171 N.E. 629 | Ill. | 1930
From a decree of the superior court of Cook county setting aside a sale of real estate under an execution and a deed of the bailiff of the municipal court of Chicago based on that sale, Walter A. O'Brien, the grantee in the deed, has appealed.
The bill alleged as grounds for the relief prayed for, that the complainant, Mrs. Rose Logar, and Louis Logar, her husband, were the owners in joint tenancy of the premises in question, which were occupied by them and constituted their homestead; that Joseph McCarthy and John McCarthy sued the complainant in the municipal court for work done upon other premises for which she had paid them; that she employed an attorney and informed him of her defense, and he promised to notify her of the time of the trial but did not do so, though she was in Chicago and had been ready for trial since May, 1927; that she was not served with any notice or execution, and the first notice she received was a written demand for the possession of the premises dated October 15, 1928, and signed "Walter A. O'Brien;" that the claim of the McCarthys on which they sued her was for $69.95, and James H. Hooper became the purchaser at the execution sale on July 6, 1927, for $93.66, but no steps were taken at the sale to comply with the requirements of the statute in regard to the sale *630 upon execution of real estate in which the owner has a homestead estate; that the premises consisted of a lot with a three-story stone-and-brick building in front and a brick cottage in the rear, are worth $35,000, are incumbered with a mortgage of $10,000, and the rents from them are $7000 a year; that the complainant did not learn the facts until October 15, 1928, and she tenders and offers to pay what, if any, amount shall be found to be due upon the hearing of the cause but she does not intend to waive her rights to defend against the unjust claim of the McCarthys. The bill alleged that the complainant believed that O'Brien served the demand for possession to enable him to bring suit for possession of the premises, and prayed for an injunction against his doing so as well as for the setting aside of the sale and deed.
The defendant, Walter A. O'Brien, answered the bill, denying its allegations in detail, averring the recovery of a judgment for $69.93 in the municipal court by the McCarthys against the complainant on May 27, 1927, the issue of execution on June 1, its levy on June 6 and the sale of the premises on July 6, 1927, to Hooper for $93.66, the purchase of the certificate of sale from Hooper on September 15, 1928, and its assignment to O'Brien, and the execution of a deed to him by the bailiff on October 8, 1928.
The cause was referred to a master, who made his report finding the recovery of the judgment against the complainant for $69.95, the issue and levy of the execution, the sale to Hooper and the execution of the deed to O'Brien as Hooper's assignee; that on October 15, 1928, O'Brien served a demand for possession of the premises on the complainant; that prior to the sale the complainant knew that judgment had been entered against her but prior to service upon her of the demand for possession she did not know of the sale; that on May 5, 1924, the complainant and her husband acquired title, as joint tenants, to the premises in question, which are improved with a three-story and basement *631 brick building and a two-story brick building in the rear; that the complainant had lived on the premises since May 5, 1924, and at the time of the various proceedings under the judgment she had a homestead in the premises; that at the time the complainant purchased the premises in question they were incumbered with a mortgage indebtedness of $16,000, which was reduced to $10,000 prior to June 7, 1927, when a new mortgage was made, which has since been reduced to $9000; that there are no incumbrances on the premises and they were worth $27,000 at the time of the sale; that the homestead of the complainant was never set off; that no offer was made, prior to the sale, of the money required by statute to be paid for the homestead and that the complainant had at all times sufficient money to pay the judgment. Objections to the report were overruled by the master and were renewed as exceptions before the chancellor but were not sustained. The decree followed the findings of the master, set aside the sale and deed as a cloud on the complainant's title and ordered O'Brien to deliver the deed, to be canceled by the clerk of the court upon payment by the complainant to him of $93.66, with interest at five per cent from July 6, 1927, within five days after such payment.
The sale was for a grossly inadequate price and was contrary to equity and good conscience. The complainant, because of the neglect of her attorney, made no defense to the action in the municipal court, but she knew of the judgment after it was rendered and before the sale under the execution. She did not, however, know of the sale before the demand was made upon her, after the execution of the deed, for possession of the premises. The execution was not served upon her, she had no notice of it and no demand was made upon her for its payment, though she had ample resources to satisfy the execution had payment been demanded of her. Property worth $27,000 was sold for less than $100 — about one-half of one per cent of the *632
value of her equity — without demand of payment or notice to her. The evidence does not, in our judgment, sustain the appellee's claim to a homestead in the premises. While it is well settled that mere inadequacy of price is not a sufficient reason for setting aside a sale under execution where the sale is subject to redemption, this court has uniformly held, where property has been sold at a judicial sale for a grossly inadequate price, that even slight circumstances indicating unfairness or fraud will furnish sufficient ground for equitable interference. (Magnes v. Tobias,
In Davis, Cory Co. v. Chicago Dock Co.
It is assigned for error that the costs should not have been taxed against O'Brien, and this assignment must be sustained. A sale upon execution will be set aside in equity only upon equitable terms, and these usually include the return of the judgment or the bid, according to the circumstances. (Diets v. Hagler,
Objections are made to the form of the decree, which set aside the sale and deed and directed O'Brien to deliver the deed to the clerk for cancellation upon payment by the complainant to O'Brien of $93.66, with interest at five per cent from July 6, 1927, within five days after the payment of that sum, but did not direct the payment of that sum within any time. This defect can be remedied upon the entry of the decree hereafter directed.
The decree is reversed and the cause is remanded to the superior court of Cook county, with directions to enter a decree setting aside the sale under the execution and the deed to O'Brien as a cloud upon the title of the complainant, upon the payment by the complainant to the clerk of the superior court, for the use of O'Brien, of $93.66, with interest at five per cent from July 6, 1927, together with the costs of the case in the superior court, within thirty days from the entry of the decree.
Reversed and remanded, with directions. *635