Miller v. McAlister

64 N.E. 254, 197 Ill. 72
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 64 N.E. 254 (Miller v. McAlister) 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
Miller v. McAlister, 64 N.E. 254, 197 Ill. 72 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Mag-ruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The main question, involved in this case, is the validity of the sheriff’s deed executed to the appellant. If that deed is valid, the appellant acquired thereby the undivided interests in the property in question, belonging to the appellees, which were sold at the sheriff’s sale, and, as the owner of such undivided interests, is entitled to partition, as prayed in the original bill. If, however, the sheriff’s deed is invalid, then the prayer of the cross-bill, filed by the appellees in the court below, permitting a redemption from the sheriff’s sale upon the payment by the appellees of the amount of such sale and interest thereon, and setting aside and canceling the sheriff’s deed in case of such payment, was properly granted by the court below.

First—The court below found in its decree that Mary E. McAlister, William McAlister and Owen McAlister took the entire estate in the land in question from William P. Moore, the father of Mrs. McAlister, under the deed executed by him on August 23, 1865. We are of the opinion that this finding of the court was correct. The deed in question conveyed the eighty acres here in controversy to Mary E. McAlister “and her children born and to be born.” The only children in existence when the deed was made on August 23, 1865, were the appellee, William McAlister, and his brother, Owen McAlister, and, therefore, these were the only children of Mary E. McAlister, who took title under the deed. The children, born after the date of the deed, took nothing. Hence, Mary Elizabeth McAlister and her two sons, William McAlister and Owen McAlister, became the owners by virtue of the deed, each of an undivided one-third of the premises.

A grantee must be in esse at the time a deed is executed; otherwise no title will pass by the deed. An unborn child has no such existence as will enable it to take a present grant of lands by deed. In Morris v. Caudle, 178 Ill. 9, we held that a deed to a grantee in esse and his unborn brothers and sisters, which is delivered and recorded after the birth and death of a sister, is valid as to the grantee in esse at the execution of the deed, but creates no rights in the deceased sister or those claiming under her; and that, while an unborn child may inherit property by descent or take by devise upon coming into being, yet it cannot take a present grant of lands by deed, although in ventre sa mere when the deed was executed. Also, in Faloon v. Simshauser, 130 Ill. 649, we held that, where a deed of land is made to a woman by name and “her children,” she and her children, living at the time of the execution of the deed, will take as tenants in common, but a child born thereafter will take nothing; and that, in the case of a grant of an immediate estate in possession, the grantee must be in esse, and a deed of that kind may be avoided by showing that the grantee came into being subsequently to the delivery of the deed.

Second—The ground, upon which the appellees claim that the sheriff’s deed to the, appellant should be set aside, is that, at the sheriff’s sale, the interests of the appellees in the property were sold for a grossly inadequate price, and that, in connection with such inadequacy of price, there were irregularities, which will justify a court of equity in setting aside the sheriff’s deed and al: lowing a redemption from the sheriff’s sale. One of thé irregularities insisted upon is, that the land levied upon was sold en masse, and that, although each subdivision of the land may have been offered separately, yet that, when no bids were made upon the tracts so separately offered, the sheriff should have added two of them together, and then three of them together, and so on, until all the tracts had been thus offered; and that, inasmuch as the latter course was not pursued, it was not proper to offer a sale of the property en masse. Another of the irregularities insisted upon is, that no demand was ever made upon the defendants in the execution for the payment of the same, and that they were never notified of the issuance of the execution under which the sale was made, or that any sale was or was to be made. Another of the irregularities insisted upon is, that the sheriff failed to set off to Mary E. McAlister a homestead in the premises sold, it being claimed that she had a homestead therein.

This court has held in a number of cases that, while inadequacy of price alone may not justify a court of chancery in setting aside a judicial sale, yet that equity will seize hold of serious irregularities in the mode of sale, or of any circumstances of unfairness towards the debtor, in order to grant relief in a case where such gross inadequacy is shown to exist. Where property has been sold upon execution, or at a judicial sale, at a grossly inadequate price, even slight circumstances, indicating unfairness or fraud, either upon the part of the officer, the purchaser, or the party to the record benefited by the sale, will furnish sufficient ground for equitable interposition. Where the inadequacy is gross, the purchaser can retain his advantage only by showing that he acquired title by proceedings free from fraud or irregularity. (Parker v. Shannon, 137 Ill. 376, and cases cited on p. 372; Davis v. Chicago Dock Co. 129 id. 180; Hobson v. McCambridge, 130 id. 367). It is true that, where the judgment debtor has notice of the sale, he should present his application to have it set aside before the right of redemption has expired in the court from which the execution is issued; but the rule above stated is in nowise weakened by the fact, that there may be a waiver of the right to set aside the sale after the expiration of the time for redemption, especially where such a length of time has elapsed since the making of the sale as to amount to laches, and where title has passed from the grantee in the sheriff’s deed into the hands of a bona fide purchaser. (Clark v. Glos, 180 Ill. 556).

In the case at bar, the proof shows clearly that the interests of the appellees in the eighty-acre tract in question were sold for a grossly inadequate price. The land, according to the testimony of the witnesses, was worth $80.00 per acre, or $6400.00 for the whole tract. The undivided one-third interest of William McAlister in the tract was, therefore, worth $2133.33, and yet it was sold for only $75.00. The undivided one-third interest of Mary Elizabeth McAlister in the south forty acres of the tract was worth $1066.66, and was sold for only $70.00. The combined interests of the two appellees in the eighty-acre tract were worth $3200.00, and were sold for the small sum of $145.00 to the appellant. Where a tract of land worth $1000.00 is sold to satisfy an execution for less than $30.00, the tract being susceptible of division, there is gross inadequacy of price in the sale. (Stewart v. Croes, 5 Gilm. 442). Where property of the value of $1500.00 at the time of the sale is sold en masse for $71.65 without having been offered in smaller tracts, the sale is for a grossly inadequate price. (Smith v. Huntoon, 134 Ill. 24). Where lots of the value of $2000.00 above all encumbrances are sold under execution for only $60.00, the price is grossly inadequate. (Lurton v. Rodgers, 139 Ill. 554).

Third—In his return upon the execution the sheriff states, that he offered the west half of the south-west quarter, etc., being the whole of the eighty-acre tract, in separate tracts of twenty acres each, and received no bids, and that hé then offered the entire interest of William McAlister in and to the whole eighty acres, and received a bid of $75.00.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E. 254, 197 Ill. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-mcalister-ill-1902.