Hotchkiss v. Brooks

93 Ill. 386
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 93 Ill. 386 (Hotchkiss v. Brooks) 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
Hotchkiss v. Brooks, 93 Ill. 386 (Ill. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, brought by Zenas N. Hotchkiss, in the circuit court of Peoria county, against Sarah Brooks, for the appointment of commissioners to appraise certain premises, under oath, and, if the same can be divided, to set off so much thereof, including the dwelling house, as, in their opinion, shall be worth $1000, to the defendant; and in case the value of the premises exceeds $1000, and can not be divided without prejudice to the interests of the parties, that the commissioners make and sign an appraisement of the value of the premises, and report the same to the court, and that complainant be permitted to pay $1000 to the defendant in lieu of her homestead right.

From the evidence and admitted facts in the record, it appears, that on the 6th day of March, 1876, Joseph W. Brooks, being seized in fee of lot 5, block 40, in Morton, Voris & Davielle’s addition to Peoria, sold and conveyed the premises, by warranty deed, to appellant, for the consideration of $2500; that Brooks then was a householder, residing upon the premises with his wife, the appellee, as a homestead; that appellee did not join in the deed or release her right of homestead; that since the date of the deed Brooks and his wife have separated and are living separate and apart; that Joseph W. Brooks has abandoned the premises and claims no interest therein ; that appellee continues to occupy the premises, claiming the same as a homestead; that the premises are of the value of $4750. The circuit court appointed commissioners, as prayed for in the bill, who examined the premises and made a report that the same could not be divided without injury to the interests of the parties, and appraised the value thereof at $4750. The court approved the report and rendered a decree requiring appellant, within ten days, to pay into the hands'of the clerk of the court $1000, for the use of appellee, in lieu of her homestead in the premises; and upon such payment being made, and notice given to appellee, she should, within ten days thereafter, surrender the possession of the premises to appellant. To reverse the decree appellee sued out a writ of error to the Appellate Court, and on the hearing the decree of the circuit court was reversed and the bill dismissed.

Section 1, chap. 52, Bev. Stat. 1874, page 497, provides that every householder having a family shall be entitled to an estate of homestead to the extent in value of $1000, which shall be exempt from attachment, judgment, levy, or execution sale, for the payment of debts, and from the laws of conveyance, descent and devise, except as is provided in the act.

Section 2 continues the exemption after the death of the husband or wife, for the benefit of the survivor, so long as he or she continues to occupy the homestead, and to the children until the youngest becomes twenty-one years of age; and in case the husband or wife shall desert his or her family, the exemption shall continue in favor of the one occupying the premises as a resident.

Section 4 provides the manner in which the estate so exempted may be released, waived or conveyed.

Section 8 declares, in the enforcement of a lien in a court of equity upon premises, including the homestead, if such right is not waived or released as provided in the act, the court may set off the homestead and decree the sale of the balance of the premises; or, if the value of the premises exceeds the exemption, and the premises can not be divided, may order the sale of the whole and the payment of the amount of the exemption to the person entitled thereto.

In the general and common acceptation of the term homestead, a homestead may be regarded as the place occupied by the householder, without regard to its extent or value; it may be a town or city lot with a costly house thereon, or it may be a section of land of great value, but it will be observed that a homestead of this character does not fall within the exemption provided by the statute. The homestead which is exempt from levy and sale and the laws of conveyance, as provided by the act of the legislature, is an estate of homestead to the extent in value of $1000, occupied as a residence. If the property occupied as a residence was worth $5000 or $10,000, the householder, under the statute, would be entitled to a homestead therein of the value of $1000, and no more. The value of the property over and above $1000 would be subject to the debts of the householder, and controlled by the laws of conveyance in the same manner and to a like extent as if no exemption whatever had been provided by law.

In McDonald v. Crandall, 43 Ill. 231, where a question similar in principle to the one involved in this case arose, it was held, that where the homestead exceeds $1000 in value, a judgment, mortgage or deed of trust becomes a lien and may be enforced against the overplus; and the same is true of the excess where there' is a conveyance without a release of the exemption, as the grantee may enforce his rights to the surplus. It was there said, it has been held that where the homestead exceeds $1000 in value, a judgment, a mortgage or deed of trust becomes a lien, that may be enforced against the overplus. So of a conveyance without a release of the homestead exemption—where the value exceeds the exemption, the grantee can enforce his rights against the surplus by partition or otherwise.

The ease of Mix v. King, 55 Ill. 434, is also an authority in point. In that ease, a deed of trust with power of sale had been given on property occupied as a homestead, which was worth more than $1000. Default having been made in the payment of the debt secured by the deed of trust, the premises were sold by the trustees, apd purchased by Mix, who subsequently brought ejectment against King, the grantor in the deed of trust, and recovered possession of the premises. On a bill filed by Mrs. King, the wife of the grantor in the deed of trust, for relief, the court held that, as the premises were worth more than $1000, it was proper to make an order, in analogy with the statute, to set off the homestead in kind, and if that could not be done, that the premises be sold, unless the defendant, Mix, should pay complainant $1000, the value of the homestead. This case again came before the court, and it was held that complainant was entitled to rents from the time she was ejected, on a homestead worth $1000, less taxes and improvements, as her interest in the premises was limited to that sum; and if it was not practicable to thus settle the account, the court should decree the payment of $1000 to complainant, with six per cent interest from the time she was dispossessed. It was there said: “As the owner of the fee had no right, under the statute, to the possession until he had set off the homestead, or paid appellee $1000, it would only be equitable and just that she now have $1000 which she should then have had, with interest from that time. * * Had Mix, when he obtained possession, done as the statute required, he would have=assigned her a homestead or paid her $1000.”

It is, however, contended that the case of McDonald v. Crandall, supra, is not an authority in point; that the grantee in a deed, where the homestead has not been released, can not deprive the grantor of the right to live upon and possess $1000 worth of the premises conveyed.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ill. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotchkiss-v-brooks-ill-1879.