Kucera v. Novak

277 Ill. App. 301, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 122
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 24, 1934
DocketGen. No. 37,037
StatusPublished

This text of 277 Ill. App. 301 (Kucera v. Novak) 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
Kucera v. Novak, 277 Ill. App. 301, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 122 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant filed a bill against the defendants in the circuit court of Cook county for the partition of Lot 71 in E. A. Cummings Addition to Warren Park, in the South-east quarter of Section 20, Township 39 North, Range, 13, East of the 3rd Principal Meridian in Cook county. This is an appeal from a decree confirming a master’s report and ordering partition of the property or in the alternative its sale and the distribution of the proceeds.

It is alleged by the bill in substance that complainant and defendants are brother and sisters; that their mother devised the property to them, and that they are each seized of the real estate in equal one-third parts as tenants in common; that since the death of their mother, complainant and defendants have occupied the real estate jointly, said Otto Novak and Emilie Franks occupying the first floor and complainant occupying the second floor in the two-flat building situated on the real estate; that since February, 1929, the real estate has been incumbered by a trust deed given to secure the payment of $5,000, bearing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum. It is further alleged that since the death of the mother of the parties, the complainant has managed the real estate, has paid $500 on the principal indebtedness secured by the trust deed, and interest in the sum of $150; also a special assessment amounting to $7.24, and the sum of $150 on account of the 1930 real estate taxes levied against such property; that there has been no contribution to her by the other two cotenants upon said payments, and that there is due complainant the sum of $269.08 from each of the defendants as their proportionate share thereof, which should be paid out of the proceeds of the sale in the partition suit.

Defendants filed an answer to the bill; also a cross-bill which was subsequently amended, in which defendants charge in substance that the real estate in question has been owned by the parties in equal shares since September 1, 1930; that since October 1,' 1930, the property has been occupied and is now being occupied to the extent of substantially one-half thereof by complainant and that the balance is occupied by defendants; that complainant should be charged with one-half of the rental value of the property and be credited with one-third of the rental value from October 1, 1930, until the termination of the lawsuit, that is, until the approval by the court of any partition sale of the real estate in suit, and that the balance found to be due should be credited to the defendants and cross complainants in equal shares, and should be set off against any sum or sums which might be found due from cross complainants to the complainant. The matter was referred to a master in chancery on the bill, answer and cross-bill to take proof. The master’s report and the evidence indicate that there is little question of fact involved in the case. It is undisputed that the parties own the property as tenants in common and that each owns a one-third interest therein; that for the period in question complainant occupied the second story of the two-flat building located on the premises, and that the defendants occupied the lower flat; that the defendants were unable to contribute anything towards the maintenance of the property, or the payment of sums falling due on the indebtedness against the property; that by an agreement between complainant and defendants, the complainant paid the amounts alleged to have been paid out, that is to say, $500 on account of the mortgage indebtedness, $150 paid on account of taxes, and $7.24 on account of a special assessment, making a total of $657.24, and that each defendant had delivered a note to complainant for one-third of that amount,, or $219.08. The decree finds that complainant is entitled to reimbursement from the defendants, by reason of the advances made by her, in the sum of $219.08 each, the amount of each of the notes, and that the overplus, if any, should be distributed in proportion to the respective interests of the parties.

During the period in question, there has been no income derived from the property involved, and the record shows that since October 1, 1930, the complainant and defendants have been in possession thereof, as stated, by mutual consent and agreement; that there has been no demand by either that the other pay rent, and no agreement between them that any rent should be paid by either. Each cotenant was lawfully in possession. In the settlement made between the parties, each defendant recognized the obligation of each to complainant by giving a note, and it is not in evidence that either of them claimed anything from complainant until the filing of the bill.

Cahill’s Illinois Revised Statutes, 1933, chapter 2, ¶ 1, provides “That where one or more joint tenants, tenants in common or coparceners in real estate, or any interest therein, shall take and use the profits or benefits thereof, in greater proportion than his, her or their interest, such person or persons, his, her or their executors and administrators, shall account therefor to his or their co-tenant, jointly or severally.” Par. 2 provides that “The action of account may be sustained: First — By one joint tenant, tenant in common or coparcener, his or her executor or administrator, against the other or others, who receive, as bailiffs, more than his or their due proportion of the profits or benefits of such estate.”

Defendants cite the case of Clarke v. Clarke, 349 Ill. 642, as authority for the proposition that the statute provides “for an accounting not merely in case a co-tenant takes and uses the entire profits and benefits of the real estate in question, but whenever a co-tenant takes and uses the profits of it in excess of his share. ’ ’ In that case, one of the parties claimed title to the premises involved under the Limitations Act by reason of a claimed adverse possession of the property for a period of 20 years, and the court said in reply to this contention: “Mere possession of one tenant in common who receives the rents and profits and pays the taxes assessed against the property, no matter for how long a period, cannot be set up as a bar against the co-tenants. In such case the possession of one tenant in common is m contemplation of possession of all the tenants in common.” In the instant case, the co-tenants were all in actual possession of the premises, apparently, by mutual agreement. When- the defendants made a settlement with the complainant for their share of moneys paid out by her in maintaining the property, they gave her their notes and recognized their debt to her. The record does not indicate that at this or at any time prior to the filing of their answer and cross-bill did defendants, by demand or otherwise, ever claim that complainant was indebted to them.

In Cooper v. Martin, 308 Ill. 224, in the bill for the partition of the property involved, complainant prayed that one of the defendants be required to account for rents collected, and by the answer this defendant, in the language of the court, “declared her willingness to account for the same. The decree required such accounting, . . . and the chancellor required her to account to the other owners for the reasonable rental value. She has assigned a cross error on that portion of the decree.

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Related

Clarke v. Clarke
182 N.E. 12 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1932)
Crow v. Mark
52 Ill. 332 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
Woolley v. Schrader
116 Ill. 29 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
Boley v. Barutio
11 N.E. 393 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1887)
McFarland v. Larkin
155 Ill. 84 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1895)
Cooper v. Martin
139 N.E. 68 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 Ill. App. 301, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kucera-v-novak-illappct-1934.