Fyffe v. Fyffe

183 N.E. 641, 350 Ill. 620
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1932
DocketNo. 21477. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 N.E. 641 (Fyffe v. Fyffe) 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
Fyffe v. Fyffe, 183 N.E. 641, 350 Ill. 620 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellees, Lee Fyffe and Cynthia Holsen, filed a bill in the circuit court of Lawrence county to partition the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 31, town 4 north, range 12 west of the second principal meridian, containing 38.71 acres.. The land was owned at the time of her death, on September 30, 1893, by Ella Fyffe. She died intestate, leaving her husband, Charles Fyffe, and their four children, Grace, Roy, Pearl and Julia, her heirs. The family lived with Charles’ mother, who was a widow, on a farm known as the home place, about a mile and a half from the land in question here, which had belonged to her husband, Charles’ father, in his lifetime. Charles married again in 1896, and he and his second wife had three children, Fred, Cynthia and Lee, born between 1897 and 1900. The second wife died soon after the birth of the youngest child and the family continued to live all together with Charles’ mother. Pearl, the oldest, and Julia, the youngest of the children of the first marriage, died within two weeks of one another, in April, 1905, both unmarried, and their heirs were their surviving brother and sister, the children of the first marriage, their father, and the three children of the second marriage. No person lived on the land in question as a homestead or as a tenant. The premises were unimproved by any buildings, but Charles farmed them during the lifetime of his first wife and continued to do so after her death for a short time. On March 22, 1906, acting individually and as guardian for Roy, together with Grace, who was then eighteen years old, he executed an oil and gas.lease of the premises to C. L. Wise. The lease included the two farms, called farm No. 1 and farm No. 2, No. 1 being the farm which had belonged to Charles’ first wife in her lifetime, and No. 2 being the farm of 68 acres which Charles’ father owned in his lifetime and on which Charles and his children and mother lived together as one family and in which she had an interest. Various assignments of this lease have been made to different persons and the International Oil and Gas Company has operated it continuously since 1911.

By the death of Ella Fyffe, Charles’ first wife, he became entitled to dower in the premises, and his four children inherited each one-fourth of the premises, subject to his dower. All the children of the second marriage were born before the death of the two children of the first marriage, and the heirs of the latter were" therefore their full brother and sister, Roy and Grace, their half-sister and two half-brothers, the children of the second marriage, and their father. The title, therefore, after their death was held by all the children and their father in the following proportions: Grace and Roy, g/sSths each, the three children of the second marriage, Fred, Cynthia and Lee, 2/28ths each, and Charles, the father, 4/28ths, all subject to the father’s dower. The bill filed by Lee and Cynthia, (who is now Cynthia Holsen,) two of the children of the second marriage, against the two surviving children of the first marriage, Fred Fyffe, one of the children of the second marriage, and Charles, the father, seeks a partition of the premises in that proportion, an assignment of the dower interest of Charles, and an accounting of all the oil and gas that have been produced and sold from the premises, the royalties from which have been received by Charles, Roy and Grace, who has been married and is now Grace Denison. Upon a hearing the court entered a decree granting the relief prayed by the bill, ordering the assignment of dower to Charles, a division and partition of the' remainder among the parties according to the interests which have been stated, and an accounting as to the royalties received under the lease. The defendants Roy Fyffe and Grace Denison have appealed. The lessee, the International Oil and Gas Company, was also made a party but has not appealed.

The only defense to'the bill is the Statute of Limitations, and the appellees argue that the statute is not sufficiently pleaded in the defendants’ answer. They contend that the answer merely recites a history which is practically parallel to the allegations in the bill of complaint and a mere recital of facts and circumstances without claiming the benefit of any particular statute of limitations; that the particular statute upon which the defendants seek to base their defense must be definitely identified, pleaded and set out and the benefit of the statute claimed before it will operate.

No rule of practice is more firmly adhered to than that which requires that the Statute of Limitations, to be availed of as a defense, must be set up and relied on by the pleadings; and this is true both at law and in equity. (Borders v. Murphy, 78 Ill. 81.) It is not necessary that the plea should make express reference to the statute. The court will take judicial notice of it. (Harpending v. Reformed Dutch Church, 16 Pet. 455.) Nor is it necessary, in terms, to refer to the statute which creates the bar, but it will be sufficient for the defendant to state the necessary facts to bring the case within the operation of the statute and then insist that by reason of the existence of those facts the complainant’s rights or remedies are at an end. (1 Beach on Modern Equity Practice, sec. 307; VanHook v. Whitlock, 7 Paige, 373.) The defense of the Statute of Limitations may be set up by answer, and when so interposed it has the effect of a plea. Pierce v. McClellan, 93 Ill. 245 ; VanHook v. Whitlock, supra.

The appellants’ answer alleged that at the time of the death of their mother they went into possession of all the real estate in question and have ever since been in the peaceable, open and adverse possession, claiming to own the land as tenants in common, have paid all the taxes and special assessments levied against them, and their title has never been questioned or disputed until about the time of the filing of the bill; that the complainants were raised in the home of the defendants and lived near this land and were familiar with the claims of the defendants and acquiesced in them and never questioned any of the right, title and interest of the defendants; that more than ten years have elapsed since the complainants arrived at their legal majority, and that they well knew for more than twenty years that the defendants were claiming to be the owners and in possession of all of the premises, collecting the rents, issues and profits from them. These allegations were of no importance except to inform the complainants and bring to the attention of the court that the defendants were relying on their possession as a defense to the bill. The facts, if established by proof, bring the case, except for the disability of appellees, within section 1 of the chapter of the statute on limitations, which prohibits the commencing of an action for the recovery of lands unless begun within twenty years after the right to bring such action first accrued, and section 9 of the same chapter, which provides that if at the time such right of action first accrued the person entitled to such action is a minor or insane, imprisoned, or absent from the United States in the service of the United States or of this State, such person may bring the action within two years after such disability is removed.

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Bluebook (online)
183 N.E. 641, 350 Ill. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fyffe-v-fyffe-ill-1932.