McDonald v. Crandall

43 Ill. 231
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 43 Ill. 231 (McDonald v. Crandall) 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
McDonald v. Crandall, 43 Ill. 231 (Ill. 1867).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In this controversy both parties derive title to the lot in dispute, from the same common source. One H. C. Twombly and wife, at different times, executed trust deeds to two different trustees, to secure debts owing by him to different parties. Default having been made in payment, each of the trustees at different times advertised and sold the property, which was purchased by several persons. Appellant claims by purchase at the sale under the trust deed first executed, which was also first recorded, and under which he had entered into, and was holding, possession when this suit was brought to recover the premises. Appellee claims by a purchase under the trust deed last executed, and under which it was sold by the trustee in the mode required by the instrument.- Twombly and wife did not, by the first trust deed, relinquish their right to claim the benefit of the homestead law, but did in the latter. It also appears, that he was within the provisions of the act, and the deeds having been made after the adoption of the amendatory act of 1857, these trust deeds were subject to its provisions.

This, then, presents the question whether a deed executed subsequently to the passage of the amendatory act of 1857, without relinquishing the homestead right, is void, or whether it takes effect, in case the property is surrendered, and the purchaser is put into possession by the grantor. Or may he, after a sale of the fee, without releasing the homestead, and letting the purchaser in, sue for, and recover the premises under the right to claim the homestead. Or can he afterward sell and convey the homestead right to another, so as to authorize the second purchaser, to recover and hold the property under the homestead right, as against the owner of the fee.

In the case of Patterson v. Kreigh, 29 Ill. 514, it was held, that when the wife failed to join in the release of the homestead right, the grantee did not acquire a title such as would authorize him to eject the grantor still in possession of the homestead. In that ease it appears, that the grantor was within the provisions of the homestead act. And it was held that the grantee, not being in possession, could not assert it against his grantor, as he had never released it in the mode prescribed by the statute, and had not surrendered the possession. Again, in the case of Best v. Allen, 30 Ill. 30, it was held, that a purchaser at a trustee’s sale under a trust deed, in which the wife‘had not released the homestead right, could not defend an action brought by the person who executed the deed of trust, and who had not abandoned or surrendered the possession, for a trespass to the premises. Other cases decided by this court announced the same rule.

It has also been repeatedly held, that the homestead right was not subject to a judgment lien. That the right could be transferred with the fee, and the grantee would take it notwithstanding a judgment was in existence against the grantor when the conveyance was made. And that the sale of the homestead, and its surrender to the purchaser, who was a junior judgment creditor, would be sustained as against a title derived from a sale under the prior judgment.

It has, however been held, that where the homestead property exceeds $1,000 in value, a judgment, a mortgage, or deed of trust becomes a lien, that may be enforced against the overplus. So of a conveyance, without a release of the homestead exemption, where the value exceeds the exemption, the grantee can enforce his rights against the surplus, by partition or otherwise. It is only the right to claim the homestead, and to continue to use and enjoy it, that is protected. The ultimate fee is, no doubt, conveyed by a regular deed, properly acknowledged, although it fails to release the homestead right. But in such case the fee is subject to the right, of the grantor to hold it as a homestead, in the manner and for the period prescribed by the statute. Young v. Graff, 28 Ill. 20. In this case, it was held, that the premises upon which a debtor held a homestead, might be sold under a decree in chancery, subject to the exemption. The cases which hold that conveyances of the property without releasing the homestead, do not affect or transfer the homestead, must be understood as relating to, and distinguishing between, the fee, the ultimate right of property, and the exemption created by the statute. That such a conveyance passes the title to the premises, but not the right of possession as against the homestead exemption conferred by the statute. The grantee may acquire the fee or other estate of the grantor in the property, but he will retain the right to hold and enjoy it, unless he abandons or releases it in the mode prescribed in the statute. And in such a case the law will protect the right until it is released, or abandoned.

The question then arises, whether a grantee, by a deed which fails to release the homestead exemption, becomes invested with the right to hold the premises, when the vendor has abandoned the possession, ceased to occupy them as a homestead, and placed his purchaser in possession. As between these parties there can be no question but that he may. Brown v. Coon, 36 Ill. 243. But it is contended that the homestead right is a species of estate, that can only be released by a deed of conveyance. In the various cases which have heretofore come before the court, where the right has been protected as against grantees and judgment creditors, the vendor or the debtor has been in possession of the homestead, never having abandoned it, or placed the purchaser in possession. The question has not previously arisen between two voluntary grantees, in the conveyance to one of whom the exemption was released, and not to the other. In the case of Green v. Marks, 25 Ill. 221, it was held, that the debtor being entitled to the benefit of the act, could sell the premises, and transfer the possession free from a judgment lien, as none attached. And in the case of Bliss v. Clark, 39 111. 590, it was held, that the grant of the homestead to a junior judgment creditor, with a surrender of the possession, would hold against a sheriff’s deed, on a sale made under a prior judgment, whilst the premises were occupied as a homestead by the debtor.

When the grantor conveys the premises and places the grantee in possession of the homestead, we must hold that he thereby abandons it and the right to insist upon the exemption. The abandonment of the homestead is one of the means provided in the statute by which the right may be lost, and when he surrenders possession to his grantee he unmistakably abandons the homestead, although the deed does not contain a release of the right.

It is, however insisted, that the homestead act has created a new estate previously unknown to the law, which is claimed to be separate and distinct from the fee or other estate. That the homestead right, as distinguished from the homestead itself, may be sold and conveyed separately from the fee, and the grantee succeed to the right of possession during the life of the head of the family, or those entitled to claim its benefit, had the sale never been made. We have seen, that the right to claim the benefits of the act may be lost by abandoning the homestead. When the holder conveys the premises without releasing the benefit of the act, it may be claimed by him or those specified in the act, until he abandons the homestead or surrenders its possession to the grantee.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ill. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-crandall-ill-1867.