Montague v. Selb

106 Ill. 49 | Ill. | 1883

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

When this case was before us at a former term, the controversy was whether the present appellant was entitled to dower and homestead in the premises described in the bill without contributing on account of the prior incumbrances, or whether she was bound to make contribution on that account. She contended that, under the evidence in the record, the purchasers at the administrator’s sale assumed the burden of removing the prior incumbrances, and took title subject to her right of dower and estate of homestead. The present appellees denied this position, and contended that she was liable to make contribution on account of the prior incumbrances. We sustained this view, and reversed the decree and remanded the cause, and in doing so used this, language: “The decree of the circuit court granting to the widow, unconditionally, dower and an estate of homestead, was therefore erroneous, in not subjecting her rights each to the condition that she should, as to each right, contribute a ratable share, in regard to such right, of the redemption money paid by appellants for the discharge of the mortgages, before she should be permitted to avail herself of that right. The decree is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for other proceedings not incompatible with the views here expressed. ” (Selb et al. v. Montague, 102 Ill. 452.) But the court below, instead of proceeding in compliance with this direction, permitted the present appellees, by a supplemental answer, to set up that since the former hearing they had obtained a deed on the certificate of purchase which they then held, and which, in the argument and consideration of the case when formerly here, was treated as a redemption from or payment and discharge of the prior mortgage, and to rely on that deed as a bar to appellant’s claim for dower and estate of homestead, and the present question is, whether appellees can be allowed to now set up that deed as a complete bar to appellant’s claim for dower and estate of homestead.

In their original answer, appellees, after stating their ownership of the certificate of purchase, prayed the court that appellant he decreed to pay ratably the amount paid out by them on that account. It was not then asserted that appellees, by acquiring the certificate, had acquired an adverse interest in the property, but it was, by implication at least, conceded that they had simply removed a common burden upon both their and appellant’s interests, and hence that in equity appellant was bound to make contribution, as a condition to the enjoyment of her rights. Had appellant been then advised the purpose was to assert an interest adverse to her claim, under and by virtue of that purchase, there was yet ample time in which she could have protected herself by making a redemption, but by asking that she be required to make contribution, she was, in effect, told redemption had already been made, and she had a right to rely on the belief that the sole question involved was whether she was compelled to make contribution as a condition to the assertion of her claim for dower and homestead. If she was entitled to make contribution then, it is inequitable that she should now be told she has no such right. Appellees having, then, asserted that she should make, a contribution to them for having removed a prior incumbrance to their common interest, are now equitably estopped to say that was not true, but that she was only entitled to make a redemption, which has since been barred by lapse of- time.

But appellant’s right to treat appellees’ purchase of the certificate as the simple removal of a prior incumbrance upon her and their common interest, rests also upon another very satisfactory ground. The record shows occupancy of the premises as a homestead by Daniel Montague at the time he and appellant were married, and thenceforth until his death, and the continued occupancy of the premises as a homestead by appellant and her family since that time; and it also appears that the homestead estate will not necessarily embrace the entire premises, but leave something beyond for the heirs and creditors. When Daniel Montague died, therefore, this was the condition of these premises. They were charged with the payment of these mortgages, but he was in possession and still had the equity of redemption. In this equity of redemption appellant had an estate of homestead, and so much of such equity as was not embraced by that estate descended to his heirs at law. The estate of homestead not being set off and specifically defined, its exact limits and boundaries could not be determined, (Rev. Stat. 1874, chap. 52, secs. 10, 11,) and necessarily, therefore, she and the heirs, until its severance, must hold as tenants in common, having the requisite unity of possession. When the administrators sold for the payment of debts, they only-sold, and could only sell, .the interest of the heirs at law, and, therefore, the purchasers at such sale, taking the place of the heirs at law, became tenants in common with appellant.

