Weil v. Levy

82 N.E.2d 209, 335 Ill. App. 367, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 400
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 26, 1948
DocketGen. No. 43,611
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 N.E.2d 209 (Weil v. Levy) 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
Weil v. Levy, 82 N.E.2d 209, 335 Ill. App. 367, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 400 (Ill. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Marcus Weil, Administrator de bonis non of the Estate of Emanuel Levy, deceased, appealed from an order of the Probate court of Cook county dismissing for want of equity a verified amended petition -to sell real estate to pay debts. On June 8,1948, the death of Marcus Weil was suggested and Louis Dulsky was substituted as administrator de bonis non.

It appears from the verified amended petition that Emanuel Levy died intestate May 24, 1916; that he left no personal property but was seized in fee simple of certain real estate (describing it) worth $80,000; that the total claims allowed against the estate were $20,429.34; that the deceased left him surviving Sarah Levy, his widow, since deceased, and his daughters Julia Levy Dry, Ruth Levy Ettelson and Katherine Levy Goldman, his only heirs at law and next of kin; that Sarah Levy, who died after her husband, left the said daughters as her heirs; that the daughters are all married, of legal age, and have an interest in the described real estate. Pius P. Flick was appointed administrator of the decedent’s, estate on June 22, 1927. On June 17, 1929, he filed a verified petition to sell real estate to pay debts, and on January 29, 1931, he filed an amended verified petition. Two of the heirs filed a second amended answer to the amended petition, in which they alleged, inter alia, that the proceedings to sell were instituted more than seven years after the death of the decedent and that the petitioner had made unreasonable delay in the institution of the proceedings, which delay was not and could not be reasonably or lawfully explained or excused by any facts alleged in the amended petition; that the petitioner had been guilty of laches in instituting and prosecuting the said proceedings, and was barred and estopped from having the relief prayed in his said petition. When the cause came on for trial no evidence was heard, as the trial court was of the opinion that the defense of laches interposed in the second amended answer was a meritorious one and Katherine Levy Goldman, the nonresident heir, was allowed to file a demurrer to the amended petition with the understanding that the demurrer should set up the defense of laches. The said heir then filed a general and special demurrer to the amended petition, in which she alleged: “1. That it appears from the said Amended Petition that the petitioner herein has been guilty of gross laches in the filing of his said Amended Petition in that the said Amended Petition sets forth that the said Emanuel Levy died on May 24, 1916 and that the said Amended Petition was not filed herein until January 29,1931; and that the said Amended Petition does not sufficiently explain or excuse the delay of the said petitioner in filing the said Amended Petition.”

The trial court dismissed the petition upon the ground that the administrator de bonis non was barred from the relief .asked in the amended petition because said petition was filed more than seven years after the death of the decedent and that the delay in the filing was unreasonable and was not excused by any facts alleged in the petition.

In our original opinion we held that the trial court erred in holding that a petition to sell real estate to pay debts filed more than seven years after the death of the intestate was barred unless the delay was satisfactorily explained, and erred in sustaining the defense of laches interposed and in entering the decretal order from which the administrator de bonis non appealed.

Respondents filed a petition for rehearing, which was granted.

Upon a reexamination of the cases bearing upon the question involved we have reached the conclusion that we erred in our ruling and judgment.

The origin of the seven-year doctrine dates from McCoy v. Morrow, 18 Ill. 519, where a delay of approximately twenty-six years had elapsed since the decedent’s death before application was made for the granting of a petition to sell real estate to pay debts. The court said (pp. 523, 524, 525, 526):

“Creditors have a lien in this state against the estate of their deceased debtors for satisfaction of their debts, and which they may enforce, through administration, even against purchasers from heirs or devisees. Vansyckle v. Richardson, 13 Ill. 171. And there is no statute interposing any limitation of time within which the lien must be enforced. The questions then are, will delay and laches of the creditor destroy his lien and right to pursue the land of which his debtor died seized, in the hands of the grantee of the heir holding under conveyance duly recorded; and, if so, in what period of time?

“The motion that this lien is perpetual, and may be enforced at any time against land, after alienation by the heir, is wholly inadmissible. Such a rule would render titles to land insecure to a vast extent; and no man who holds lands derived through heirs or devisees, after having exhausted all the means the law affords for the ascertainment of the validity of his title, and the existence of liens and incumbrances against the lands, could be reasonably certain that he would not, after the lapse of years, be stripped of his title through such a secret lien, without actual notice or means of defense. At any period his lands might be demanded and finally wrested from him or his heirs by force of a conveyance under judicial order and sale, obtained without notice in fact, and founded on an ápparent debt against some unknown person, for years in the grave, through whom his title had passed, and which debt had been hunted or trumped up for that special purpose. . . .

“There are few greater public misfortunes than insecurity of titles to landed property. If paralyzes industry and destroys that incentive to labor and enterprise which a reasonable certainty of just reward alone will crteate, and upon which depends the public and private prosperity.

I Í

“The creditor, under our law, has ample means of, without delay, compelling administration, and, through administration, subjecting the debtor’s estate, real and personal, to the payment of the debts against the estate. If he fails to do so within a reasonable time, he will be held to have waived his lien against property descended, and the grantee of the heir will take the title discharged of the lien. It is not necessary in this case to decide what shall be a reasonable period of time for that purpose; for here the delay is so great as to leave no room, either from adjudged cases or the analogies of our law, for question. It seems to me that that certainty in- the law so necessary to enable the citizen to know his rights of property — by análogy to the lien of judgments and the limitations of entry upon and action for the recovery of lands — requires the application to this case of the fixed period of seven years from the death of the ancestor. ’ ’

In Unknown Heirs, Etc. v. Baker, 23 Ill. 430, the court followed McCoy v. Morrow, supra.

In Rosenthal, Admr., Etc. v. Renick, 44 Ill. 202, the court said (p. 205):

“. . . If the real estate in Illinois, of which Andrew Huston died seized had been aliened by his devisee for a valuable consideration before the filing of this petition, or even if money had been expended by the devisee himself in improving such real estate, tue, should have no hesitation in saying, that the lapse.

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Related

Frick v. Frick
167 N.E.2d 266 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1960)
Fohrman v. Laird
87 N.E.2d 235 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E.2d 209, 335 Ill. App. 367, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-levy-illappct-1948.