Swanson v. Kohout

136 N.E. 656, 304 Ill. 606
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1922
DocketNo. 14756
StatusPublished

This text of 136 N.E. 656 (Swanson v. Kohout) 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
Swanson v. Kohout, 136 N.E. 656, 304 Ill. 606 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees filed their bill praying that for reasons alleged in the bill a certain transcript of proceedings and judgment before a justice of the peace, filed in the circuit court, the levy of an execution on real estate and sale thereof by the sheriff, the deed executed by the sheriff to the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, and subsequent deeds made by the sheriff’s grantee, be canceled and set aside as clouds on appellees’ title, and that the person claiming title to the land adversely be enjoined from prosecuting a forcible detainer suit or other action for possession. After answer filed the cause was referred to the master to take the testimony and report his conclusion. The master reported that appellees were entitled to the relief prayed and recommended a decree to that effect upon condition that appellees reimburse the purchaser at sheriff’s sale to the amount of the justice of the peace judgment against appellees, with interest from the date of its rendition. The chancellor, after overruling exceptions of appellants, rendered a decree in accordance with the master’s recommendation, and defendants have appealed.

Appellees, Anton Swanson and Tillie Swanson, are husband and wife. They owned lot 496, block 13, in Riverside, Cook county. Anton owned the east half of the lot and Tillie.the west half. There was a residence on the east half of the lot. The west half was vacant. In 1914 Swanson employed B. A. Melborn, a contractor, to repair the residence. The Drexel Sash and Door Company furnished the material, and it brought suit in a justice court against both Swanson and the contractor for a balance due for the price of material furnished, $53.38, and obtained judgment by default against Swanson and Melborn on November 21, 1914. Mrs. Swanson was not served with summons. The judgment recites the material was furnished on the order of Melborn and was used in repairing the building; that there was a balance due the Drexel Sash and Door Company of $53.38; that plaintiff had caused a notice of mechanic’s lien to be served on Swanson according to the requirements of the statute. The judgment recited that plaintiff have a mechanic’s lien on the property, the lien to attach as of June 1, 1914, and that execution issue. An execution was issued December 15, 1914, and delivered to a constable. It was returned January 23, 1915, the return stating Swanson and Melborn had no personal property to satisfy the judgment. A transcript of the judgment was filed in the circuit court January 29, 1915. A general execution was issued out of the circuit court January 30, 1915, and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Cook county. It was returned no property found and no part satisfied. Another general execution was issued August 4, 1915. It was returned satisfied by a sale of the property in controversy to E. W. Eroehlich on September 7 for the amount of the judgment and costs, $77.03. A certificate of purchase was issued by the sheriff to Froehlich, which was filed September 15, 1915. The certificate was assigned to Joseph Meydrech, who is president of the Drexel Sash and Door Company. No redemption having been made from the sale, the sheriff made a deed to Meydrech on January 23, 1917, which was recorded January 27, 1917. In February, 1921, Meydrech sold the property to Kohout for $500. Kohout made a trust deed on the property to secure his note for $2000 and insured the premises for $3500. He sold the note to Novotny for $1800. The master found the lot was the homestead of the Swansons and had never been abandoned by them as such. He also found the transcript of the justice of the peace judgment was never recorded in the circuit court, and that the execution issued from the circuit court and the levy and sale under it were void. The decree as abstracted approves and confirms the master’s report and grants the relief prayed but makes no specific finding on the homestead question.

Appellants argue the evidence showed the homestead has been abandoned; that Swanson and wife are separated, she residing in California and he in Illinois, and no homestead right existed in either of them. Appellees say they do not rest their claim for relief on the provisions of the homestead exemption laws, but base their right to relief on the ground that the sheriff’s deed was void because it rested on an execution wholly void for lack of authority in the clerk of the circuit court to issue it; that the execution, levy and sale by the sheriff were void, and they and all subsequent deeds are clouds on appellees’ title. The material contention of appellees is that the transcript of the justice of the peace judgment filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court January 29, 1915, was never recorded, and the clerk therefore had no authority to issue an execution.

Section 28 of the Lien act provides for the enforcement of liens in suits at law, and such action may be brought in the court of a justice of the peace where the amount involved does not exceed his jurisdiction. Section 29 provides if an execution issued on a judgment obtained from a justice of the peace is returned not satisfied, “a transcript of such judgment may be taken to the circuit court and spread upon the records thereof, and execution issued thereon as in other cases except that the lien of the same shall be preserved as a preferred lien on the property improved from date recited in the judgment, and enforced thereon the same as if a decree had been rendered by the circuit court in a suit to enforce such lien under the provision of this act.”

The judgment of the justice of the peace in this case recites that it is for material furnished by plaintiff, a subcontractor, to improve the premises; that plaintiff has a lien on the premises described for the payment of the judgment. The justice of the peace could not issue a special execution against the-real estate, but by filing a transcript of it in the circuit court, “and having it spread on the records thereof,” the plaintiff was entitled to have execution issued. We are of opinion the statute contemplates that the execution issued from the circuit court shall be a special execution against the property subject to the lien. In the enforcement of mechanics’ liens it is required that the property against which the liens exist shall be exhausted before resorting to other property. First Baptist Church v. Andrews, 87 Ill. 172; Green v. Sprague, 120 id. 416.

We do not understand appellants to deny that if the transcript was never recorded, the execution, levy and sale were unauthorized and void. They insist the proof shows the transcript was recorded. M. P. Delano, on behalf of appellees, testified he was deputy clerk of the circuit court. He produced the transcript of the justice of the peace judgment and said it was a file of the office and was not recorded in any book. He testified that in May, 1907, the clerk discontinued recording justice’s transcripts unless the fee was paid and request made that the transcript be recorded. Such transcripts were recorded in “Record J, Letter J.” Witness had examined “Record J” and there was no record of the transcript. Appellants contend that this proof was not competent; that it was merely the testimony of a public officer as to his conclusion. The proof was competent and in the absence of any other proof warranted the conclusion the transcript was never recorded. Cross v. Pinckneyville Mill Co. 17 Ill. 54; City of Beardstown v. City of Virginia, 81 id. 541; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec: 78; 16 Cyc. 936.

Appellants offered no evidence that the transcript was recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.E. 656, 304 Ill. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-kohout-ill-1922.