Clark v. Waggoner

119 N.E. 273, 283 Ill. 199
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1918
DocketNo. 11674
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 N.E. 273 (Clark v. Waggoner) 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
Clark v. Waggoner, 119 N.E. 273, 283 Ill. 199 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Thomas H. Clark, (appellant,) Rieka Hubbs and Francis M. Hubbs filed a bill of review in the circuit court of Hardin county against Joseph W. Waggoner, Louis Hamp, Sr., Elizabeth Hamp, Lee Howell, Orville W. McGinnis, Harold D. Moran, H. Robert Eowler, Effie McCoy, Jessie Nutty and G. R. Nutty, to set aside and to review a former decree of that court rendered on a bill to quiet title to forty acres of land, on which is located a valuable fluor-spar mine. The bill was later dismissed as to H. Robert Fowler. A demurrer to the bill by the other defendants was sustained by the court. The complainants having elected to stand by their bill, the court entered a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity and taxed the costs against the complainants. From that decree Thomas H. Clark, alone, has prosecuted this appeal.

Appellant in his statement of the case refers to the bill as a bill of review for errors of law apparent on the face of the record sought to be reviewed, and both parties to the record have so treated it in their briefs and argument. The bill averred the filing of the original bill to quiet title in said circuit court on August 25, 1914, by Joseph W. Waggoner, H. Robert Fowler, Louis Hamp, Sr., Lee Howell, Harold D. Moran, Pitt Y. McCoy (who has since died) and Orville W. McGinnis, against the complainants in the bill of review. The original bill is set out in full in the supplemental bill, and the substance of the averments in the original bill is as follows: Henry Hamp and his wife, Charlotte Hamp, died intestate many years ago-, leaving them surviving four children as their only heirs, Henry Hamp,. Jr., Manda Hogan, Rieka Hubbs and Louis Hamp, Sr., and seized of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter o-f section 18, town 11, south, range 8, east, in Hardin county. On January 26, 1874, they conveyed by warranty deed the land to their son Louis Hamp, Sr., the deed being an absolute deed without any reservation or exception, and was recorded in said county January 30, 1875, the record of which was destroyed by fire in 1884. On December 15, 1899, Louis Hamp-, Sr.,- and wife, executed and delivered to F. H. Haley a mining lease to all the coal, iron ore, clay, oil, gas and all other minerals in said tract for the space of fifty years. By numerous assignments said leasehold estate became vested in the complainants in the original bill in the following portions: Joseph W. Waggoner and H. Robert Fowler 4/28ths each, and Lee Howell, Harold D. Moran, Pitt Y. McCoy and Orville W. McGinnis each-5/28ths, and they have possession of the same. On April 6, 1910, the deed of Charlotte and Henry Harnp to Louis Harnp, Sr., was re-filed for record in said county, and the record thereof contained the same language, in every respect, as was in the original deed, except that the new record of said deed contained the following clause as an exception or reservation of the land conveyed, “One-half of all minerals in all 140 acres,” which reservation or exception was not in the original deed as first recorded but has been interpolated in said original deed by someone having wrongfully obtained control thereof, and that such interpolation was fraudulently and wickedly made to deprive complainants of their property rights. After said fire the original deed to Louis Hamp, Sr., was introduced in evidence in a lawsuit tried in said circuit court. The judgment in that suit was appealed from to the Appellate Court, and in the record of said appeal made up and certified by the clerk of said court appears a copy of said deed showing no such reservation or exception therein. Soon after the refiling of said forged instrument, as aforesaid, three other instruments purporting to convey undivided interests in the minerals under the real estate were filed for record in said county, to-wit: One from Henry Hamp and his wife to Francis M. Hubbs and Rieka Hubbs, his wife, bearing date March 28, 1910; another' from Manda Hogan and her husband, Henry Hogan, to Francis M. Hubbs and Rieka Hubbs, bearing date March 29, 1910; another from Francis M. Hubbs and wife, Rieka Hubbs, to Thomas H. Clark, (appellant,) bearing date March 29, 1910; and that all three of said deeds are without consideration and invalid as against complainants. On March 14, 1911, appellant filed a bill for partition of the minerals, etc., in said land, alleging that the minerals were separated from the surface and claiming title to said minerals from the Hamp heirs by said deed, and that he was entitled to an undivided three-eighths in said mineral estate, and further claiming that Louis Hamp, Sr., did not own the entirety of said mineral estate but only an undivided five-eighths thereof, and that he had no authority from his brother and sisters to lease a greater interest, and that the lease is a cloud on his title and ought to be removed. Afterwards the bill for partition was dismissed without prejudice, on motion of the complainant, but the record of the partition suit and the deeds are clouds on the title of complainants in the original bill. Further outstanding titles of record are averred by an amendment to the original bill, with allegations that the outstanding record titles are void as against the complainants, and other parties apparently interested in such outstanding titles are made parties to1 the bill, but the particulars of said averments are immaterial so far as this suit is concerned. The supplemental bill also set out in full the answer of the defendants to the original bill, which denied all of the allegations of fraud set up in the original bill, and further averred that appellant is the owner of an undivided three-eighths of the mineral rights by virtue of the conveyances to him. The replication of complainants in the original bill, and the answer of the guardian ad litem of the new parties added by way of amendment to the bill, were also set out in the supplemental bill. The bill further sets forth all orders and decrees of the court in said cause, by which it appears that the court entered a decree in the original suit finding the issues against appellant and the other defendants in the original bill, that the alleged spurious clause had been added to the deed of Henry Hamp and Charlotte Hamp to Louis Hamp, Sr., after the record thereof was destroyed by fire, and granted the relief prayed in the original bill. It is then further averred that there was a certificate of evidence in the cause prepared and signed by the trial judge and filed in the original cause June 14, 1916, “as by reference thereunto will fully appear.” The certificate of evidence or the contents thereof are not set out in the bill of review nor attached to the same as an exhibit. The bill then sets forth a number of errors “apparent upon the face of the record and decree as a basis for a review of said decree.” A number of the errors relate- to the sufficiency of the evidence in the original suit to support the decree and to rulings of the chancellor in the admission and exclusion of evidence offered by the parties. In the assignment of errors it is set forth that a number of exhibits, consisting of answers in some other suits and decisions of the Appellate Court in said suits, were erroneously admitted in evidence, but the exhibits are not set out in the bill of review or the nature of them.

The only error set forth in the bill of review that is argued and apparently relied on in this appeal is, in substance, as follows: That pursuant to an act of the General Assembly entitled “An act concerning proof of handwriting to be made by comparison,” approved June 23, 1915, in force July 1, 1915, Thomas H.

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Related

McNab v. Dunsmure
274 Ill. App. 560 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1934)
Vyverberg v. Vyverberg
142 N.E. 191 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)
Waggoner v. Clark
127 N.E. 436 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E. 273, 283 Ill. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-waggoner-ill-1918.