Fitzgerald v. Quinn

58 Ill. App. 598, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 97
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 16, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Ill. App. 598 (Fitzgerald v. Quinn) 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
Fitzgerald v. Quinn, 58 Ill. App. 598, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 97 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opihiost op the Court.

This was an action of forcible detainer to recover possession of a strip of land twenty-six inches in width at the west or front end of a lot numbered 19, and tapering- to the width of twenty inches at the east or rear end of said lot.

Said lot 19 appears by a plat attached to the transcript to be one of several lots forming a subdivision in what is now a part of the city of Chicago, and said strip comprises the north side of said lot.

Next to it is lot 20 in the same subdivision. In the Circuit Court the cause was tried upon the following agreed facts:

‘* The parties to this suit hereby waive a jury and submit this cause to the court to be tried without a jury, upon the following facts agreed upon:

That upon the 21st day of August, A. D. 1883, the plaintiff, John Quinn, obtained a warranty deed to lot 19, block 2, in James Goodspeed’s subdivision of 7.88 acres in the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 9, township 38 north, of range 14 east of the 3d principal meridian, in Cook county, Illinois, from Mary A. It, Harrison, formerly Mary Ann Eegina McNamara, and her husband, Eobert Harrison, of Fergus Falls, Minnesota, which deed is recorded in the recorder’s office of Cook county, as document 503,505, on the 24th day of October, 1883, in book 1428 of records^ on page 103, which is here offered in evidence and marked ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit A,’ claiming title by mesne conveyances from the United States Government. That after the time said deed was so received as aforesaid by plaintiff, the defendant Elizabeth M. Fitzgerald, who is the wife of the defendant John W. Fitzgerald, obtained a deed to lot 20, in block 2, claiming title by mesne conveyance from the United States Government, in the same subdivision, which is immediately north of and adjoining said lot 19. That at the time that said deed was made to the plaintiff, the premises, lot 20, or the greater part thereof, were inclosed and a house built thereon, and the same was surrounded by a fence substantially as set down and delineated upon a certain plat of survey, which is now introduced in evidence, marked Plaintiff’s Exhibit B; said south line of said inclosed premises being the most northerly of the red lines marked ‘fence’ on said plat. That at the time the deed was obtained by the plaintiff, a fence encircled the entire inclosure north of the .red line and marked ‘ fence,’ in lot 19 and so much of lot 20 as is included in 25 feet north of said line marked ‘ fence.’ That such fence was on the east and west lines, and also on the north side, and 25 feet north of said line marked ‘ fence,’ the same constituting one entire inclosure. That at the time the deed was obtained by the plaintiff there was upon the premises contained in said inclosure a two-story frame building, which building was then occnpied by tenants, and continued to be occupied by tenants of parties other than the plaintiff, until the time of the obtaining of the deed by defendants, upon which date' one of the tenants moved out of the second story of said building and the defendants moved into said second story; the defendants having continued to occupy the said building and the premises inclosed within said fence continuously from the date of their deed until the date of the service of process in this case, except as hereinafter stipulated. That south of and adjoining said house, between the house and the south fence, was a 2£ foot wide board walk which extended from the front of said lot to the rear of said lot, and which was being constantly used by the parties in possession of the premises so inclosed. That the plaintiff never in fact was in the actual possession of the premises contained, within said inclosure, unless he was in possession by virtue of his said deed, and the improvement of the street front of lot 19, and the payment of the taxes thereon since 1883, A. D. That during all the time from time of the obtaining of said deed by the plaintiff until the date of the commencement of this suit the plaintiff never collected any rents from any of the tenants upon said premises; never leased or attempted to lease the same, but that said premises were leased and the rents therefor collected by persons (other than plaintiff) who held possession of all the premises contained within said inclosure.

That on the 17th of May, 1891, the day before the commencement of this suit, the defendant moved the fence on the south line of said inclosure, bodily toward the north on a line running from a point eight inches north of where it stood on the west line, to the same point where it stood on the east or rear of the lot.

The defendants stipulate for the purpose of this trial only, and not to be used or claimed against them in any other suit, except they shall eventually be found guilty of forcible detainer of the premises in the complaint described in this action, that the north line of lot 19 is the black line running from School street on the west to the alley in the rear, which is the first line north of the north red line marked ‘ fence ’ in the plat offered in evidence.

It is further stipulated that lot 19 has never been improved or occupied by plaintiff or his grantors in any way except the street improvements in front, and excepting so much of the same as is described in the complaint as has been fenced in and occupied by the said fence and board walk as hereinbefore stipulated. That said premises were not fenced in by the defendants, but that said fence was there at the time they received the deed to the said lot 20. And that the defendants entered into possession of said premises in a peaceable and quiet manner under the said deed from Taylor to them. The defendants offer in evidence the said deed from Thomas Taylor, Jr., to Elizabeth M. Fitzgerald, recorded in book 2403, at page 354, and make the same a part hereof and mark the same Defendants’ Exhibit A. That all of said lot 19 which was south of said fence was at the time plaintiff obtained his deed, what is called open prairie, and has never been fenced or improved in any way, except tliat the plaintiff has paid for the street improvements in front of said lot 19.

It is hereby stipulated that the summons, the complaint, and the notices, and the returns thereon; may be considered in evidence.

Hasterson & Haet,

Plaintiff’s Attorneys.

George G. Fry,

For Defendants.”

The question is, mainly, whether forcible detainer will lie.

The action was brought under the third paragraph of Section 2, Chap. 57, Rev. Stat. Ill., entitled “Forcible Entry and Detainer,” which reads as follows:

“ Sec. 2. The person entitled to the possession of lands or tenements may be restored thereto in the manner hereafter provided. * * *

“ Third. When entry is made ihto vacant or unoccupied lands or tenements without right or title.”

It was charged in the complaint:

■ “ That said premises were" vacant and unoccupied, ami that said John W. Fitzgerald and wife, Elizabeth M., made entry therein without right or title, and now unlawfully withhold the possession thereof from the said John Quinn.”

The right of possession only, and not the title, is involved in forcible detainer proceedings. Thomasson v.

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Related

Riverside Co. v. Townshend
120 Ill. 9 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)
Thomasson v. Wilson
34 N.E. 432 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1893)
Thomasson v. Wilson
46 Ill. App. 398 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Ill. App. 598, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-quinn-illappct-1895.