Burton v. Perry

34 N.E. 60, 146 Ill. 71
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 60 (Burton v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Perry, 34 N.E. 60, 146 Ill. 71 (Ill. 1893).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Magruder

.delivered the opinion of the Court:

The complainants, Perry and Henderson, file this bill for the partition of forty acres of lánd, and claim to be the owners of an undivided half thereof. The defendants deny the ownership asserted by the complainants, and contend that they are themselves the owners of the whole of the forty acres. Therefore, the first question to he determined is, whether the complainants own any interest in the land, and, if they do, what interest.

It is not denied, that, on February 16, 1836, Isaac Cook, then holding the Government title to eighty acres, of which the tract of forty acres now in controversy is the south half, conveyed an undivided half of said, eighty acres to Asa W. Chambers and Sheldon Benedict. The complainants claim title through a conveyance from Benedict to Chambers and three conveyances from Chambers to themselves.

Chambers and Benedict left Chicago in 1838. Benedict has never been seen or heard of but-once since that time. It is said, that in the year 1848 he made a visit to Chambers while the latter was living in the State of Texas, but, after remaining with Chambers two or three weeks, he disappeared, and all further trace of him has been lost. He paid no taxes upon the property in question after he left Chicago, nor do the records of Cook County where these premises are located, show that he has ever made any conveyance of the land, or instituted any proceeding, or done any act indicating a claim of ownership, since the year 1838.

Chambers, according to his own testimony, was not in Chicago from 1838 to 1872. During a period of more than thirty years his whereabouts were unknown, and were only discovered in the year 1871, or thereabouts, after considerable search by • a party acting for, or in concert with, the complainants. After his disappearance in 1838, he paid no taxes upon the land, nor did he or his grantees thereafter take any steps to assert title thereto until the filing of the bill in this ease in July, 1873.

All the facts, however, in the present record, which tend to show laches by reason of-delay in beginning suit, were before this Court in 1884, and again in 1888. (Perry et al. v. Burton et al. 111 Ill. 138; Same v. Same, 126 id. 599).

The only witness, who testifies that a deed was made by Benedict to Chambers, is Chambers himself. The latter swears that, after leaving Chicago in 1838, he remained about ten months in Georgetown, Vermilion County, Illinois; that he went to Texas in June, 1841, taking Mrs. Chambers with him; that he lived in Navarro County, Texas, from 1843 to 1872, about two miles from a little town called Mt. Pisgah containing 15 or 20 houses, thirteen miles from Corsicana, the principal town of the county, and about 110 miles from Bryant, Brazos County, where the complainants, Perry and Henderson, who are attorneys at law, reside; that he never saw Benedict, after leaving Chicago, until 1848; that, in November of that year, Benedict came to his house in Navarro County “flat broke and afoot,” saying that he came through Galveston, and had been in New Orleans, and New York, and divers places; that he then sold to Chambers all his interest in this land and other lands in Illinois for $200.00, of which $75.00 was paid in cash, and for the balance he took-a saddle horse; that Benedict then made a deed to Chambers of the land; that neither had any papers showing the description, but both remembered the description; that the deed was acknowledged before a justice of the peace, who is dead, and attested by two witnesses, who are both dead; that Benedict then rode away, and Chambers has never seen or heard of him since, or of any of his relatives, if he had any; that Chambers never recorded the deed, but kept it for fourteen years on his place in Texas; that in 1862 he left home and deposited his papers in a trunk in the care of a daughter, then 25 years old; that the deed was lost during his absence, and he has never been able to find it.

The question as to the execution of the deed from Benedict to Chambers was passed upon by this Court in the decision made in 1884. (Perry et al. v. Burton et al. 111 Ill. 138). Counsel for defendants refer to many circumstances brought to light by the evidence taken since the first and second hearings of the cause, which are alleged to demonstrate the falsity of the testimony given by Chambers. We do not deem it necessary, however, to enter upon a discussion of this subject, as we have reached the conclusion for the reasons hereafter stated, that the defendants must he regarded as bona fide purchasers of the one fourth interest formerly held by Benedict without notice of the deed said to have been made by him to Chambers, and consequently are entitled to protection as against the latter deed.

Some time in 1871 or 1872 Chambers conveyed or attempted to convey all his interest in said tract of 80 acres, described as the E. J N. E. J Sec. 20, etc., and in other lands in Illinois, to the complainants, and received therefor the sum of only one hundred dollars. About the same time the complainants agreed with a real estate agent in Chicago to convey to him one half o'f such interest in the land as they should finally recover, upon condition that he should take possession of the property, employ attorneys, perfect the title, and pay all costs, expenses and attorneys’ fees. We agree with counsel for the defendants, that the agreement in question was champertous and void, and could not be enforced as between the parties to it. (Thompson v. Reynolds, 73 Ill. 11; Coleman v. Billings, 89 id. 183). But we do not regard such agreement as material in the consideration of this case, as the present suit is not between the complainants and the agent so employed by them. (Torrence v. Shedd, 112 Ill. 466; 3 Am. and Eng. Encyc. of Law, page 86).

It is not denied by the complainants, that, in the fall of 1844, Isaac Cook was the owner of the other undivided one half of the 80 acres which had not been conveyed in 1836 to Chambers and Benedict. The undivided half so conveyed to Chambers and Benedict was sold for taxes to Cook on November 28, 1842, and the Sheriff issued a tax deed therefor to him on December 9, 1844. It is claimed by the defendants, that Cook, holding under said tax deed and under the deed to him of the other half as color of title, paid all the taxes legally assessed upon the whole tract of 80 acres from 1844 to 1854, inclusive, while the land was vacant and unoccupied. We have heretofore passed upon the question of the payment of taxes by Cook under said tax deed, and have held that the payment of taxes by him during the period aforesaid was not established by proof. (Perry et al. v. Burton et al. 111 Ill. 138). Counsel claim, that there is now new evidence in the record, which shows that Cook did pay the taxes on the undivided half, conveyed to him by the tax deed, for a period of seven successive years between 1844 and 1854. We find no evidence whatever in the record, which shows that the 80 acres were vacant and unoccupied for seven successive years during the period from 1844 to 1854. Cook says nothing upon this subject, and the other witnesses,, to whose testimony we have been referred, speak of the land as it was after 1854.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 60, 146 Ill. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-perry-ill-1893.