137 Ill. 68 | Ill. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Appellants mortgaged their homestead, relinquishing and waiving all their rights therein in conformity with the requirements of the statute. The mortgage was foreclosed and the homestead sold, and appellants failed to redeem from the sale. After the expiration of twelve months and before the expira-. tion of fifteen months from the date of the sale, a junior judgment creditor, as to whom there was no relinquishment or waiver, in writing, of appellants’ rights of homestead, redeemed from the sale under the mortgage, had the property sold on an execution issued on his judgment, became the purchaser of the property at the sale, and received a sheriff’s deed therefor. The question is, does this deed convey the homestead to appellee.
It is contended in argument, on behalf of appellants, that the act approved June 17, 1887, to amend an act entitled “An act to exempt the homestead from forced sale, and to provide for setting off the same, * * * approved June 30, 1873,” (Public Laws of 1887, p. 178,) controls the question. An attentive examination of that act will, in our opinion, disclose that its only purpose and effect are to restrict the mortgage to the “specific release, waiver or conveyance,”—in other words, to prevent a “specific release, waiver or conveyance” of the homestead for one purpose from being used for a different purpose. But it has not the slightest relevancy to the effect of a sale of the property as to which there has been a “specific release, waiver or conveyance” of the homestead, in a mortgage, pursuant to the terms of that mortgage, or the right of judgment creditors to redeem from such sale. In such ease there is no extension of the “specific release, waiver or conveyance” of the homestead, but a divesting of the homestead title in the property as to which there is a “specific release, waiver or conveyance” of the homestead.
The next - contention on behalf of appellants is, that “by redeeming from the prior sale the judgment creditor simply removes an incumbrance out of the way of his execution,” etc. That is the effect of a redemption by the defendant under section 18, chapter 77, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, but a redemption by a judgment creditor pursuant to the provisions of sections 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24 of the same chapter, ipso facto creates a specific lien in the property redeemed, in his favor. A title acquired at an execution sale upon redemption by a junior judgment creditor relates back to the judgment from which the redemption is made, and is paramount to any title acquired subsequent to the beginning of the lien of that judgment. The junior judgment may not, itself, have been a lien upon the property redeemed,—it is the lien of the senior judgment that is enforced. Sweezy v. Chandler, 11 Ill. 449; McLagan v. Brown, id. 526; Blair et al. v. Chamblin et al. 39 id. 521; Massey v. Westcott, 40 id. 160; Karnes v. Lloyd, 52 id. 113; Pease v. Ritchie et al. 132 id. 644.
By failing to redeem from the sale'under the decree of foreclosure within twelve months from the date of that sale, appellants lost all right to redeem. By the legal effect of their mortgage they authorized theiir homestead to be sold and the purchaser at the sale to acquire all the title thereto that they had, reserving to themselves only this right to redeem from the sale within twelve months, and it must follow, when they failed to make this redemption their rights were gone. Undoubtedly, the purchaser at the sale might extend their time for redemption, and allow them to redeem afterwards; but this would be by his grace and favor, and not because of their legal right.
In Borders v. Murphy, 78 Ill. 81, Clingman v. Hopkie, id. 152, Meyer v. Mintonye, 106 id. 414, and Brooks v. Sanders, 110 id. 453, cited by counsel for appellants, redemption money was paid by parties claiming to redeem as judgment creditors, who, in fact, were not such within the contemplation of the statute, and the money was accepted by the purchasers at the sales under the senior judgments as redemptions from their sales. It was held, that though the parties attempting to'redeem acquired no rights thereby, the acceptance of the money paid to the purchasers at the sales under the senior judgments, as a redemption, had that effect, and removed from the property all liens created by such judgments and sales. The doctrine of these decisions is, simply, this: a party accepting money as a redemption of property from a sale is thereafter .estopped from saying that the property is not redeemed. Being redeemed from the sale, the property is no longer encumbered by it, and it ceases to be an element in the title to the property. Redemptions by junior judgment creditors are purely statutory, and no one can obtain rights in that way save by bringing himself within the spirit of the statute. These parties having failed to do so, they could assert no claim to the property, and the defendants were therefore left with their property just as if these liens had never existed. But to allow a judgment creditor who brings himself within the spirit of the statute, to redeem from a sale under execution on a senior judgment after the expiration of twelve months from that sale, deprives the defendant of nothing that he would otherwise have. His interest, indeed, is promoted by the redemption, because thereby the property may be made to pay more of his debts than it otherwise would, and for that reason it has been held to be the policy of the law to encourage redemptions. ' Whether the redemption shall'be effected or not, his title to the property is gone, and the sale on the execution issued upon the junior judgment'is of nothing that belongs to him. Sweezy v. Chandler, Blair v. Chamblin, Massey v. Westcott, supra, and Fitch v. Wetherbee, 110 Ill. 475, and Bozarth v. Largent, 128 id. 107.
It follows that, in our opinion, in the present case the junior judgment creditor was, upon making his redemption, substituted to the rights of the purchaser at the mortgage sale, and so the homestead passed to him by the deed. See 12 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 243, and cases cited; Rorer on Judicial Sales, sec. 1194; Freeman on Executions, see. 321.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.