Sutherland v. Harrison

86 Ill. 363
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 86 Ill. 363 (Sutherland v. Harrison) 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
Sutherland v. Harrison, 86 Ill. 363 (Ill. 1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

There are no disputed facts here, the questions involved being those of law, and mainly the one whether the widow should be held to pay the entire amount of this unpaid purchase money for this acre of land, or only her proportional part thereof, according to her interest in the land.

Onr statute in respect to the descent and distribution of intestate estates provides, that “ when there shall be a widow and no child or children or descendants of a child or children of the intestate (as in this case), then the one-half of the real estate, and the whole of the personal estate, shall go to such widow as her exclusive estate forever.”

Under this provision, is the widow entitled to have and enjoy the personal property which she has received as distributee, without the deduction of this debt in question ?

It is a well-settled principle, that in the administration of assets the personal estate is the natural and primary fund for the payment of debts and legacies, and, as a general rule, must first be exhausted before the real estate can be made liable ; and it will not be exonerated by a charge on the real estate, unless there be express words, or a plain intent, in the will, to make such exoneration. Clinefelter v. Ayers, 16 Ill. 329 ; Harris v. Douglass, 64 id. 466. This general principle seems to be admitted by appellant’s counsel, but it is contended there is this distinction here: that in the.case of a mortgage, for instance, on land, it may be made for the general benefit of the estate; the personal estate may have received the benefit. Whereas a claim for the purchase money of land, as that here, can only be for the benefit of the particular piece of land purchased, in which case it is claimed that the land is the primary fund, and is to be first applied in payment, and the personal' éstate is only to be resorted to as auxiliary. As supporting appellant’s position, a class of cases is cited to the effect that if one purchases an estate subject to a charge made upon it by a previous owner, the estate charged is the primary, and the personal estate merely the auxiliary and collateral, fund for the payment of the debt charged upon it, and the heir at law or devisee will take such estate cum onere; and as it is sometimes given as a reason that the personal estate of the purchaser has not received any addition to its funds by means of the incumbrance, that is contended to be the principle which applies, whether the personal estate has received any benefit from the incumbrance to be discharged; and that, where it has not, the personal estate should be exonerated, and the debt be paid by the land. There is no such principle of general application.

In Cumberland v. Codrington, 3 Johns. Ch. 229, Chancellor Kent reviews at length most of the cases referred to by appellant’s counsel, with many others, and lays it down that, “ when a man gives a bond and mortgage for a debt of his own contracting, the mortgage is understood to be merely a collateral security for the personal obligation. But when a man purchases, or has devised to him land with an incumbrance on it, he becomes a debtor only in respect to the land; and if he promises to pay it, it is a promise rather on account of the land, which continues, notwithstanding, in many cases, to be the primary fund. The same equity which in other cases makes the personal estate contribute to ease the land, as between the real and personal representatives, will here make the land relieve the personal estate.” And again : “ The books are full of cases which subject the personal estate primarily, and as the ‘natural fund’ to the payment of debts originally contracted by the party, and even though the debt should be created by mortgage, without either bond or covenant.”

A full collection and review of the cases on this subject may be found in the note to Duke of Ancaster v. Mayer, Lead. Cas. in Eq., volume 1, part 2, page 881, where it is said: “ But the distinction between mortgage debts originally contracted by the testator, and those contracted by another, is also established in the American cases; and it is agreed that, in the latter case, the land is considered as the debtor, and shall bear its own burden. If one purchases an estate subject to a mortgage, and dies, his personal estate shall not be applied to the exoneration of the land, unless he has done some act by which he has created a new and original liability in himself.” The contest in the cases in this regard of a charge made upon land by a former owner, is, whether the ancestor has made the debt contracted by the previous owner his own, it being unquestioned that, if he has, then his personal estate is primarily liable for its payment. No dissent is found in the cases from the general doctrine that where one gives a mortgage on land for a debt of his own contracting, his personal estate is the primary, not the auxiliary, fund for the payment of the mortgage debt, and the debt should be paid out of the personal property to the exoneration of his real estate. Howes v. Dehon, 3 Gray, 205 ; Plimpton v. Fuller, 11 Allen, 139. If a mortgage creditor proceeds against the land, the heir or devisee is prima facie entitled to reimbursement out of the personal estate. Chase v. Lockerman, 11 Gill & J. 185; Walker’s Estate, 3 Eawle, 229. The debt here involved is not that of another, a former owner, but it is the intestate’s own orieinal debt, contracted by himself in the most binding form.

As respects a contract for the sale of land, in the view of a court of equity, that which is effectually contracted to be done, is to be considered as done, and it holds that such contracts are, for the most part, equivalent in equity to actual conveyances in law. The vendor, as between him and .the vendee, is from the time of the contract regarded in equity as a trustee of the land for the purchaser, and the latter a trustee of the purchase money for the former, so that the purchaser is treated as the equitable owner of the land, and it is devisable and descendible as his real estate; and the money is treated as the personal estate of the vendor, and is subject to the like modes of disposition by him as other personalty, and is distributable in like manner on his death. Jer. Eq. Jur. 446 ; Dart on Vend, and Purch. 114, in note, and authorities there cited. And it is there stated, in the note, that, unless some circumstances affect the case, the heir of the purchaser may require the purchase money to be paid out of the personal estate of the purchaser in the hands of his personal representative. Indeed, so far from there being any distinction in this respect, as suggested in argument, between the case of a mortgage debt where there is a mortgage on land, and that of a debt for the unpaid purchase money for land where there is a vendor’s lien therefor, there are numerous explicit decisions to the contrary, which directly hold that in case of such unpaid purchase money the personal representative must pay the purchase money out of the personal property for the benefit of the heir, Broome v. Mouck, 10 Ves. 596 ; Dart on Vend, and Pur. 125 ; Livingston v. Newkirk, 3 Johns. Ch. 312 ; Cogswell v. Cogswell, 2 Edw. Ch. 231: Johnson v. Corbett, 11 Paige, 265 ; Lamport v. Beeman, 34 Barb. 239 ; Wright v. Holbrook, 32 N. Y. 587; 1 Sugd. Vend. 8th Am. ed. 192 marg.

Another class of cases has been cited by appellant’s counsel as supporting the claim of appellant, of the character of Lieford v. Powyskeek, 1 L. R. Eq.

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86 Ill. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutherland-v-harrison-ill-1877.