52 N.E.2d 133 | Ill. | 1943
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *130 The appellee, David DeMartini, filed his complaint in the superior court of Cook county against Giuseppe DeMartini, Rosa DeMartini, and the appellant, Celestina DeMartini, for the partition of the real estate described in the complaint, of which he claimed to own an undivided one-half interest by virtue of a sheriff's deed. Appellant answered denying the plaintiff's title, and claiming title to the whole property. The cause was referred to a master, who made a report finding that David DeMartini and Celestina DeMartini were each the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property. The chancellor overruled exceptions to this report and entered a decree for partition, from which Celestina DeMartini has appealed.
There is no controversy as to any of the facts in the case. The transactions between the different parties to *131 this litigation, set out in their chronological order, are substantially as follows:
On June 16, 1923, the defendants Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini, his wife, became owners in joint tenancy of the real estate described in the complaint. On March 31, 1932, they conveyed the real estate by warranty deed to Joseph B. Giunta, who instantly reconveyed the same by warranty deed to the defendant Rosa DeMartini. On January 16, 1936, the plaintiff filed suit in the circuit court of Cook county against Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini to have the deeds of March 31, 1932, set aside as fraudulently executed and to have judgment entered against them in his favor on a note for $3000. On March 30, 1939, appellant, Celestina DeMartini, caused judgment in the sum of $2118.97 to be confessed in the superior court of Cook county on a note executed by the defendants Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini. On April 14, 1939, a decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the circuit court case, finding that the aforesaid deeds of March 31, 1932, were fraudulent and void as to the plaintiff and setting the same aside as to him. On May 12, 1939, an appeal in this case was taken by the defendant Rosa DeMartini. On February 23, 1940, the decree of the circuit court was affirmed by the Appellate Court, and leave to appeal to this court was denied at our June term in 1940. In the meantime an execution was issued on the judgment of Celestina DeMartini and on August 1, 1939, the sheriff sold all the right, title and interest of the defendant Giuseppe DeMartini, in said real estate, to the appellant, Celestina DeMartini, for the sum of $3261.69, but no sale was made of the interest of Rosa DeMartini, who held the record title to all of said real estate subject to the plaintiff's decree of April 14, 1939. The sheriff, from the proceeds of the sale, paid to the defendant Giuseppe DeMartini the sum of $1000, this being, according to the allegation in appellant's *132 answer in the instant case, in "extinguishment of his homestead rights." On November 1, 1940, the defendants Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini conveyed to the appellant, Celestina DeMartini, by quitclaim deed, with the release and waiver of the right of homestead, all their interest in the real estate herein. On November 7, 1940, the sheriff issued his deed to the appellant, Celestina DeMartini, pursuant to his sale of the interest of Giuseppe DeMartini on August 1, 1939. On January 7, 1941, the sheriff sold all the right, title, and interest of the defendant Giuseppe DeMartini, in said real estate, to the plaintiff for $3200, and on April 18, 1942, issued his sheriff's deed to the plaintiff pursuant to such sale. The defendants Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini have resided on said premises since June, 1923. Appellant, Celestina DeMartini, has never resided thereon.
Appellant bases her alleged ownership of the undivided one-half interest originally belonging to Giuseppe DeMartini upon the priority of her judgment in point of time over that of appellee. She says that her judgment was a first lien, and that the sheriff's sale and deed thereunder disposed of all the interest of Giuseppe DeMartini in said premises, leaving nothing for the sheriff to sell on January 7, 1941, under the execution issued on the later judgment of appellee, and the deed of the sheriff to appellee consequently conveyed nothing. She says further that as there is no proof in the record of the value of the premises at any time, and there being no presumption that homestead premises are worth in excess of $1000, appellee has not established that he became entitled to any interest therein by virtue of his sheriff's deed; that the premises being the homestead of Giuseppe DeMartini and Rosa DeMartini, they had the right to convey the same, and their grantee took free and clear of all claims of creditors. Appellant's final contention is that in any event, appellee by his sheriff's deed would take only an undivided one-half *133 interest in said premises over and above the homestead estate and appellant would be entitled to the homestead estate of $1000 and an undivided one-half in the excess.
Consideration of some general principles which have become fully established by the decisions of this court will serve to pave the way to a clear understanding of the rights of the parties in relation to the various transactions and the effect of those transactions upon their respective rights. First, it is the settled law of this State that a judgment is not a lien on real estate which the judgment debtor, before the rendition of the judgment, had conveyed away to defraud his creditors, the doctrine being that as between parties to it the conveyance is valid and binding and no interest, legal or equitable, remains in the grantor upon which the lien can rest. This doctrine has been affirmed again and again by this court. (Union National Bank v.Lane,
Secondly, it is well established that a transfer of property fraudulent and void as to creditors is nevertheless valid as between the parties thereto. (Illinois Trust Co. v. Jones,
Prior to the conveyance by Giuseppe DeMartini to his wife, Rosa, they were the owners in joint tenancy of said premises; and the property being occupied by them as a residence, an estate of homestead was vested in Giuseppe DeMartini, the husband. (Johnson
v. Muntz,
This brings us next to consider whether the defendant, Giuseppe DeMartini, after the conveyance to his wife, which stripped him of his title, inasmuch as he continued residing on the premises with his wife, as his family, of *136
which he was the head, continued to be the "householder having a family" designated by the statute as entitled to an estate of homestead. As we recently pointed out in the case of Johnson v.Muntz,
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the trial court was correct in deciding that none of the defendants had a right of homestead in the premises described in the complaint, that appellant and appellee are each the owner of an undivided one-half interest in said real estate as tenants in common, and that appellee is entitled to partition of said premises.
It is contended by appellant that the lower court was in error in decreeing that the costs be taxed against the property. There is no technical rule governing the exact apportionment of costs in such cases. The court is required to equitably apportion the costs and we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion.
For the reasons we have indicated, the decree of the superior court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.