Lueptow v. Guptill

202 N.W.2d 255, 56 Wis. 2d 396, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 933
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1972
Docket197
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 202 N.W.2d 255 (Lueptow v. Guptill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lueptow v. Guptill, 202 N.W.2d 255, 56 Wis. 2d 396, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 933 (Wis. 1972).

Opinion

Wilkie, J.

Two issues are raised on this appeal:

1. Were the Guptills entitled to claim a homestead exemption in the land in question?
2. The Guptills not claiming a homestead exemption, could their mortgagee, Production Credit Association, claim that homestead exemption?

1. Were the Guptills able to claim a homestead exemption? It is undisputed, absent the statutory homestead exemption, a judgment which is properly docketed creates a superior lien on real property for a period of ten years. 1 In this situation, therefore, the cognovit judgment belonging to Lueptow which was docketed first is superior to the later recorded mortgage of respondents Production Credit Association.

The trial court, Lueptow contends, erroneously ordered the Production Credit Association mortgage to have priority over the cognovit note. Lueptow argues that in reaching this conclusion the trial court wrongly determined that the Guptills were entitled to a homestead exemption under the Wisconsin statutes. Arguing (1) that the Guptills had no equity in the property which they had occupied, (2) that they did not receive any *401 funds from the sale of that land with which to procure another homestead, and (3) that they had abandoned the property as their homestead before the commencement of this action, Lueptow urges that the Guptills could claim no homestead exemption.

Sec. 272.20 (1), Stats., defines the homestead exemption:

“An exempt homestead as defined in s. 990.01 (14) 2 selected by a resident owner and oempied by him shall be exempt from execution, from the lien of every judgment and from liability for the debts of such owner to the amount of $10,000, except mortgages, laborers’, mechanics’ and purchase money liens and taxes and except as otherwise provided. Such exemption shall not be impaired by temporary removal with the intention to reoccupy the premises as a homestead nor by the sale thereof, but shall extend to the proceeds derived from such sale to an amount not exceeding $10,000, while held, with the intention to procure another homestead therewith, for 2 years. . . .” (Emphasis supplied.)

In answer to Lueptow’s first supportive argument— that the Guptills had no equity in the property — the record indicates the contrary. It is true that at the time of the Guptills’ execution of their mortgage with Production Credit Association the balance they yet owed to the Lueptows under the land contract was more than the initial land contract sale price.

It has long been acknowledged, however, that the vendee in a land contract has an equitable interest in the real estate. 3 Further, it has been noted that such land contract vendee is entitled, after a default and *402 vendor's suit for the unpaid purchase price, to any surplus in excess of the land contract price. 4 In the instant case, the land was worth substantially more than the initial land contract purchase price. To say, as does Lueptow, that the Guptills had no “equity” in the land is probably true. They do, however, have an interest in the land. The homestead statute expressly provides that it extends “to any estate less than a fee.” 5 The Guptills’ interest in the subject matter of their land contract, while perhaps not substantial and less than a fee, is an interest in the land within the meaning of this statute. 6

Lueptow also argues that the Guptills are unable to claim the homestead exemption in the proceeds of the sale of the property because they did not receive any of such proceeds with which they might “procure another homestead therewith, for 2 years.” 7 Here, Lueptow’s contention has been refuted by this court in Kopf v. Engelke. 8 In Kopf, an action by a judgment creditor to set aside a conveyance of defendant’s farm to his son as fraudulent, this court held a judgment creditor, who falls within the purview of the exemption statute, has no right to complain about the exempt person’s disposition of the proceeds of the sale of the homestead:

“The plaintiff argues that under the decision of the trial court the defendant John and his wife are given the benefit of two homestead exemptions. The right of the defendant John to acquire a new homestead with the proceeds derived from the sale of the first homestead is undoubted, sec. 272.20, Stats. If John chose to use the proceeds derived from the sale of the homestead for the payment of creditors other than the plaintiff, the *403 plaintiff cannot complain for the reason that she had no claim upon such exempt proceeds.” 9

A similar situation exists in the instant case. Lueptow is precluded, under the homestead exemption statute, from executing his judgment lien against the homestead of the Guptills. The Production Credit Association, the mortgagee, is not so precluded and would be able to foreclose or use some other suitable remedy even as against the Guptills’ homestead.

Also refuting Lueptow’s argument is the case of Clancey v. Alme. 10 Claneey involved a mortgage foreclosure of both exempt and nonexempt lands. The value of the whole property was much more than the mortgage, and the appellant-judgment creditor claimed such surplus. This court held the proceeds of the sale, under the liberal spirit of the exemption laws, were exempt from the judgment creditor’s claim. The court further affirmed the trial court’s direction of the payment of the surplus to the mortgagor as within the statute’s “procure another homestead” wording.

We conclude, therefore, that the Guptills could validly exercise their homestead exemption in the proceeds of a sale of such homestead in order to forward such surplus to their mortgagee. This is precisely what occurred in the Claneey Case.

Lueptow’s final argument is an asserted abandonment of such homestead. The statute provides a homestead exemption to a resident owner who occupies the homestead. 11 Lueptow argues that the Guptills were not such owners and occupiers of the premises at the time of the sale or at the time of the commencement of this foreclosure action. The record is to the contrary and the trial court found that the Guptills were occupying the premises as a homestead on the dates the cognovit note *404 and mortgage were filed. Moreover, at the hearing it was stipulated by counsel for Lueptow that the Guptills occupied the premises until August of 1969.

As early as Upman v. Second Ward Bank,

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W.2d 255, 56 Wis. 2d 396, 1972 Wisc. LEXIS 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lueptow-v-guptill-wis-1972.