Wilson v. Schneider

17 N.E. 8, 124 Ill. 628
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 N.E. 8 (Wilson v. Schneider) 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
Wilson v. Schneider, 17 N.E. 8, 124 Ill. 628 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court :

John Arends, now deceased, executed a mortgage in his lifetime to Charles A. Wilson and Luppe I. Arends upon east half south-west quarter section 28, Town. 28 N. Range 10 B. of 3d P. M. in Iroquois county. After his decease a bill to foreclose was filed by the mortgagees in the Circuit Court of said county against his heirs and the administrator of his estate, and certain parties in possession, named Marie Schneider and Antoine Schneider, and others. It does not appear that any of the creditors, whose claims were allowed against the estate, were made defendants to the hill.

Decree of sale was entered in the foreclosure suit on February 24, 1886, and, in pursuance thereof, the premises were sold, on May 10, 1886, to Joseph Buans. The usual certificate of purchase was issued to Buans and the master’s report of sale was confirmed. The fifteen months for redemption expired on August 10, 1887, and the master’s deed was executed and delivered to the purchaser on August' 29, 1887.

The estate of Arends proved to be insolvent. On January 19, 1880, Comstock & Co. procured the allowance of a claim against the estate in the Probate Court of Iroquois county.' On August 9,1887,—seven years, six months and twenty days after the allowance of the claim—Comstock & Co. caused a special execution to be issued by the clerk of the Probate Court to the sheriff of the county for the purpose of redeeming from the foreclosure sale. The execution came into the sheriff’s hands on the same day, and Comstock & Co. at once paid him the amount necessary to redeem. The certificate of redemption was executed and recorded on said 9th day of August, 1887, and after being duly advertised the premises were sold on September 9, 1887, to Comstock & Co., who then paid to the sheriff the redemption money and interest, and received from him the usual sheriff’s deed.

As we understand the facts, notice was given of the attempted redemption by Comstock & Co. to the master and to the purchaser at the foreclosure sale before the execution to such purchaser of the master’s deed above mentioned.

The controversy is between the creditors, Comstock & Co., and the purchaser, Euans. The question involved is as to the right of a creditor, whose claim has been allowed against the estate of a deceased debtor, to redeem from the sale of the debtor’s land after the expiration of seven years from the allowance of the claim. The Circuit Court decided against such ■right.

Section 27 of chapter 77 of the Revised Statutes, entitled “Judgments, Decrees and Executions,” provides that “for the purpose of redemption from the sale of real estate of a deceased debtor, any person, whose claim shall have been probated and allowed against the estate of such deceased debtor, shall be considered a judgment creditor, and, for the purpose of enabling such creditor to redeem from such sale, it shall be lawful for the clerk of the court, wherein letters testamentary or of administration were granted, to issue special execution to the sheriff of the proper county, commanding him, upon redemption being made, to levy upon and sell the premises so sought to be redeemed, and like proceedings shall be had as upon other executions.”

This section 27 is a part of the act of March 22, 1872, entitled as aforesaid. It went into effect at the same time with the rest of the act. In order to ascertain its meaning, it must he construed in connection with the other sections, which precede and follow it. The person, whose claim has been allowed against the estate, is to be considered a “judgment creditor” in the sense, in which the term; “judgment creditor,” had already been used in the preceding sections. As a creditor, who had obtained his judgment in the lifetime of the debtor, had been required to have execution issued and a levy and. sale made, so a creditor, obtaining judgment against the estate of the deceased debtor, was also required to proceed in the same way. The object of section 27 was to give the judgment creditor of the deceased debtor the same right of redemption, which had just been given to the judgment creditor of the living debtor, and to prescribe for the former the same mode of effecting such redemption as had been prescribed for the latter.

In both cases, the issuance of an execution is an essential requirement in the proceeding for redemption. Whatever limitation the act may contain as to the time, within which an execution must be issued, applies as well to the special execution named in section 27 as to the ordinary fi. fa. mentioned in section 20. Turning to section 6, we find this language : “No execution shall issue upon any judgment after the expiration of seven years from the time the same becomes a lien, except upon the revival of the same by scire facias,” etc. The words, “any judgment,” are broad enough to include the probated claim, which is to be considered a judgment by the terms of section 27, and the special execution, provided for in that section, is certainly comprehended within the meaning of the words, “no execution.” We are, therefore, of the opinion, that the restriction laid down in section 6 was intended to apply to the claims and special executions referred to in section 27.

In the present case, the judgment was rendered on January 19, 1880, and the special execution was issued more than seven years thereafter. That execution must be regarded as having been void and of no effect, if the judgment of Comstock & Co. can be regarded as having become a lien at the date of its rendition. By the terms of section 6 the period of seven years begins with the time when the judgment “becomes a lien.”

Section 1 of the act provides “that a judgment of a court of record shall be a lien on the real estate of the person, against whom it is obtained, * * * from the time the same is rendered or revived for the period of seven years and no longer.” It is true, that the judgment in favor of the claimant against an estate is, not that he recover his damages and costs and have execution therefor, but that the amount due him be paid in due course of administration" by the administrator, etc.

But the creditors, who prove up their claims against an estate, have a right to have the land of the deceased debtor subjected to the payment of such claims in case of a deficiency of personal assets. Where the administrator files his petition to sell the land within a proper time, the purchaser at the administrator’s sale will hold the property as against the grantee of the heir. This right of the creditors of an estate to have the realty sold to pay their debts is in the nature of a lien upon the land. In Vansyclde v. Richardson, 13 Ill. 171, we said: “The statute, in effect, reserves a lien on the lands of an intestate, to secure the payment of any excess of indebtedness beyond the proceeds of the personal estate. This lien is to be enforced by the administrator for the benefit of the creditors generally.” (McCoy v. Morrow, 18 Ill. 519; Bursen v. Goodspeed, 60 id. 277; Myer v. McDoügal, 47 id. 278; Wheeler v. Daioson, 63 id. 54; Reed v. Colby, 89 id. 104; Furlong v. Riley, 103 id. 628.) In Bishop v. O’Conner, 69 Ill. 431, it is said: “It is not accurate to say that the lands are charged, but rather that they are liable to be charged,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E. 8, 124 Ill. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-schneider-ill-1888.