Moore v. Flynn

25 N.E. 844, 135 Ill. 74
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 844 (Moore v. Flynn) 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
Moore v. Flynn, 25 N.E. 844, 135 Ill. 74 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

John Moore, appellant herein, exhibited his bill for the purpose of removing clouds from the title to twenty acres of land in Wayne county, and for other relief. In March, 1883, he had recovered in the circuit court of said county a judgment for $120, against Mary E. Flynn, upon which execution issued within one year. On December 8, 1885, an alias execution issued thereon, which was levied on said land, and on January 6, 1886, he bought said land at the sheriff’s sale. There having been no redemption from such sale, a sheriff’s deed was executed to him on April 4, 1887. In May of this latter year, through collusion with the tenant of some of the appellees, who were in possession through such tenant and claimed adversely to his title, appellant obtained possession of the premises. He was subsequently ousted by a forcible entry and detainer proceeding, but while in temporary occupancy of the land he instituted this equity suit. Waiving the question of his right, under the circumstances, to file the bill», we will pass upon the merits of the controversy.

In 1877, Mary E. Flynn (then Mary E. Schofield,) was a widow, and bought the north ten acres of the land from one Trousdale, and received from him a deed for the same. She at once went into possession of the ten acres, and occupied the same, with her children, as a homestead, until May, 1883» . when she. moved with her family to Fairfield, some eight miles distant. Sh¿ had, prior to that, married one Flynn, a bridge' carpenter, and the object in view when they'moved to Fair-field was that the husband might get employment on the railroad. 1 When she left the' premises she rented them for a year» and intended to return to her homestead at the end of the year.

In the winter of 1883-84, and prior to March, 1884, Mrs, Eliza Leet, mother of Mrs. Flynn, purchased from Trousdale; the,south ten acres of the land in question, and paid for it with her own money. Trousdale delivered to her a deed therefor, but the evidence is conflicting whether Mary E. Flynn was named therein as grantee, or “Mary Flynn’s children” (without naming them) were the grantees. We think the weight of the evidence shows the former was the case.

In March, 1884, Mrs. Leet bought from Mrs. Flynn the north ten acres, and paid her $140 therefor, and took immediate possession and control of the same. Mrs. Flynn executed no deed to her mother, but at the time of the sale delivered to her the deed that she had received from Trousdale, That deed had not been recorded, and it seems, from the evidence,- that the idea of the parties was, that as the title of" record'was still in Trousdale, the surrender to him of his deed to Mrs. Flynn, and the execution of a new deed by him, would convey the land to the grantee or grantees in such new deed, and save expense in recorder’s fees. So, also, the deed for the south ten acres, from Trousdale to Mrs. Flynn or “Mary Flynn’s children, ” was never placed upon record, but on December 20, 1885, Mrs. Leet surrendered to Trousdale both •that deed and the deed for the north ten acres, from Trousdale "to Mrs. Flynn, which had been turned over to her at the time ■she bought the last mentioned ten acres from Mrs. Flynn, in March, 1884, and they were destroyed, and a deed of convey.anee was thereupon made by Trousdale for the whole twenty .acres, to William A. Schofield, Lawrence W. Schofield and ■Charles E. Flynn, minor children of Mrs. Flynn and grand■children of Mrs. Leet, which was at once duly recorded. The -claim of Mrs. Leet is, that she bought the south ten acres with 'intention of giving it to her grandchildren above mentioned, and that if Mary E. Flynn was made grantee therein, it was a mistake on the part of the scrivener, and contrary to her directions.

In respect to the north ten acres of the land, it is claimed there was an abandonment of the homestead therein, and that thereupon the lien of the judgment of appellant attached. It is very plain, from the evidence, that said land was the homestead estate of Mrs. Flynn from 1877 until May, 1883, and that she then left her home there for a merely temporary purpose, and with'the intention of returning to it when the lease thereon should expire, at the end of a year. She moved to Fair-field, but lived in a rented house. The fair conclusion from the testimony, considered as a whole, is, that in February, 1884, she made up her mind that if she could sell her place she would remain in Fairfield and not return to her old home. There is no question but that under our statute one may sell a homestead without an existing judgment thereby becoming a lien thereon, even when such sale is made during a temporary absence therefrom. Tet such person, prior to the execution and delivery of the deed therefor to the purchaser, must • necessarily come to the conclusion to sell, and hence not to return to the homestead. The statute provides, in express terms, -that when a homestead is conveyed by the owner thereof, such ■ conveyance shall not subject the premises to any lien or in-cumbrance to which it would not have been subject in the hands of such owner. It would be destructive of the true intent and purpose of the statute to say, that the mere formation of an intention to sell, by the holder of a homestead right, during a temporary absence from such homestead, is, in and of itself, an abandonment of the homestead. It has been the uniform doctrine of this court, that the homestead laws are remedial, and should receive a liberal construction, and such as will advance the objects contemplated by the legislature in enacting them. We think that under the circumstances of this case there was no abandonment of the homestead.

It is also insisted that the law requires a certain form for the release of the homestead, and that no other form can be substituted for the required one. The propositions thus stated, have application only to a case when possession is not given pursuant to the conveyance. A surrender of possession pursuant to a conveyance of the property is not an abandonment of the estate of homestead, but is, by virtue of the statute, an appropriate mode of transferring that estate. (Eldridge v. Pierce et al. 90 Ill. 474.) Here, possession was given at the time of the sale, and although no conveyance of the legal title was made, yet as the purchase money was fully paid and possession delivered, and the vendor’s unrecorded title papers delivered to the vendee, this was sufficient to work a conveyance of the equitable title, and was a sufficient performance to take the sale out of the Statute of Frauds, even if such latter question could and did here arise. (Fitzsimmons v. Allen’s Admr. 39 Ill. 440; Temple v. Johnson, 71 id. 13.) Besides this, the land was not subject to levy and sale for the payment of appellant’s judgment at the time of the purchase by Mrs. Leet, and her actual possession and her equities were long prior, in point of time, to any right acquired by appellant; and of her possession and of her equities, and of those of her grandchildren, for whom she intended the land, appellant had both constructive and actual notice before he bought the land at sheriff’s sale.

It is suggested, however, that Mrs. Leet bought the land for the purpose of preventing the judgment from becoming a lien thereon. Even if this be so, yet her action in purchasing deprived appellant of no interest which he had in the land, and was in fraud of no right which was vested in him. Not only was the property, while in the hands of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 844, 135 Ill. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-flynn-ill-1890.