Kruger v. Le Blanc

42 N.W. 853, 75 Mich. 424
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 853 (Kruger v. Le Blanc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kruger v. Le Blanc, 42 N.W. 853, 75 Mich. 424 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

Mrs. Kruger, the complainant, on the fifth day of June, 1884, recovered a judgment against the defendants LeBlanc, Oicotte, Champagne, and Washer, in an action of trespass, in the Wayne circuit court, for $60 damages. This judgment was brought to this Court on writ of error, and here reversed, and a new trial granted, June 24, 1886 [425]*425{see 62 Mich. 70), with costs of this Court to the defendants. The costs were taxed at $90.40.

A writ of execution for this sum was issued out of this Court in due form, directed to the sheriff of Wayne county, which execution was on the twenty-fourth day of August, 1886, levied by George H. Stellwagen, then sheriff of said county, upon all the right, title, and interest of complainant in certain lands. The lands were regularly advertised to be sold under said levy, the sale to take place November 19, 1886, at 11 o’clock A. M, The sale was on that day adjourned to December 3, 1886, at 11 o’clock A. m., at which time the land was sold under said levy, and bid in by the defendant Thomas Henderson, he being the highest bidder at such sale, for the sum of $132.70.

On the same day the sheriff delivered a certificate of such sale to said Henderson, which was recorded in the register of deeds’ office of Wayne county, April 22, 1887.

The complainant filed her bill, claiming that the land thus levied upon and sold — about 25 acres — was at the time of such levy and sale, and now is, her homestead, and all the land that she owns; that the premises are not worth over $1,500, and there is an incumbrance upon them of $500, which is still unpaid and subsisting; that before the sale of said land, and on the eighth day of November, 1886, she caused a notice to be served upon said sheriff, Stellwagen, under How. Stat. § 7723, claiming a homestead in the premises, and that they did not exceed the sum of $1,500 in value, and were only 25 aeres in quantity.

She further alleges in her said bill that, notwithstanding the service of this notice, the sheriff, under the direction of the first four named defendants, instead of discharging such levy or taking proceedings under the statute to appraise the value of the premises, and ascertain whether it could be divided if the value was found to be over $1,500, proceeded to sell, and did sell, the lands under and by virtue of such [426]*426levy, to the said Thomas Henderson, in violation of the law in such case made and provided.

That the term of office .of said Stellwagen has expired, and the defendant Louis B. Littlefield is his successor, and, as such successor, authorized to execute a sheriff’s deed under the sale made by Stellwagen; that the extreme limit of time allowed by law for redemption will expire on the third day of March, 1888, and that Henderson threatens to demand a deed of Sheriff Littlefield, and said Littlefield threatens to execute and deliver such deed to Henderson.

That Henderson, when he purchased the lands at said sale, was fully informed and knew that all the proceedings after such levy were illegal and void, for the reason that the lands were sold in violation of the statute, and without any recognition of the notice to the sheriff of claim of homestead, or any compliance with the law in reference thereto.

She alleges that this action and threatened action of the defendants constitute a cloud upon her title, and prays that Sheriff Littlefield and his deputies may be enjoined from making and delivering a sheriff’s deed of the premises to Henderson, and that Henderson be restrained from receiving such deed; and that all the proceedings in the issuing and levying of said writ of execution, and the sale, and the issuing and filing of the sheriff’s certificate, be declared null and void, and that the defendants Le Blanc, Gicotte, Champagne, and Washer be enjoined from issuing any other writ of execution upon the judgment for costs obtained by them in this Court for the collection thereof.

The defendant Littlefield put in a disclaimer, and the other defendants answered.

The answers, in substance, denied that the premises were the homestead of complainant, and averred the value of the same to be at least $2,500.

They admit that Stellwagen did not summon a jury, and did not adjourn said sale for 60 days, as provided in sections [427]*4277723, 7724, 7728, 7729, How. Stat., and allege that the same was not necessary under the laws of this State, and that the sheriff in making such sale did not violate the law.

They aver ignorance as to any service of notice of claim of homestead upon the sheriff.

The answer of the defendants Le Blanc, Oicotte Champagne, and Wa¡-her also avers that on the eighteenth of November, 1886, and before the sale, the complainant filed her bill of complaint in the same court as the present bill, setting forth her ownership and occupancy of the land, and the value thereof, and the incumbrance thereon, and also the said suit, and the proceedings therein, and the taxing of said costs against her in the Supreme Court, the issuing and the levy of the execution, substantially as set forth in the present bill, and praying that the sheriff might be enjoined from selling the premises under said writ, and that the levy be canceled; that a temporary injunction was issued on the filing of such bill, which injunction, on motion, was dissolved December 2,1886.

Afterwards, on December 15, 1886, said cause being at issue, the complainant, by notice duly given, obtained the right to take testimony in open court, as in a suit at law; since which time nothing has been done, and the case seems to have been practically abandoned by the complainant.

Replications to the answers were filed, and proofs taken, and on the hearing Judge Gartner granted a decree in favor of the complainant; declaring that the property was the homestead of the complainant at the time of the levy, and not exceeding $1,500 in value, and occupied by her as such, and not liable to be sold on execution without taking the steps required by the statute; that notice was given as claimed by complainant to Sheriff Stellwagen, and that he sold the premises in disregard of such notice.

The decree perpetually enjoins the sheriff and his deputies from executing and delivering any deed upon the sale, and [428]*428declares all the proceedings in the premises, after the levy of the execution, null and void, and provides that a record of the decree in the office of the register of deeds of "Wayne county shall operate to remove the cloud from complainant’s title caused by the issue and filing of the certificate.

The record shows clearly enough that the proper notice of a claim of homestead was served upon the sheriff. It is equally clear that he paid no attention to it. The complainant owned and occupied the land. The value of it is not certain from the testimony, and as the case stands is immaterial.

The argument is made that the demand against Mrs. Kruger, being a judgment for costs in an action brought by her sounding in tort, is such that there is under the Constitution or the statutes no homestead exemption. It is claimed that neither the Constitution nor the statute exempts any homestead against judgments in tort actions.

It is sufficient for the purposes of this suit that the judgment upon which the execution and levy was based was not rendered against Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 853, 75 Mich. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kruger-v-le-blanc-mich-1889.