Conness v. Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad

62 N.E. 221, 193 Ill. 464
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 62 N.E. 221 (Conness v. Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad) 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
Conness v. Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad, 62 N.E. 221, 193 Ill. 464 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case has been before this court on appeal from a former hearing, in which the present appellee was appellant, and is reported in 184 Ill. 178. In the opinion of the court, and with a view to a further hearing of the case, we said (p. 180): “The estate in remainder in the north-west quarter was a vested interest, the value of which could be determined, and if that estate was damaged we see no good reason why the damages might not be assessed in this proceeding. * * * The lands were already separated as to interest and estate, and the only evidence admissible as to the north-west quarter was con-, cerning defendant’s estate therein. If his interest in the north-west quarter was in any way affected by being separated from his-other lands, it required careful discrimination and the limiting of the evidence to his interest, and in this respect the court erred. It appeared that the defendant and his mother and brother lived together as a family on the place, and he testified that the lease from his mother was oral to himself and his brother. Counsel on both sides say that it was subject to the Statute of Frauds, and voidable. At any rate, he furnished no basis whatever for the assessment of damages to his share of the leasehold interest, and evidence including it should not have been admitted. Whether the leasing was for a share of the crops, or what the rental was, or the value of the leasehold interest, did not appear in any manner.”

The first, second, third, fourth and fifth errors all relate to the same question and may as well be considered together.

While appellant was upon the witness stand, and without asking him a single question as to the character of his lease, or the length of term he had, or as to the rent, —whether cash or part of the crops,—his counsel made this offer: “Thereupon the defendant, by his attorney, offered to prove by the defendant, John Conness, that this railroad right of way as laid out divides up arid separates the northrwest and south-west quarters of section 24, in township 31, referred to in the testimony in this case; that said two quarters, at the time of the beginning of this suit, were farmed by the defendant, John Conness; that* John Conness and his brother, Benjamin Conness, had, and still have, and for a long time before the commencement of this suit had, a verbal lease of the life interest of the mother, Mary Conness, in said north-west quarter from her, and were occupying and farming said quarter by virtue of and under said lease; that the putting through of said road and right of way will damage the defendant by separating his two interests in the two quarters,—the south-west and the north-west quarters of section 24,—thereby rendering the farming and carrying on of said two quarters as one farm impossible in the way that they have been farmed prior to the putting through of said road and right of way,”—to which offer counsel for appellee objected, and the objection was sustained and appellant excepted. Again, without asking a question, the defendant’s counsel made the following offer: “The defendant, by his attorney, then offered to prove by said witness that the putting through of said, road and right of way will damage the individual interest of said John Conness in said north-west quarter by separating it from the said south-west quarter; that before the commencement of this suit said interest was not separated from said south-west quarter, but was joined to it and farmed in connection with it,”—to which offer appellee’s counsel objected and the objection was sustained. It will be observed that these offers of evidence were in very general terms. Witness was allowed to testify where he lived and how he had been farming these lands. These rejected offers only added the proposed evidence as to the verbal lease and supposed damages accruing to him by reason of separating the two quarters.

When the case was before us on the former trial we practically held that the verbal lease of the north-west quarter for the life of the mother was a voidable lease, and for that reason of such uncertain duration that damages for interfering- with the enjoyment of it, as related to the south-west quarter, would be too uncertain and would enter the field of speculative or imaginary damages, which are not allowed in this class of cases; and we indicated, as clearly as we could, that some reasonable basis other than the mere existence of such lease, and the exercise of rights under it, must be presented as the basis for any such claim of damages. It is again insisted that, inasmuch as we have found that this interest of appellant in the north-west quarter was a vested interest, therefore damages must follow. The vested interest that appellant has in that tract is by virtue of the deed of his father, and is to the fee of the land after the expiration of the life estate, and, in so far as that interest extends, appellant has by the jury been allowed the damages to which he was entitled. His insistence that he is entitled to have taken into consideration the facts that upon the north farm are the wells and the buildings that he has been using and enjoying in connection with the south farm, and that by the building of this railroad between the two farms the enjoyment of these things will be interfered with, we cannot accede to. In addition to the uncertainty when he will enter into the enjoyment of his vested estate is the further uncertainty as to whether he will ever have any portion of the lands upon which are the buildings and wells which he now insists are so valuable to the use of the south-west quarter. He is not able to say that upon the death of his mother and a partition of the lands and the ascertainment of his particular portion all these benefits may not be given to his brother. In the partition of the north-west quarter commissioners would hardly be expected or required, to the detriment of the interests of the brother, to take into consideration the fact that appellant owned one hundred and sixty acres of land south of and adjoining it, and if they did, he cannot say but they would give him the west eighty, upou which none of these buildings appear to be. Looking at the offers as made, and construing them most strongly against appellant, as it is our duty to do, we are unable to say that they would furnish a basis upon which the character of damages contended for could be established, and without the evidence contained in such offers there was nothing in the record to warrant appellant’s claim to the damages so contended for.

The instructions complained of in the fifth assignment of errors, being numbered 2, 3, 7, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18, were predicated upon the evidence in the record, with the offered evidence excluded. A special complaint is made, however, of instructions 4, 12, 13, 15, 17 and 18, upon the ground that they told the jury that in fixing the compensation to be paid they must not take into account the fact that the right of way divided the two interests of appellant in the two quarters, but must consider each interest separately and as if standing alone, or as if the other of the two interests belonged to an entire stranger. There was no error in this. In the view that we entertain and have expressed above, that the interests of appellant, as shown by this evidence, were so distinct and so unlike in character that they cannot, in law, be said to have anything in common, then those instructions were in keeping with that view, and were right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.E. 221, 193 Ill. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conness-v-indiana-illinois-iowa-railroad-ill-1901.