Dawson v. Hayden

67 Ill. 52 | Ill. | 1873

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of ejectment, brought by the appellees against the appellant, for certain lots in the town of Peters-burg, in Menard county. Appellant executed a deed of trust for the premises in controversy, bearing date July 21, 1853, to secure certain indebtedness due from him to appellees, and the trustee to whom the trust deed was executed sold and conveyed the premises to appellees by deed bearing date December 15, 1859.

Appellant asserts a homestead exemption in the premises, his wife not having joined in the deed of trust, and it containing no release of the homestead right.

The homestead act of 1851 exempted the homestead only “ from levy and forced sale under any process or order from any court of law or equity in this State.” This sale was made by a trustee, under a trust deed, and was not made under a levy under any process or order of any court, and does not come within the provisions of that act. The trust deed having been executed before the passage of the amendatory act of 1857, requiring in all cases the signature and acknowledgment of the wife as conditions of the alienation of the homestead, was not affected by the latter act. Ely et al. v. Eastwood, 26 Ill. 107; Smith v. Marc, ib. 150.

It is objected that the certificate of acknowledgment to the trustee’s deed was defective, and that the deed was read in evidence without proof of its execution. The defects suggested in the certificate are, that the deed was executed and the acknowledgment taken in the State of Missouri, and it does not appear that the acknowledgment was in conformity with the laws of that State, nor that the grantor executed "the deed “freely and voluntarily.”

Ho matter whether the acknowledgment was in conformity with the laws of Missouri or not; it was taken before a notary public under his notarial seal, in conformity with our own law, which was sufficient, the premises being situate in this State. Appellant insists1 that the trustee’s deed is governed by the confirmatory act of 1853, (Sess. Laws 1853, p. 89,) which requires the certificate to show that the deed wras executed “freely and voluntarily.” We need only say that statute relates to deeds made by husband and wife, (Short v. Conlee, 28 Ill. 229,) and we do not perceive how it applies to this trustee’s deed made by the husband alone.

The certificate states that the grantor acknowledged the deed “to be his act and deed for the purpose therein mentioned.” That was a sufficient acknowledgment. Short v. Conlee, supra; Lockwood v. Mills, 39 Ill. 602.

It is lastly objected, that the trustee did not execute the power of sale in accordance with the deed of trust, in this: that the deed of trust required at least sixty days’ notice of the sale by advertisement, etc., while the notice given by the trustee was only sixty-two days, Sundays included; appellant contending that the Sundays intervening in that time should, not be counted to make out the required sixty days. Without considering its merits, the objection is one which is not available in this action. By the trust deed, the legal estate was vested in the trustee, and he conveyed it to the appellees; whether in compliance with the provisions of the trust deed or not, was not a subject of inquiry in an ejectment suit. If the trustee sold contrary to the conditions of the trust deed, the remedy was in equity. Graham v. Anderson, 42 Ill. 517; Reese v. Allen, 5 Gilm. 236.

The judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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