It is said in Freeman on Co-tenancy, sec. 96: “As tenancy in common may arise from such a confusion of goods that neither owner can designate and reclaim his own, so it may exist whenever the title of real estate is such that neither of the owners can locate his part. If the owner of a tract conveys a number of acres, less than the whole, without any designation of their locality, the grantee thereby acquires an interest in the whole tract as tenant in common with the grantor. The interest of the grantee in the whole tract is in the proportion which the number of acres conveyed to him bears to the whole number, and entitles him to all the rights and remedies incident to a tenancy in common. It is immaterial by what means the interest is created, so long as it remains unsegregated. Hence, where a defendant was entitled to a homestead of a specific value out of a tract of land which had been sold under execution, it was held that as the purchaser owned all in excess of the homestead limit of value, and the defendant owned all within that limit, and as neither had a claim to any specific portion, they were tenants in common in proportion to the value of their respective interests.” The author refers to Silloway v. Brown, 12 Allen, 30, in support of the last proposition. In that ease the court said, among other things: “The homestead estate differs, indeed, from ordinary estates held in common, in not being an aliquot part of the land, but measured by value only, which may be constantly fluctuating. * *' * But when an estate of homestead has once been acquired in land of a greater value than the limit of the homestead exemption, and the surplus has been alienated by levy of execution or sale according to law, the owner of the homestead and the owner of the residue each has a right of immediate possession and enjoyment of the land. * * * Their rights in this respect are exactly those of tenants in common, according to the elementary definition. ‘Tenants in common are such as hold by several and distinct titles but by unity of possession, because none knoweth his own severalty, and therefore they all occupy promiscuously. This tenancy therefore happens where there is a unity of possession merely, but perhaps an entire disunion of interest of title and of time.’ (2 Blackstone’s Com. 191.) The facts that the defendant had an estate for life, and the plaintiff an estate in fee; that the defendant held by virtue of the Homestead act, and the plaintiff by purchase from the defendant’s assignee in insolvency, and that the defendant acquired his title long before the .plaintiff purchased his,—do not make them the less tenants in common by reason of their unity of possession.” (Page 36.)

There is here, it will be observed, a common interest in the title of Daniel Montague. Both the rights of the heirs, (and, by necessary consequence, those of the purchasers at the administrator’s sale,) and those of the widow, rest upon that title. Any paramount title defeating the one must necessarily defeat the other.

The general doctrine is, a co-tenant can not take advantage of any defect in the common title by purchasing an outstanding title or incumbrance, and asserting it against his companions in interest; but in such ease the purchase is, notwithstanding his designs to the contrary, for the common benefit of all the co-tenants. (Freeman on Co-tenancy, sec. 154.) The objection has sometimes been urged that this doctrine only applies where there is an equality of interest or estate, but in Rothwell v. Dewees, 2 Black, 613, the Supreme Court of the United States held that objection untenable; and in Bracken et al. v. Cooper et al. 80 Ill. 229, this court followed the ruling in Rothwell v. Dewees, observing: “We do not find sufficient authority or reason to induce us to adopt the qualification of the doctrine, as applied to tenants in common, that their interest should accrue under the same instrument or act of the law. We regard the rule as founded upon the duty which the connection of the parties as claimants of a common subject creates, and not as dependent upon the accidental circumstances whether the relationship of the parties be constituted by the same instrument or act of the parties or of the law, or not. ”

There are obvious and peculiarly intimate relations of trust and confidence between the widow and heir at law,—the owner of the homestead and of the inheritance,—which it would be clearly contrary to the law to allow violated, which it is not necessary to specify. It is sufficient to say they exist, and are, quesumably, obvious. It necessarily results that, in our opinion, appellees could not, by taking a deed by virtue of the certificate of sale, cut off appellant’s rights. They hold this title in trust for the common estate, and appellant is entitled to avail of it upon making ratable contribution of the amount paid out for it.

The objection, however, is interposed, that appellant has never offered to make contribution. That objection is now urged for the first time. It comes too late. We have before seen that appellees, in their original answer to the bill, after setting up their ownership of the certificate of purchase, prayed the court that appellant be decreed to pay ratably the amount paid out by them on that account, and that the only question made here, on the former argument, was whether appellant should be held to so contribute. If the objection that an offer to contribute should have been alleged in the bill is tenable now, it was tenable then, and was tenable in the circuit court on the first hearing. We have often held a party can not be allowed to lie by and permit matters to pass unchallenged, and then urge them as objections for the first time in this court. Much more is it inadmissible that a party should try a cause without raising a particular objection, then submit it in this court without raising that objection, then retry it, and for the first time when the case is brought here a second time, raise the objection. The supplemental answer presented, in fact, no new question. If it had, it would have been in contradiction of the original answer, because the attempt was to set up a title inconsistent with a right there admitted, and for that reason it would seem it ought not to have been allowed to be filed. (Greenwood v. Atkins, 4 Sim. 61.) But the question remained precisely the same after as before that answer was filed. The purchase of the certificate by the appellees was in trust for all the co-tenants, and that was totally unaffected by the subsequent taking of -the deed. The deed, after it was obtained, was held precisely as the certificate had been held.

For the reasons expressed the decree below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent therewith.

Decree reversed.