Elston v. Kennicott

46 Ill. 187
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 46 Ill. 187 (Elston v. Kennicott) 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
Elston v. Kennicott, 46 Ill. 187 (Ill. 1867).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of ejectment, brought in the Superior Court of Chicago, by Daniel T. Elston and others, against William H. Kennicott, to recover the possession of the east one-third and west one-third of lot three (3), in block ninety-five (95), in the school section addition to Chicago, claimed by the plaintiffs as their property in fee. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and admitted, that at the time of the commencement of the suit, he was in possession of the premises.

During the progress of the suit, the defendant died, and his widow, Caroline Kennicott, and the others, his heirs at law, were brought in by scire facias, and pleaded to the action. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the court found for the defendants. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was rendered for the defendants.

To reverse this judgment, the plaintiffs have appealed to this court, and have assigned various errors, which will be considered.

The facts are, briefly, that the premises in question were conveyed by patent from the State, to one William Worthingkam, on the 6th of December, 1835, on a certificate of sale made to him by the Commissioners of School Lands of Cook county, and it was agreed that section sixteen was a ’ school section, and was laid out into two lots, and recorded as an addition to the town of Chicago. A quitclaim deed from Worthingham to the plaintiffs, dated October 1, 1859, completed their title. The defendants set up the statute of limitations of 1839, and in support thereof introduced a deed dated May 20, 1842, from the sheriff of Cook county, to Hugh T. Dickey, as the purchaser of lot three, in block ninety-five, school section addition, at a tax sale made in 1840 for the State and county taxes due and unpaid, and assessed against this lot.

They further exhibited a quitclaim deed from Dickey to Thomas Hoyne, for the same lot, dated June 27, 1842; a warranty deed from Hoyne to Caleb Morgan, dated May 1,1843 ; a warranty deed of the west third of this lot, from Caleb Morgan to Michael Monich, dated May 1, 1843 ; a quitclaim deed from Deidrich Mong to William H. Kennicott, dated February 1, 1853, for this west third. The defendant also produced a deed dated June 11, 1852, from Caleb Morgan to Deidrich Mong, for this west third, written on the back of the deed Morgan had executed to him, by the name of “Michael Monich,” reciting therein that by inadvertence and mistake, the name of Deidrich Mong, “was incorrectly set. forth in said deed, and erroneously spelled Michael Monich.”

For the east third, defendant produced in evidence a deed from Caleb Morgan to himself, dated August 2, 1845.

• The defendants then proved, by one Wheeler, that he had acquainted with W. H. Kennicott twenty-four years, and with the property in question, seventeen years; knew of Kennicott’s purchase of the east third; was some slight improvements on it at the time ; a shed or other small building, one story high, which Kennicott used for storing grain; he occupied rooms over witness’ store, on the adjoining block, in 1844 or 1845, and while so occupying, he built a new dwelling house on the east third, and enclosed the premises with a new fence. The new building had been occupied as a dwelling ever since it was finished until the present time (1862). A widow Hoyt first occupied it for a year or more, and then Kennicott, who, witness thinks, occupied it not less than seven years. This witness is corroborated substantially by the testimony of Hamilton, Peacock and Cobb, the carpenters and joiners, who built the house, and who fixes the date of its erection in the year 1848, having commenced it in May and completed it in September.

To prove possession of the west third, the deposition of DeicLrich Mong was introduced, by which it appeared that he bought the west third of Morgan, May 1st, 1843, who gave him the deed in evidence, in which he was called “Michael Monich,” by mistake. He testifies he came from Germany in 1841, and could not speak English when he bought the lot. He worked for Morgan, as a cabinet-maker, twenty years, who, during all that time, had not usually called him by his right name—calls him “Moonich.” The summer after he bought the lot, he built a dwelling house on it, costing three hundred dollars, built a fence around the lot, and filled in the front with dirt. After the house" was completed, he lived in it six or seven years, and then rented it out; sold the lot to Kennicott, and gave him the deed in evidence. He testified further, that he paid the taxes on this property—city, county, and every tax that was to be paid; began to pay “right at the time”-he bought it, and continued to pay until he sold to Kennicott, .and took the receipts which he produced on the trial, numbered from one to sixteen, inclusive, and gives as a reason why some of the receipts appear to be given to “D. Monich,” some to “Monch,” and some to “Mooney,” that “these Yankees did not know how to spell his name;” that he never owned any other lot on Madison street besides this. When he took the receipts he did not read them ; that he could n.ot read "them, not understanding the English language. When he paid the taxes, he told the collector what property he wanted to pay on, and had, every time, on a paper, the lot and number. He states, also, that after Kennicott bought of him, he rented it out, and that the house witness built was still standing on the lot, on the back part of it, to which place Kennicott moved it.

The plaintiff's objected to several of these tax receipts, namely : to receipt Ho. 2, for the State, county and, special taxes for the year Í845, for the reason that it did not specify on what part of lot 3 the taxes were paid ; it describes a lot as “30 feet on Madison street, by 189 "feet deep, of lot 3, block 95, school section addition.” They also objected to-receipt Ho. 4, on the ground that it did not appear that the property mentioned was in the school section addition to Chicago; to receipt Ho. 6, that it appeared to be for the payment of the taxes on a lot in the original town of Chicago; to receipt H o. 14, on the ground that it appeared to be for the north third, and not for the west third of lot three; to receipt Ho. 17, on the ground it appeared to be for the south third, and not for the east third of lot three. The objections were overruled by the court, and the receipts admitted in evidence. This action was had at the July hearing, in 1862,. at which time, after argument, the cause was submitted and taken under advisement. It would appear from the record, that no decision was made, and no step taken in the cause until February term, 1866, when the plaintiffs suggested the death of the defendant, and a scire facias was ordered to bring in the widow and heirs. The record then states, that on March 26,1866, the plaintiffs appeared by their attorney, and the widow and adult heirs of W. H. Kennicott by their attorneys, entered their appearance, and pleaded not guilty to the declaration; and the minor heirs, by their guardian ad Utem, entered their appearance and put in the same plea, all of them having. been served with process.

At this stage of the case, the plaintiffs’ counsel submitted the cause to the court, as before then tried, and asked that a finding and judgment might be made upon the evidence and arguments before then submitted.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elston-v-kennicott-ill-1867.