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DS News November 2022

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70 By: Lauren Riddick Quick Take It's not often that a modern-day court relies on case law from 1896, but it's also not often that issues arising in 1896 are still uncertain modern-day. In Estate of Topal, 2022 IL App (4th) 210613, the 4th District Appellate Court of Illinois confronted some longstanding friction between Illinois probate and Illinois foreclosure law. At issue was the impact on a mortgage lien of a probate statute barring "all claims" failing to be filed within two years of a decedent's death. 755 ILCS 5/18-12(b). In Topal, pursuant to this probate statute, the lower court found that the time for filing a claim against an estate begins at the decedent's death, regardless of whether a lender is aware of that death. Consequently, a lender's claim against the estate brought more than two years after the decedent's death was time-barred. However, the probate court then went a step further and required the lender to record a release of the mortgage—effectively eliminating the lender's ability to ever foreclose. Interestingly, this same issue was resolved by the Illinois Supreme Court more than 125 years ago. In Waughop v. Bartlett, 165 Ill. 124, (1896), the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that although the failure to file a timely claim barred the claim against the estate, it did not terminate the debt itself. In other words, the "all claims" language arose in a probate statute and was therefore limited to all claims in a probate—not all claims in the universe of all possible claims. Normally, an on-point decision like this, especially one coming from the Illinois Supreme Court, would have ended future similar disputes. e problem was that the Waughop court went on to classify foreclosure actions as "in rem"—a notion specifically rejected by a much later Illinois Supreme Court in ABN AMRO Mortg. Group, Inc. v. McGahan, 237 Ill. 2d 526. And when the Illinois Supreme Court rejects an earlier ruling, even an earlier ruling from itself, that entire ruling tends to be forsaken. However, recognizing this dichotomy, the 4th District Appellate Court in Topal clarified that "[a]t no point did the supreme court explicitly abandon" the first part of its holding in Waughop, and that the only impact of an untimely probate claim was "'… to prevent any participation in the inventoried assets of the estate.'" Topal at P27. erefore, the Topal court concluded that: … [e lender's] failure to timely file a claim against decedent or his estate prevents [the lender] from reaching estate assets to satisfy the debt owed to it. is conclusion does not mean, however, that [the lender] cannot still proceed with a future foreclosure action against the property covered by the mortgage … Should the foreclosure sale produce insufficient funds to satisfy the debt, [the lender] may not pursue a deficiency judgment against the Estate. is is fundamentally the purpose of section 18-12(b). Topal at P28. Interestingly, the Topal court also seemed to invite Supreme Court review of its Waughop and McGahan analyses, stating that it would be "unwise" for them to "extrapolate" from McGahan a "conclusion which was not reached there," and theorizing that "such a consequential decision, if it is to be made, should come from the supreme court." erefore, although the analysis appears to be well-reasoned and serves to close some longstanding confusion, it remains to be seen whether the Illinois Supreme Court will even review the matter, much less agree. Lauren Riddick is an attorney and Director of Learning & Development at e Codilis Family of Firms. PROBATE- FORECLOSURE KNOT UNTANGLED? It's not often that a modern-day court relies on case law from 1896, but a recent case did exactly that, examining longstanding friction between Illinois probate and foreclosure law.

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