Todd v. Todd

214 Ill. App. 282, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 220
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 29, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 214 Ill. App. 282 (Todd v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. Todd, 214 Ill. App. 282, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 220 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Waggoner

delivered the opinion of the court.

James S. Todd died intestate July 11, 1916, leaving as one of his heirs, Anna M. Bybolt, who inherited an undivided one-seventh of his real estate in DeWitt county, Illinois. A suit to partition the real estate was filed July 19, 1916, in the circuit court of DeWitt county. On December 2, 1916, decree for sale was entered, and a sale was made by the master in chancery on January 6, 1917. An intervening petition was filed by David Adler & Sons on January 8, 1917. Edith E. Arthur filed an intervening petition on January 12, 1917. No report of sale had been filed when the intervening petitions were filed. The share of Anna M. Eybolt amounted to $3,925.32, and by agreement $825.32 was paid to Edith E. Arthur, and the residue, amounting to $3,100, is claimed by both intervening petitioners.

Edith E. Arthur is a daughter of Anna M. Eybolt. She procured a judgment against her mother on October 7, 1915, in DeWitt county, for $6,338.68. On the same day execution was issued to Macon county, levied on personalty and $568.65 was realized and credited on the judgment. A second execution was issued on November 18,1916, to Macon county, under which certain lands in Macon county were redeemed from a prior execution sale to Wilson Brothers, resold and brought the redemption money only, $614.82; this land was worth $16,000 and was subject to an $8,000 mortgage. Edith E. Arthur obtained a deed, so the transaction netted her a profit of the difference between $16,000 and $8,614.82, or $7,385.18. Edith E. Arthur has in fact received on her judgment $568.65 on the first execution, $7,385.18 profit on the redemption of the real estate, and $825.32 from- the master in chancery, making $8,779.15, which is in excess of the principal and interest due on the judgment. The only credits appearing are $568.65 and $825.32, or a total of $1,393.97, so Edith E. Arthur still claims a balance due on the judgment of the difference between $6,338.68 and $1,393.97, or $4,944.71. On January 12, 1917, Edith B. Arthur had a third execution issued on her judgment. This was the first execution issued to Dewitt county and was issued more than fifteen months after the judgment was rendered. On January 12, 1917, Edith B. Arthur procured from Anna M. Bybolt an assignment of all right, title and interest in and to the estate of James S. Todd for one dollar and “other good and valuable consideration.” On the same day Edith B. Arthur filed an intervening petition in the partition suit.

David Adler & Sons obtained judgment in the circuit court of Macon county on November 8, 1915, for $2,695.05 against Anna M. Bybolt. On the same day execution was issued to the sheriff of Macon county, and was returned February 5,1916, no property found. On January 8, 1917, a second execution was issued to Dewitt county, but no levy was made or certificate of levy filed. On the same day, January 8, 1917 a transcript of the judgment was filed in Dewitt county, but no execution was issued on this transcript. The intervening petition was filed as above noted by David Adler & Sons on January 8, 1917.

The 'appellee, Edith B. Arthur, in her brief says:

“The appellee herein has filed her intervening petition under sections 14 and 15 of the Partition Act, claiming that she was a judgment creditor having a lien on the interest of Anna Todd Bybolt in the lands of James S. Todd, deceased, and by her intervening petition, or bill of interpleader, she sets up those rights and asks the court to recognize and declare her lien upon those lands.”

The master in chancery found (and the circuit court approved his finding) that the execution issued October 7, 1915, to Macon county made the judgment of Edith Arthur obtained in Dewitt county a lien on any lands that the judgment debtor, Anna M. Bybolt, might own in Dewitt county for a period of seven years, and that it was not necessary for an execution to issue to the sheriff of Dewitt county to make the judgment a lien on the land owned by the judgment debtor in Dewitt county.

Section 1, of chapter 77, Hurd’s Bev. St., provides:

“A judgment of a court of record shall be a lien on the real, estate of the person against whom it is obtained situated within the county for which the court is held, from the time the same is rendered or revived for the period of seven years and no longer: Provided, that there shall be no priority of the lien of one judgment over that of another rendered at the same term of court, or on the same day in-vacation; and upon filing in the office of the clerk of any court of record in any county in this State, of a transcript of a judgment or decree rendered in any other county of this State, such judgment shall have the like force and effect, and shall be a lien upon the real estate of the party against whom the same is obtained in said county where filed, and execution may issue thereon in said county, in like manner as in the county where originally obtained. When execution is not issued on a judgment within one year from the time the same becomes a lien, it shall thereafter cease to be a lien, but execution may issue upon such judgment at any time within said seven years, and shall become a lien on such real estate from the time it shall be delivered to the sheriff, or other proper officer, to be executed.”

Sections 4 and 34, same chapter, provide for executions to ‘1 any county, ’ ’ and that in such case a certificate of levy shall be filed, and, until filed, such levy shall not take effect as against creditors and bona fide purchasers without notice.

By the statute a judgment “shall be a lien on the real estate of the person against whom it is obtained situated within the county for which the court is held, from the time the same-is rendered.” If execution is not issued in one year “from the time the same becomes a lien,” it shall cease to "be a lien. It is obvious that when the legislature used the expression “from the time the same becomes a lien” they referred to the “time the same is rendered.” Therefore an execution must issue within one year from the date of the judgment to continue the judgment lien seven years on real estate of the judgment debtor located in the county in which the judgment was rendered. ■ -

At the common law, a judgment created no lien upon the lands of a defendant. Durham v. Heaton, 28 Ill. 264 (275). The lien of judgments on real estate and the power to sell lands under execution are regulated alone by statute. The lien only attaches and becomes effective by force of the statute, and only in the mode, at the time, and upon the conditions and limitations imposed by it. It receives no vigor or even aid from the common law, to which it was unknown. The statute has not, in terms, nor so far as we can see, by implication, given the same force to the levy on land under an execution, to create a lien, that arises from the rendition of a judgment. The statute has said the latter shall create the lien, but has not said the levy may, except in cage an execution is sent to a foreign, county, and the levy is recorded as required. Tenney v. Hemenway, 53 Ill. 97 (101); Hall v. Gould, 79 Ill. 16 (22). It was said in Sapp v. Wightman, 103 Ill.

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Related

Durham v. Heaton
28 Ill. 264 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1862)
Tenney v. Hemenway
53 Ill. 97 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
Hall v. Gould
79 Ill. 16 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Sapp v. Wightman
103 Ill. 150 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1882)
Dobbins v. First National Bank
112 Ill. 553 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
Russell v. Chicago Trust & Savings Bank
17 L.R.A. 345 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1891)
Young v. Clapp
147 Ill. 176 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 Ill. App. 282, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-todd-illappct-1919.