Mathison v. Magnuson

80 N.E. 885, 226 Ill. 368
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 80 N.E. 885 (Mathison v. Magnuson) 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
Mathison v. Magnuson, 80 N.E. 885, 226 Ill. 368 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

On November 14, 1900, Ellen Marie Magnuson filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county for the partition of certain real estate, and such proceedings were thereáfter had as resulted in a decree, on April 26, 1901, finding the tenants in common of said real estate to be seized of undivided interests therein in the following proportions: Ellen Marie Magnuson eighty one-hundr'ed-and-twentieths; Karl Gustav Magnuson twenty-five one-hundred-and-twentieths; Thea Sevrina Magnuson and Helga Magnuson each five one-hundred-and-twentieths ; Helga Jenny Olsen, Thor A. Olsen, Ellen S. Olsen, Magnus Olsen and Mabel A. Olsen each one one-hundred-and-twentieth; also finding that during .the lifetime of Peter Oluf Magnuson, now deceased, through whose last will and testament the above named parties derived title, said Peter Oluf Magnuson, to secure his note for $4500, conveyed, by trust deed, to Thomas S. Creighton a portion of the real estate sought to be partitioned; that said note is now held by David S. Cook, and, with interest thereon, is still due and unpaid, and that said trust deed is a first lien upon such portion of said real estate; also finding that Karl Gustav Magnuson had theretofore conveyed to August Dahlgren, by mortgage deed, his interest in said real estate to secure his note for $4050, and that said mortgage is a lien upon the interest of said Karl Gustav Magnuson but is subordinate to the lien of the Creighton or Cook trust deed. Partition of the premises was awarded in accordance with the rights and interests of the parties as’ above set out and commissioners were appointed to make partition. Dahlgren and Cook were parties to the suit. The commissioners reported that the premises were not susceptible of division without manifest prejudice to the parties in interest. Thereupon George Mills Rogers, the master in chancery, was ordered to sell the premises free of encumbrances, and to distribute the money realized from the sale to the parties entitled thereto “according to the decree heretofore entered herein.” The premises were thereafter sold to Ellen Marie Magnuson, the complainant in the bill, for the sum of $17,-700. This sale was approved and the master was ordered to execute a deed to the purchaser. He was also directed to pay the costs of suit out of the proceeds of sale, and to “distribute the residue of said money between said parties in the proportions to which each of them are, respectively, entitled according to the decree of partition entered in said cause on the 26th day of April, 1901.” While this decree is very awkwardly drawn, its purpose was, in part, to direct the payment in full of the Cook encumbrance and the application of the distributive share of Karl Gustav Magnuson upon the Dahlgren encumbrance, and the decree was evidently so understood by all the parties to the partition suit. On May 22, 1902, the cause was stricken from the docket of the circuit court.

After the sale in partition Karl Gustav Magnuson sued out a writ of error from this court seeking to obtain a reversal of the decree of partition on the ground that he was entitled to an undivided one-half of the real estate instead of twenty-five one-hundred-and-twentieths, as found by the decree, and that complainant was the owner of the remaining one-half. The decision of this court was adverse to Karl Gustav Magnuson. (Magnuson v. Magnuson, 197 Ill. 496.) Before this writ of error was sued out, and on October 16, 1901, in order to obviate the necessity of a supersedeas and to permit the sale already made to stand, an agreement in writing was entered into between all the parties found by the decree of partition to be tenants in common of the property, under the terms of which the master was to pay out of the proceeds of sale, first, the costs of the partition proceeding, the taxes on the property and the Cook note and mortgage, the latter then amounting to $4782; second, to Ellen Marie Magnuson, on account of her distributive share in the proceeds of sale, one-half of the balance then remaining; and third, on account' of the Dahlgren note and mortgage the sum of $2379.76. It was further agreed that the master should hold the balance then remaining to await the outcome of the writ of error, provided that the writ should be sued out to the December term, 1901, of this court, otherwise it was agreed that the master should distribute such balance “in accordance with the order of distribution entered in said partition proceedings first hereinabove mentioned.” This agreement was entered into between the parties through their respective solicitors. The writ was sued out to said term of this court and the written contract was carried out in the manner hereinafter stated. ■

When this agreement was made Ellen Marie Magnuson had paid only $2500 to the master on account of her bid. Two days after the agreement, and on October 18, 1901, she gave to the master a receipt for $5711.44 on ■account of her distributive share in the proceeds' of sale and a check for $9488.56 to apply on her bid. The Cook note and trust deed were then satisfied by the payment of $4782 by the master, and there was paid by the master on account of the Dahlgren note and mortgage the sum of $2379.76. The costs amounted to $1495.11. After paying these items the remainder in the master’s hands amounted to $3331.69, which was that portion of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate the distribution of which was subject to change by the judgment of this court in the suit instituted here by Karl Gustav Magnuson. -

On February 17, 1902, while the writ of error was still pending in this court, Ellen Marie Magnuson delivered to Gustav Mathison, the appellant, a written instrument which purported to assign and transfer to said Mathison all the interest of the assignor in and to the $3331.69 in the hands of the master, to be applied on an obligation of hers held by Mathison.

After the decision of this court in Magnuson v. Magnuson, supra, the master paid out of said $3331.69 to Thea Sevrina Magnuson and to Helga Magnuson each $475.96, and to Helga J. Olsen, Thor A. Olsen, Ellen S. Olsen, Mag-nus Olsen and Hilda A. Olsen each the sum of $95.19, such payments being in accordance with the decree of distribution theretofore entered. The seven persons last named, however, claimed that they were entitled to additional sums, aggregating $597-75, out of the proceeds of sale in the hands of the master under a verbal agreement with the solicitors for Ellen Marie Magnuson, entered into before the decree of partition was rendered, to the effect that their interests in the real estate, aggregating one-eighth thereof, should not be made to bear any part of the payment of the Cook note and trust deed. Dahl'gren also claimed that he was entitled to the further sum of $960 of the proceeds of sale under the same agreement with the solicitors for Ellen Marie Magnuson. Mathison was at the same time claiming the entire balance of $1903.82 in the hands of the master by virtue of the assignment from Ellen Marie Magnuson to him.

Upon the refusal of the master to pay the sum demanded by them, Thea Sevrina Magnuson, Helga Magnuson, Ellen S. Olsen, Helga Jenny Olsen, Thor A.

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80 N.E. 885, 226 Ill. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathison-v-magnuson-ill-1907.