Hyman v. Bogue

26 N.E. 40, 135 Ill. 9
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 40 (Hyman v. Bogue) 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
Hyman v. Bogue, 26 N.E. 40, 135 Ill. 9 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery, brought by S. L. Hyman, Mary H. Pindar, Edward H. Green and Hetty H. B. Green, against George M. Bogue, B. Suydam Grant and the New York Life Insurance Company, to redeem section 21, township 39, north, of range 13, east of the 3d principal meridian, in Cook county, from a sale under a decree of the Circuit Court of said county. The bill prays that, upon payment by the complainants of the redemption money, defendants Bogue and Grant be required to convey said premises to the complainants; that said insurance company be required to release a certain mortgage thereon executed to the company since said sale, and that the defendants be decreed to surrender and deliver up said premises to the complainants. A demurrer to said bill for want of equity having been sustained, and the complainants having elected to abide by their bill, a decree was entered dismissing said bill at the complainants’ costs, and they now bring the record to this court by appeal.

The facts out of which the litigation arose have already been twice before this court, first, in Barling v. Peters, 131 Ill. 78, which was an appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court affirming the decree under which said sale was subsequently made, and again in Barling v. Peters, 134 Ill. 606, in which the order of the Circuit Court confirming said sale was brought up for review. Said decree having directed the sale of said premises absolutely and without redemption, and a deed having been executed to the purchaser in accordance with its terms, the complainants seek by the present bill to assert a statutory right to redeem from said sale under the provisions of chapter 77 of the Bevised Statutes.

The bill is quite voluminous, but as all of the material facts involved in the controversy, except such as have transpired since the confirmation of the sale, are sufficiently stated in the opinions filed in the former cases, it will be unnecessary to repeat them here. The present bill sets out, in substance, the bill, answers, replications, decree, the master’s report of sale, and the proceedings thereon resulting in a confirmation of said report, which were presented by the former records, and also alleges that, on the 6th day of March, 1890, the master in chancery executed a deed conveying said section 21 to R. Suydam Grant, the $602,000 purchase money, less the twenty per cent deposited at the time of the sale, having been paid in to the Metropolitan National Bank of Chicago; that on the same day, said Grant borrowed of the New York Life Insurance Company the sum of $350,000, and secured the same by mortgage upon said premises, it being provided, in pursuance of an order of court, that if said sale should be set aside or vacated, said loan should be repaid to said insurance company out of the fund so deposited in said bank.

The bill further alleges that complainants S. L. Hyman and Mary M. Pender are the heirs at law of Robert W. Hyman deceased, and as such are interested in said section 21; that the complainants have always, since said conveyance to said Grant, been ready to redeem said premises from said sale, and they insist that they are entitled to redeem the same, because, as they aver, the claim of said Peters upon said land was and is in the nature of a mortgage upon the undivided half of said land which equitably belonged to said Hyman in his lifetime, and which descended to his heirs, subject to the prior lien in favor of said trustees for the advancements made by Robinson in his lifetime and by said trustees after his death. And said complainants, by their bill, offered to pay into court the amount for which said premises were sold, with eight per cent interest thereon from the date of said sale, but they allege that the defendants insist and claim that such redemption can not be made, and that they take the fee to said property absolutely without right of redemption.

Taking the averments of the bill as true, there are two grounds upon which the decree of the Circuit Court may he affirmed. First, the right of redemption of which the complainants are seeking to avail themselves is that given by the statute, and it does not appear from the bill that they have attempted to exercise that right in the mode the statute prescribes. “One who seeks to redeem must comply fully and strictly with the statute or he gains nothing.” Ex parte The Bank of Monroe, 7 Hill, 177. “The right of redemption is statutory, and must be exercised in pursuance of the statute, otherwise it will be ineffective.” Littler v. The People, 43 Ill. 188; Durley v. Davis, 69 id. 133; Silliman v. Wing, 7 Hill, 159; Rorer on Judicial Sales, sec. 1148, et seq.

Section 18, chapter 77 of the Revised Statutes provides that, any defendant, or any person interested in the premises through a defendant, may, within twelve months of a s'ale from which redemption is given by law, redeem the real estate so sold, “by paying to the purchaser thereof, his executors, administrators or assigns, or to the sheriff, or master in chancery, or other officer who sold the same, or his successor in office, for the benefit of such purchaser, his executors, administrators or assigns, the sum of money for which the premises were sold or bid off, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per centum per annum from the time of.such sale.”

The bill contains no averment that the complainants have paid or tendered the redemption money to any person authorized to receive it, or that they have taken any of the steps prescribed by the statute to effect a redemption from said sale. They merely allege their readiness to make a redemption, and by their bill offer to pay the redemption money, but no money is tendered or even brought into court. This can not he said to be in any sense a pursuance of the statutory requirements.

Nor does the fact that the decree directed an absolute sale without redemption, or that the sale was made in pursuance of the decree and a deed executed by the master to the purchaser or his assignee, constitute any obstacle to' a. redemption in the mode prescribed by the. statute. As we said in Fitch v. Wetherbee, 110 Ill. 475: “It is the statute that gives the right of redemption, and not the decree of .court. In a. case where the statute authorizes a redemption from a sale, a clause in a 'decree ordering the sale that declares the sale shall be absolute, will not bar that right. That portion of the decree will be regarded as inoperative, and a redemption will be allowed as in other cases.” See also, Brine v. Ins. Co. 96 U. S. 627; Owens v. Powell, 98 id. 176; Swift v. Swift, 102 id. 442; Burley v. Flint, 105 id. 247; Mason v. Northwestern Ins. Co. 106 id. 163. There was no occasion therefore to resort to a court of chancery for the purpose of establishing a right to redeem before paying or tendering the redemption money.

But, secondly, the sale is not one from which the statute gives a right of redemption. The land which was the subject of the sale was a trust, held by the trustees of the Robinson estate, to be sold and converted into money, and distributed to the beneficiaries of the trust. The money by which said land was purchased and which was afterward required to pay the taxes thereon, was advanced partly by Robinson in his lifetime, and partly by his executors and trustees after his death..

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 40, 135 Ill. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyman-v-bogue-ill-1890.