Earll v. City of Chicago

26 N.E. 370, 136 Ill. 277
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 370 (Earll v. City of Chicago) 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
Earll v. City of Chicago, 26 N.E. 370, 136 Ill. 277 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bakes

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the third day of May, 1854, William B. Ogden was the owner, in his individual right, of eighty acres of land lying on the west side of the city of Chicago, and some three miles west of Lake Michigan, except about three acres thereof, which he had theretofore conveyed, by metes and bounds, to one Potwin. He was also the owner, jointly with one Rockwell, of eighty acres of adjoining land. His brother, Mahlon D. Ogden, was his agent and attorney in fact. On the day mentioned, the one hundred and sixty acres were subdivided into lots, blocks, streets and alleys, and on the 18th day of July, 1854, a map or plat of such subdivision was filed for record, and the subdivision was called “Rockwell’s addition to Chicago.” The plat was acknowledged by Rockwell in person, and by Ogden by his said attorney in fact. A portion of the property was between Madison street on the north and Jackson street on the south, and between Robin’s Road (now Western avenue) on the west and Cross (now Leavitt) street on the east. The plat also showed Wilcox street, sixty-six feet in width, running from- Cross street to Robin’s Road, its course being east and west, and it being parallel to Madison street.

About the year 1867 the city of Chicago extended and opened Monroe street and Adams street through said land, both parallel to said Wilcox street, the former about one hundred and eighteen feet north of the north line of Wilcox street, and the latter about two hundred and thirteen feet south of said street. Monroe and Adams streets have ever since been used as leading public thoroughfares, and have been graded and paved. In 1868 the city laid out Oakley avenue through the land, and it runs east of Western avenue and west of Leavitt street, and it has been graded and paved. In 1867 there was only one house on the land now bounded by Monroe' and Adams streets and Western and Oakley avenues, and that house fronted west on Western avenue, and was south of Wilcox street. The remainder of said land was open prairie. About 1869 a church building was placed on the south-east corner of Monroe street and Western avenue, and it stood immediately north of Wilcox street as platted. In 1872 an addition was made to this church, which extended south, and covered the north thirty-three feet of Wilcox street, that being one-half of the width of said street as laid out.

It appears that the three acres of land which William B. Ogden had sold and conveyed to Potwin prior to the making of the plat of 1854, included ground which extended south as far as the center of what was designated on said plat as Wilcox street, so that, as Ogden could not dedicate to public use land which he had already parted with, Wilcox street west from Oakley avenue, and running towards Western avenue, and for the distance that said Potwin land extended along said street, was necessarily reduced to a width of thirty-three feet. In 1875 or 1876 Potwin constructed several houses at the corner of Monroe street and Oakley avenue, and fronting north on Monroe street, and the out-houses and fences connected with said houses run back to the middle of Wilcox street as platted. At the date of the hearing of this cause eighteen houses had been built in the block, and fronting north on Monroe street, and the fences, etc., connected therewith extending back to the center of the platted Wilcox street. At the west end of the block a new brick church was built, in 1884, at the corner of Monroe street and Western avenue, and the old frame building was moved to the south half of Wilcox street. The lot just east of and adjoining the church lot, and fronting on Monroe street, is now occupied as a residence, and is enclosed by a fence, which runs back to the south line of Wilcox street. So the whole width of Wilcox street, immediately east from Western avenue, is now occupied by the church buildings'and the premises connected with the adjoining residence fronting on Monroe street.

Prior to 1867 a slough extended south from Madison street and diagonally intersected Wilcox street about two hundred feet east of Western avenue. This slough has since been partially filled with rubbish, but where it crosses Wilcox street it still has some water standing in it in rainy seasons. Wilcox street, between Oakley and Western avenues, has never been filled, graded or paved by the city, and there have never been either sidewalks or lamp-posts thereon. Since 1877 wagons have been driven, as occasion required, over the south thirty-three feet of said street, from Oakley avenue and as far westerly as the church property, delivering groceries, coal, etc., to the abutting lot owners upon either side of the street, and for the purpose of removing garbage and ashes.

It appears that in 1856 and 1859 William B. Ogden sold and conveyed lots 1, 4, 5, 8 and 9, block 10, in “Rockwell’s addition to Chicago, ” which lots included all of the land lying south of Wilcox street and north of Jackson street, between Oakley avenue and Western avenue; that by various mesne conveyances the title to the east half of that portion of said lot 4 which lies on the north side of Adams street and runs through to Wilcox street became vested in Jerome B. Jackson, the father of Willis Gr. Jackson, one of the appellees herein; that by certain partition proceedings since the death of Jerome B., the title to the west twenty-five feet of said east half became vested in said appellee, and that in 1886 said appellee erected a brick and stone house thereon, which he has since occupied as a residence.

Maria Earll, the appellant, is the owner in fee, hj,mesne conveyances from William B. Ogden, of lot 1, in the second re-subdivision of lots 8, 9 and 10, in block 10, of Rockwell’s addition to Chicago. Said lot fronts on Oakley avenue, is one hundred and ten feet deep, and is at the south-west corner of said avenue and the Wilcox street in question. Her immediate grantor was one Albert Gr. Cone, who, in 1887, made to her a warranty deed therefor. Said Cone also made to her a quitclaim deed for that part of the original lots 8 and 9, in said block 10, lying immediately north of and adjoining said lot 1, fronting east, and being thirty-three feet front on Oakley avenue, and running back in a westerly direction, of a uniform width, one hundred and ten feet. Her executors and trustees, under the will of William B. Ogden, deceased, also made a quitclaim deed, in 1887, to appellant, for the parcel of land last mentioned. Said parcel of land so quitclaimed is the south half, in width, of Wilcox street, as it was originally platted, from the west line of its intersection with Oakley. avenue, to a line one hundred and ten feet west. In the fall of 1887 appellant went into the actual possession and occupation of the house on lot 1, and erected a fence along Oakley avenue, in front of the thirty-three feet of ground quitclaimed to her.

This controversy grows out of a bill filed by the appellant, against the city of Chicago and others, for the purpose of establishing her title to said piece of ground fronting thirty-three feet on Oakley avenue and running hack, of a uniform width, in a westerly direction, one hundred and ten feet.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 370, 136 Ill. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earll-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1891.