Cooter v. Dearborn

4 N.E. 388, 115 Ill. 509
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 4 N.E. 388 (Cooter v. Dearborn) 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
Cooter v. Dearborn, 4 N.E. 388, 115 Ill. 509 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Laura J. Dearborn, and her husband, George H. Dearborn, and Andrew Goodwin, appellees herein, filed their bill on August 12, 1875, in the circuit court of Champaign county, for a partition of 320 acres of land, described as the east half of section 13, township 22 north, range 7 east, and for the purpose of setting aside a deed from Jane Terwilliger, as guardian of Laura J. Dearborn, to one Nicholas Dolph, as a cloud upon the interest of said Laura in said land.

It is conceded that the premises were originally owned by James Goodwin, who died intestate about 1851, leaving the said Jane (since married), his widow, and fourteen children, two of whom are the said Laura and Andrew. By the death of James Goodwin, his fourteen children became owners, each of an undivided one-fourteenth of the 320 acres. By deeds from eight of the children, Benjamin Houston became the owner of eight-fourteenths, or fifty-six ninety-eighths, of the land. One of the children, Margaret Goodwin, died in 1859, at the age of seven years; another, Mary E. Goodwin, died in 1860, at the age of sixteen years. By the deaths of Margaret and Mary E., the remaining twelve children became the owners, each of an additional one ninety-eighth of said premises, and the widow, Jane Terwilliger, mother of Margaret and Mary E., became the owner of two ninety-eighths of said 320 acres. Thomas L. Goodwin, one of the surviving twelve children, conveyed to Benjamin Houston the one ninety-eighth inherited from his deceased sisters, thus making said Houston the owner of fifty-seven ninety-eighths, or about 186^^- undivided acres. Two of the fourteen children, Sarah E. and Samantha A., not included in the eight under wrhom Houston held, seemed to have made such transfers as that either all or a portion of their interests have become vested in George W. Gere, trustee for Burnham, Condit & Co. Houston died August 12, 1875, (the date of the filing of the bill,) and, from some time prior to 1858 to the day of his death, was in possession of the north 87 acres of the 320-acre tract. Since his death his- administrator has sold the 87 acres above named to pay debts, and the same has been purchased by Nathaniel Helmick. On October 18, 1858, Houston, being then the owner of an undivided seven-fourteenths, or forty-nine ninety-eighths, of the 320 acres, made a transfer of some sort of interest to David and Marion Cooter, and David Cooter took possession of the 73 acres south of the north 87 acres, and has been in possession thereof ever since. Gere, trustee as aforesaid, claims to be owner of, and is in possession of, the 101-1 acres south of and adjoining the said 73 acres, but just how his title is derived, except as to the interests of- Sarah E. and Samantha A., above named, does not appear very distinctly from the evidence. One Nicholas Dolph, in his lifetime, claimed to be the owner of the remaining 58|- acres of said tract lying south of the 101-1 acres above named, and was in possession of the same when he died, in 1864. He had obtained three deeds,—one, dated March 10, 1864, was from Gardner Sweet and wife, conveying 58-| acres off the south side of the south-east quarter of said section, but it is not shown that Sw'eet ever had any title to such 58-f- acres; one, dated September 26, 1863, was obtained from Jane Terwilliger, as guardian of Laura J. Goodwin, (now Dearborn,) and conveys the undivided interest of said Laura in the tract in question, which descended to her as heir at law of James Goodwin; the third, dated July 13,1863, was made to'Dolph by Houston, conveying the undivided interest obtained by Houston from Thomas L. Goodwin, one of the fourteen children of James Goodwin. Nicholas Dolph died in 1864, leaving one child, Ida M. Dolph, and a widow, Julia A. Dolph, who married Isaac Devore in 1874, and Jesse Richards in 1877. Ida M. Dolph married Charles A. Weidner, and died in 1883, testate, and left her husband, Weidner, her sole devisee. It is claimed that Nicholas Dolph, in his lifetime, and his widow and child, since his death, have been in pos- , session of the 58|- acres since 1864.

The master, to whom the cause was referred in the court below, found that Helmick, holding as above stated, was in possession of the north 87 acres; that David Cooter, holding as already stated, was in possession of the 73 acres next south of the 87 acres; that Gere, trustee, holding as stated, was in possession of the 1011 acres next south of the 73 acres, and that Weidner, holding as stated, was in possession of the south 58|- acres above named. No finding was made in the master’s report, or in the decree thereon, as to the nature or extent of the titles of the parties so in possession to the portions of the tract respectively held by them.

On November 13, 1874, the widow, Jane Terwilliger, conveyed her interest'of two ninety-eighths or acres, undivided, to appellee George H. Dearborn. Andrew Goodwin, appellee, by inheritance from his father and his two deceased sisters, became the. owner of eight ninety-eighths or 26^^ acres, undivided. Laura J. Dearborn, by inheritance from her father and her deceased sisters, also became the owner of eight ninety-eighths or 26^^ acres, undivided. The total amount claimed by appellees is 58r6g7g- acres, undivided.

The first question to be considered is the validity of the deed from Jane Terwilliger, as guardian of Laura J. Goodwin, to Nicholas Dolph. This deed was absolutely void, and conveyed no title whatever. Laura herself did not sign it. She was only fourteen years old on September 26, 1863, when it w:as made. Whether her mother was then her guardian or not, does not appear from any evidence in the case. She says herself she was not then the guardian of her child. In this deed, however, in which she describes herself as guardian, she conveyed away to Dolph the undivided interest of her daughter in the 320 acres, “being all the right, interest and claim which descended to her, the said Laura Isabella Goodwin, as heir at law of James Goodwin, deceased.” She had no power to sell the land of her ward without an order of the - proper court directing her so to do, for the purpose of raising funds for the ward’s support and education. No petition was ever presented asking for authority to make such a sale, and no decree was ever entered by any court permitting such a sale to be made.

It is claimed, however, that this deed was good color of title, and that Dolph went into possession under it as claim and color of title made in good faith. Whether the instrument shows on its face such a want of authority as to negative the idea .of its having been made in good faith, is a question which it is not necessary to consider. The proof show's that the land v7as located in Champaign county, and that Dolph came over from Champaign county to Springfield, in Sangamon county, where Mrs. Terwilliger lived with her daughter, and there induced her to make a deed, with full knowledge of its worthlessness, and by misrepresentation as to the character and value of the land. Therefore neither he, nor his widow, nor his daughter, nor his son-in-law, the devisee of his daughter, could claim under it as color of title made in good faith. McCagg v. Heacock, 34 Ill. 476; Hardin v. Gouveneur, 69 id. 140; Davis v. Hall, 92 id. 85.

In view of her minority and coverture, Mrs. Dearborn has been guilty of no laches in bringing this bill for partition and to remove the cloud on her title. The court below decided correctly in setting aside the deed to Nicholas Dolph.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E. 388, 115 Ill. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooter-v-dearborn-ill-1886.