Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. American Security & Trust Co.

206 Ill. App. 443, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 109
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 18, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 206 Ill. App. 443 (Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. American Security & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. American Security & Trust Co., 206 Ill. App. 443, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 109 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

On February 22, 1912, appellee, Fairview FluorSpar & Lead Company, a corporation, filed its petition in the Circuit Court of Hardin county, alleging its ownership of certain lands in that county and describing the eastern boundary and corners thereof, and further alleging that such boundary was in dispute and said corners lost; that John B. McLean was the owner of the lands adjoining such boundary and comers on the east and refused to enter into an agreement to establish said line and corners as provided by law, and asking that a commission of surveyors be appointed to make a survey of and permanently establish such boundary line and comers. After the filing of the petition the death of the defendant John B. McLean was suggested and American Security & Trust Company, his executor, was named as defendant and is appellant here. Appellant filed a general and special demurrer to this petition, alleging specially that the boundary line and comers of the lands of respondent to be affected were not described with sufficient legal certainty. This demurrer was overruled. Appellant then filed six pleas and afterwards four additional pleas, denying the allegations in the petition and setting np some new matter. On September 2, 1912, all these pleas upon motion of appellee were stricken from the files upon the ground that no rule of law or practice authorized the filing of pleas in such cases. September 4, 1912, appellee filed an amended petition alleging itself to be the owner of “the southwest quarter of Section thirty-two (32), Township twelve (12) south, Range eight (8) east, in said county of Hardin”; “that the southeast comer thereof is in dispute and the said comer as established and located by the United States Government has been lost and destroyed and is now in dispute”; that appellant was the owner of the land adjoining said comer or adjacent thereto, and refused to enter into an agreement for the appointment of a commission of surveyors to re-establish such corner. Appellant filed a motion to dismiss this amended petition on the grounds it was not an amended petition and that sufficient notice had not been given. An amendment to the amended petition was filed setting forth the giving of notice to appellant of the application for a commission.

Appellant filed two pleas denying the averments of the petition as finally amended. These pleas were also stricken from the files on motion of appellee. At the September term, 1912, the court, over the objections of appellant, appointed W. M. Ball, H. M. Winders and G. H. Brown as a commission of surveyors to establish the comer in question. This commission submitted its report at the March term, 1913. Appellant filed a motion to dismiss the petition for the want of jurisdiction as it was shown by the report that the corner in dispute had never been established by the government. On motion of appellee, leave was granted to amend the report, which was done, and the motion to dismiss overruled. The case was continued from term to term until February 2, 1914, when appellant filed twelve objections to the report and later, on February 8th, also moved to vacate the order appointing the commission on the ground he had been denied the right to controvert the allegations in the amended petition, which motion was overruled. It was agreed that a jury be waived and cause heard by the court. At the November term, 1915, the cause came up for hearing before Judge Charles H. Miller, who heard the evidence and took the case under advisement. At the March term, 1916, Judge Julius C. Kern, the then presiding judge, entered final judgment approving the report of the commission, the judgment reciting: “By direction of said Hon. C. H. Miller, the findings and judgment of said Judge C. H. Miller are, on this the 28th day of March, A. D. 1916, being one of the regular court days of the above-styled term of this court, entered herein by the Presiding Judge of this court at this term, viz.: Hon. J. C. Kern, as follows, to wit:” etc.

At the close of the testimony the court on motion of appellee held as a matter of law “that the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of Section thirty-two (32), Township twelve (12), Range eight (8) east, is an established government corner, and one which, if lost or in dispute, the petitioner is entitled to have permanently re-established and located,” and “that the petitioner and respondent, being the owner of all the land adjacent to or adjoining the corner in dispute, are the only necessary parties to this suit.” The argument for appellant is devoted to discussing the sufficiency of the petition; the action of the trial court in overruling his demurrers and striking his pleas and permitting appellee to file the amended petition; the sufficiency of the commission’s report and the amending of the same; the manner in which the commission proceeded to make the survey; the fact that one member of the commission was absent one day; the question whether one member of the commission was disinterested; the claim that the evidence does not disclose that the corner in question was established by the government and the rendering and entering of the judgment by Judge Kern.

The original petition may not have been accurately drawn, but it, in substance, contained, all the statutory requirements and was therefore sufficient to confer jurisdiction. The filing of the amended petition was then a matter within the discretion of the court, and that discretion does not seem to have been abused. In any event, appellant having failed to abide the demurrer to the original petition, and, having filed objections to the commission’s report, is now in no position to raise this question. This is purely a statutory proceeding, and the statute governing it does not appear to contemplate the filing of any pleas. Section 13, ch. 133, Hurd’s Rev. St. 1916 (J. & A. ¶ 11145) provides: “Upon the filing of proper petition and proof of due notice as aforesaid, the said court shall appoint a commission of three surveyors,” and section 14 (J & A. ¶ 11146) of the same chapter reads: “Upon the filing of said report, any person whose interest may be affected by said survey shall be at liberty to enter his objections to said report, and the court shall hear and determine said objections.” The courts of this State have held that in a proceeding of eminent domain it is not proper to file pleas, and if pleas are filed it is proper to strike same from the files on motion. Smith v. Chicago & W. I. R. Co., 105 Ill. 511. The record shows that at the September term, 1914, leave was given appellant to file pleas, which he failed to do. All points raised by the pleas were raised by the objections to the commission’s report or covered by the stipulation filed, and while it appears to us the court might properly have permitted the pleas to remain on file, yet appellant was not in any way harmed by the striking of them from the files and no error was committed by the court in so doing.

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Smith v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad
105 Ill. 511 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 Ill. App. 443, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairview-fluor-spar-lead-co-v-american-security-trust-co-illappct-1917.