Doty v. Doty

42 N.E. 174, 159 Ill. 46
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 174 (Doty v. Doty) 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
Doty v. Doty, 42 N.E. 174, 159 Ill. 46 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

This was a bill for the partition of forty acres of land, filed May 23,1894, in the circuit court of Macoupin county, by Francis M. Doty and others, as the heirs-at-law of their father, Elijah Doty, deceased, against Elijah Doty, (a son of said Elijah Doty, deceased,) Alexander V. Webber, Richard Aulabaugh and Charles O. Matlack. The bill alleges that said Doty, the father, in his lifetime entered the land in question at the land office at Edwards-ville in the fall of 1853, at the government price of $1.25 per acre, and paid the total amount, $50, at that time, and that he afterwards received a patent for the land from the government, signed by Franklin Pierce, President of the United States. It is also claimed that their father occupied said premises, with his family, from about 1848 to the time of his death, in 1860; that he left surviving him a widow and eight children, and that under the law in force at the time of his death the widow was entitled to the use and occupation of the tract in question until her death, which occurred in 1888, her dower not having been set off to her.

The defendant Elijah Doty answered the bill, denying that his father ever had any title to the land, but claimed that it was entered by his father for him, the son; that he was nineteen years old and was working out and earned the money, his father having given him his time, and that he sent his father to Edwardsville to pre-empt the tract for him; that in September, 1854, he made final payment for the land at Edwardsville and secured a certificate of entry. He testified that in 1867 he procured a patent from the United States, which he recorded in Macoupin county; that his father and mother and the family stayed with him on the place, and that he was in the full and undisputed possession, and paid the taxes from the year 1854 until he conveyed the premises, by warranty deed, to defendant Alexander Webber, in 1892; that he had frequently mortgaged the premises before he had sold to Webber; that on March 9, 1894, Webber executed a bond for a deed to the tract to defendant Richard Aulabaugh, and since that time said Aulabaugh has been in sole possession. Defendants Webber and Aulabaugh joined in the answer with defendant Doty, and set up laches and the Statute of Limitations as a further defense. Defendant Matlack answered separately, setting up a loan of $900 to defendants Doty and Webber February J.0, 1893, and their mortgage of said premises and another tract securing said loan.

The cause was referred to the master in chancery, who reported the evidence to the court. Each party reserved the right to introduce further evidence before the court on the final hearing, and on such hearing complainants introduced the certificate of the Auditor of Public Accounts, dated February 23,1895, certifying that the records of the general land office, formerly located at Edwards-ville, showed that said land was sold to Elijah Doty, of Macoupin county, October 4,1853, for $1.25 per acre, and that his receipt for $50 was dated October 4, 1853, and numbered 26,662. The court found the equities with the defendants; that defendant Elijah Doty received a patent from Franklin Pierce, President of the United States, to the premises in question, dated September 15, 1854, which instrument was recorded in Macoupin county December 13, 1867; that he was the owner of the said premises, and had been in possession and control, undisputed, and paid all tax'es assessed thereon, from the date of said patent until the sale by him to defendant Webber, in 1892; that defendant Webber had not, prior to this conveyance to him by defendant Doty, any notice that complainants, or any of them, had or claimed to have, and that they had not claimed, any interest in said premises, and that defendant Webber had executed a mortgage of the premises to defendant Matlack, and that the latter had no notice that complainants, or any of them, claimed any right or interest in, and that they had no right or interest in, said premises. The bill was dismissed by the court at complainants’ costs. From that decree this appeal is prosecuted by complainant Francis Doty.

The questions involved are mostly questions of fact. The land was entered and the patent issued in the name of Elijah Doty, but whether it was Elijah Doty the father or Elijah Doty the son is a question which, from the confiicting evidence in the record, is not altogether free from difficulty. If the testimony of Elijah Doty, the appellee, is to be believed, his father, since deceased, entered the land for him, in his name and with his money. It is not disputed, but clearly proved, that $20 of the money was furnished by Elijah Doty, the son. He testified that he paid the balance also, but there is other evidence in the record tending to prove the contrary. It cannot be said, however, that his statement in this respect is clearly disproved, and unless it shall be concluded that he is unworthy of belief, we are of the opinion that his testimony that he furnished all of the money is not overcome by the other evidence in the record. The evidence showed that he was nineteen years old at the time the land was entered, that his father had given him his time, and that he was working out as a hired hand. It is clearly proved that he paid all the taxes assessed on the land up to the time he sold the land, in 1892; that he cleared and improved the land, and exercised acts of ownership over it for many years, running back nearly to the time of its original entry. He testified that it was understood between himself and his parents that they should have a home there as long as they lived. His father died in 1860 and he married in 1861, and thereafter lived on, improved and cultivated the land until he sold it, in 1892, except that for two periods—one of about one year and the other o£ about two years—he was in Kansas, but during these periods of absence he rented the land to others and received the rents. His mother remained on the land for about two years, only, after the death of his father, and thereafter lived with her children, who had married and settled in the immediate neighborhood. It does not appear that she ever claimed any interest in the land or to the income or rents. Nearly all of his brothers and sisters settled and lived in the immediate neighborhood, but there is no evidence in the record that they ever- questioned his right to the land or to the rents received for it. In 1865—twenty years before the commencement of this suit—he mortgaged the land for borrowed money, with the knowledge and in the presence of one of his brothers, and no question of his right to do so was raised. His brother Francis Dotjq the principal complainant and the only one prosecuting this appeal, testified that he heard of his brother mortgaging the land but paid no attention to it, and that he saw the record, which showed that his brother was dealing with the land as his own. His mother died in 1888, at the home of one of her children in the neighborhood, while appellee Elijah Doty was living ón this land, and for more than six years after her death nothing was done or said by any of the complainants to question his title. He sold and conveyed the land, by warranty deed, to appellee Webber, in 1892, and delivered the possession to Webber, and afterward he and Webber joined in a mortgage to appellee Matlack on this and other land, without objection or hindrance from any of the complainants.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 174, 159 Ill. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doty-v-doty-ill-1895.