Carr v. Brennan

47 N.E. 721, 166 Ill. 108
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 N.E. 721 (Carr v. Brennan) 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
Carr v. Brennan, 47 N.E. 721, 166 Ill. 108 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

John and Ellen Brennan were husband and wife, residing in the city of LaSalle, LaSalle county, Illinois. The wife held the title to certain real estate, consisting of lots in the city and farm lands in that vicinity. In the month of March, 1893, being in failing health, she deeded this property to her husband, John Brennan, and died on December 5 following. The deed was never recorded, but was lost or destroyed. Ellen Brennan left her surviving two children, a son, and a daughter, Mary Ann, her only heirs. The daughter had married prior to the death of her mother, and her name was then Cannon. On July 5, 1894, she went to the city of Ottawa, and there conveyed to appellant, Robert Carr, an undivided half interest in the said real estate, and he, on the 11th of that month, tiled a bill in the circuit court of that county for a partition of the lands between the son and himself as the owners of the lands, and for the assignment of the dower of John Brennan. Brennan having answered that bill, filed a cross-bill, setting up the conveyance by the wife, Ellen Brennan, to himself, in March, 1893, and alleging that Robert Carr took his deed from Mary Ann Cannon chargeable with notice of that conveyance, and claiming title to the premises in fee. The circuit court, upon a hearing on the bill, cross-bill, answers and replications, found in favor of the complainant in the cross-bill, John Brennan, and decreed accordingly. Prom that decree this appeal is prosecuted.

The evidence clearly establishes the fact of the execution and delivery of the deed from Ellen Brennan to her husband, and also that that deed was either lost or destroyed without the fault of the grantee. There is some evidence tending to prove that although the legal title to the property had been in the wife, the husband was at least the equitable part owner thereof. It also appears that at the time of the death of Ellen Brennan, Mary Ann Cannon came to the home of her father and mother and remained there until the date of her going to Ottawa (July 5) and making the conveyance to appellant, Carr, and facts appear in evidence from which it might be inferred that she destroyed the deed. Whether, however, John Brennan was in any sense the equitable owner of the property, and whether Mary Ann- Cannon had anything to do with the loss or destruction of the deed, are facts of no controlling importance in the decision of the case. Neither do we attach any great importance to the fact that the circumstances under which appellant claims to have purchased the interest of Mary Ann Cannon are more or less calculated to throw suspicion upon the bona Jides of the transaction. The evidence is full and clear to the effect that from the making and delivery of the deed, in March, 1893, to the bringing of this action, John Brennan was in the open, adverse and exclusive possession of all the property. This fact, with the proof of the execution and delivery of the deed, together with the loss or destruction thereof, fully sustained the decree of the circuit court upon the cross-bill.

It was said in Coari v. Olsen, 91 Ill. 273 (on p. 280): “But although other courts have held the doctrine of notice by possession as subject to being materially modified by circumstances, this court has uniformly held that actual occupancy is equal to the record of the deed or other instrument under which the occupant claims, and a purchaser is bound to inquire by what right ¿r title he holds. The purchaser takes the premises subject to that title or interest, whatever it may be,”-—citing a large number of previous decisions of the court. An attempt is made in the argument of counsel to distinguish and take the case out of this rule, upon the ground that the possession of the husband, as is said, was the same before the making and delivery of the deed as afterward. In other words, the contention seems to be that possession, to take the place and answer the same purpose as the recording of a deed, must be possession taken under the unrecorded conveyance, and not a mere continuation of a present possession. This contention is not supported by the decisions in Illinois, but, on the contrary, it was said in Coari v. Olsen, (on p. 280): “So far, at least, as the facts of the present case are concerned, we adhere to the common law rule, that where a tenant changes his character by agreeing to purchase, his possession amounts to notice of his equitable title as purchaser,”—citing authorities.

In Farmers' Nat. Bank v. Sperling, 113 Ill. 273, Theodore F. and Abraham B. Sperling purchased certain real estate, taking the title to themselves jointly, which was duly recorded. Subsequently, Abraham B. rented his undivided interest to Theodore F., who paid rent for such interest until 1877, when he purchased the undivided interest of Abraham B., taking a deed therefor, which he failed to have placed upon record. The Farmers’ National Bank subsequently obtained a judgment against Abraham B. and levied an execution upon the real estate, and it was sold and bid in by the bank, its certificate of purchase being duly recorded. On bill by Theodore F. Sperling, claiming to be the sole owner of" the premises at the time of the execution sale, that certificate of purchase was set aside. On appeal to this court that decree was affirmed. One of the grounds of reversal urged being that the possession of Theodore F., under the circumstances, was not constructive notice that he was sole owner of the property, the court, in passing upon the point, said (p. 282): “This court has held, in opposition to the rule quoted by counsel for appellant from Wade’s Law of Notice, secs. 297, 298, and Emmons v. Murray, 16 N. H. 386, that the actual, open and visible possession of real estate is constructive notice to persons purchasing it of whatever rights the possessor then has in the land. In Coari v. Olsen, 91 Ill. 273, we held, in obedience to what we understood to be the common law and upon the faith of authorities therein referred to, that where a tenant changes his character by agreeing to purchase, his possession amounts to notice of his equitable title as purchaser. In Haworth v. Taylor, 108 Ill. 275, we held that the possession of a tenant is constructive notice of the actual title of the landlord at that time, although that title was acquired subsequent to the time the landlord leased to the tenant. It was there said: ‘As at the date of the lease Taylor was not the owner of the land, but acquired title subsequently, on November 13, 1865, it is contended that the notice from the tenant’s occupancy was notice only of Taylor’s (the landlord’s) rights at the time of the making of the lease, and not of his rights at the time of Haworth’s deed,—December 26, 1866. We do not concur in this view, although the authority cited (Emmons v. Murray, 16 N. H. 398,) lends somewhat of countenance to it. We regard the doctrine, as derived from the decisions of this court, to be, that where one purchases land of which another is at the time in the actual, open and visible possession, such possession is constructive notice to the purchaser of all rights whatever of the possessor in the land at the time of the purchase.’ ” Here, the possession of the grantee, John Brennan, had the same effect to charge appellant, Robert Carr, with notice of the deed as though it had been recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.E. 721, 166 Ill. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-brennan-ill-1897.