50. Upon the filing of the report of said sale on March 1, 1881, it appearing to the County Court that said lands were sold for less than one-fourth of their real value, said sale was set aside and vacated, and the court directed the administrator to readvertise and again offer said real estate for sale. Ho further attempt was made to sell said lands, until the filing, by the creditors of said estate, of the petition of March 22, 1904.

The 75.75-acre tract was sold at tax sale, June 4, 1883, for the state, county and Sny Island Levee Drainage District taxes for the year 1882 and prior years, and on October 20, 1885, a deed thereto was executed to the commissioners of said drainage district. October 23, 1893, Ethelinda Cochran, widow of Thomas Cochran, conveyed said tract to Peter Brown. On January 10,1895, the commissioners of said drainage district conveyed said tract to Marion P. Brown, and on September 7, 1895, said Brown conveyed 62£ acres of said tract to said Ethelinda Cochran. June 13, 1898, said tract was sold to Isaac Strauss for the levee taxes for 1897, and a tax deed therefor was executed to said Strauss May 7, 1901. July 11, 1902, said Isaac Strauss conveyed said tract to said Ethelinda Cochran.

December 14, 1885, an order was entered in the County Court directing that a citation be issued to John B. Horn, administrator of the estate of Thomas Cochran, to be and appear in that court on the first day of the January term, 1886, to show cause why he should not make final settlement of said estate. The matter of said citation was continued from term to term thereafter until January, 1888, when, no citation having issued, the County Court entered an order removing said Horn as administrator, for a failure to make report and finally settle said estate, and directing him to pay over and deliver to his successor, when appointed, all moneys and effects of said estate in his hands, within ten days after demand made on him therefor. Ho successor to said Horn was appointed as" administrator of said estate.

May 26, 1902, Ethelinda Cochran executed to C. W. and C. P. Klitz her bond for a deed of said 75.75-acre tract of land except 4-J acres, for the sum of $3,600, which-bond did not become effective because of the failure of the obligee to make the payments required within the time limited.

October 2, 1903, the said Ethelinda Cochran filed her bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Pike County against the heirs and creditors of the estate of Thomas Cochran and sundry other persons, praying that a decree be entered quieting title in her to the 75.75-acre tract of land. Appellees, the creditors of the estate of said Thomas Cochran, answered the bill and filed their cross-bill, setting up their rights as creditors and praying that said land be sold to pay the debts due them.

Thereafter, on March 22, 1904-, appellees filed their petition in the County Court, setting up the facts heretofore recited, and alleging in explanation of their long delay in moving to have the real estate sold to pay debts that said real estate was of little value, the 75.75-acre tract being worth less than $200, and the 32-acre tract being worth less than $400; that all of said lands were subject to the dower interest of Ethelinda Cochran; that a sale of said lands by reason of the outstanding dower interest would have resulted in a sacrifice of said lands, without any benefit to the widow and heirs of Thomas Cochran, or to the creditors of his estate; that from the death of said Thomas Cochran until a few months prior to the filing of the petition, the 75.75-acre tract by reason of its being swamp land lying in the Sny Island Levee Drainage District was subject to overflow arid was of little value; that within said last few months there had been a phenomenal rise in the price of and an unprecedented demand for bottom lands in said drainage district, and said lands were worth $4,000. The petition concludes with a prayer for a citation against John B. Horn requiring him to show cause why he should not proceed to sell said real estate to pay debts, and that upon a final hearing thereon he be required to sell the same. To this petition appellants, Ethelinda Cochran and John B. Horn, as administrator of the estate of Thomas Cochran, interposed a demurrer which was overruled by the- County Court, and an order there entered directing said Horn to sell the said real estate in pursuance of the order for sale originally entered. From this order appellants appealed to the Circuit Court, where they again interposed their demurrer to the petition, which demurrer was overruled.

Appellant John B. Horn thereupon filed his answer as administrator, and thereafter filed a disclaimer, averring that he was removed from his office of administrator January 3, 1888, by the- County Court of Pike County. Upon the final hearing in the Circuit Court, the court by its order found that the dower of Ethelinda Cochran, in the real estate of which her husband, Thomas Cochran, died seized, had never been assigned to her; that by the quitclaim deed of October 23, 1893, to Peter Brown, conveying the south half of the southeast quarter of section 24, township 5, south range 7, the said Ethelinda Cochran had released and relinquished her dower therein and that the same was clear and free from any dower interest; that the description of the tract of land in the south half of the southeast quarter of section 24, being the 75.75-acre tract heretofore mentioned,* should be corrected in the order of sale entered by the County Court at its October term, 1880, so as to read as follows: The south one-half of the southeast quarter of section 24, in township 5 south, range 7 west of the 4th p. m.

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Bluebook (online)
127 Ill. App. 222, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-white-illappct-1906.