Glos v. Kingman & Co.

207 Ill. 26
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 207 Ill. 26 (Glos v. Kingman & Co.) 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
Glos v. Kingman & Co., 207 Ill. 26 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee company, on the first day of April, 1903, filed in the circuit court of Cook county its application, under the provisions of an act entitled “An act concerning land titles,” approved and in force May 1, 1899, (4 Starr & Cur. Stat. p. 259,) commonly known as the Land Registration act, for a decree declaring the title in fee simple in and to lots Nos. 191 and 192, in block 2, in Young & Clarkson’s second addition to Kensington, Illinois, to be vested in it. The appellant and others were personally named as defendants, and he filed a sworn answer t.o the application. The cause was referred to the examiner of titles. Proof was taken and the report of the examiner of titles filed, and a decree was entered finding and declaring the appellee company to be the owner in fee simple of the title to the said lots, subject only to the payment to the appellant, Jacob Glos, and Emma J. Glos and D. Arnold, as their respective interests may appear, of the sum of §6.73, “and that upon the payment, as aforesaid, of said sum to said defendants, Jacob Glos, Emma J. Glos and D. Arnold, or to the clerk of this court for their respective use, to be made within thirty days from this date, together with interest, as aforesaid, the tax deed to Jacob Glos dated November 11, 1902, recorded November 13,1902, as document No. 3,320,258, and the quit-claim deed from Jacob Glos to the defendants Emma J. Glos and D. Arnold dated March 11, 1903, recorded March 16,1903, as document No. 3,363,014, be held and taken to be null and void and of no effect, in so far as either of said deeds conveys or affects said lots 191 and 192, in block 2, in Young & Clarkson’s second addition to Kensington, and that upon the failure to pay said above specified sum, and interest, within said time, this application and this proceeding stand vacated and dismissed at applicant’s costs.” This is an appeal to bring the decree into review in this court.

The appellant, among other grounds urged for reversal, insists, first, that the proofs of title produced in behalf of the appellee company were wholly insufficient to establish title in fee simple in it for registration, as declared by the decree; second, that no proof was produced to show that the tax deed to himself was in any wise défective or invalid. The appellee, in response to the first of these complaints, insists that the appellant’s position in the proceeding is the same as that of a defendant in a proceeding in equity to remove a tax deed as a cloud on the title of the complainant in the bill, and that in cases of that character no proof of complainant’s title is required other than the prima facie proof of title arising from the production of a deed purporting to convey title to the complainant, and proof of possession of the premises under such claim of title; and as to the second of the complaints of appellant, the appellee insists that in proceedings under the act for the registration of land titles the applicant is not required to attack and overturn the title held by a party named as defendant in the application for a decree of registration, but such defendant must produce proof to establish the validity of his title, if any he claims or appears to have in the premises.

The complainant in a bill in equity to remove a tax deed as a cloud on his title to land, to entitle him to that relief, must allege in his bill the invalidity which he claims exists in the title or claim of the defendant, (Gage v. McLaughlin, 101 Ill. 155; Gage v. Reid, 104 id. 509;) and on the hearing must establish-that allegation and show, the invalidity of the title of his adversary. (6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—p. 157.) If the nature of the claim of title which is alleged to-constitute a cloud is unknown, the complainant may allege such want of knowledge and make the holder of the claim a defendant, and he may be required to discover the nature and extent of his claim, and on the discovery the bill may be so amended as to allege the invalidity of such claim of title and entitle the complainant to the desired relief if he can prove the allegations of the bill as amended. (Gage v. Reid, supra.) In the case last cited we said (p. 513): “It would be anomalous to find titles invalid, or enjoin their assertion, without any pleading's or allegations upon which to base the relief. It would be an innovation on long, well established and familiar practice. It has been held in cases almost without nufriber, that a complainant can only have such relief as he entitles himself to by the allegations of his bill, supported by proof.”

In cases to remove clouds from titles we have held that the complainant’s title may be sufficiently proved by establishing a prima facie case of ownership in fee; this for the reason it is essential to the right of the complainant to a decree in such cases, that he shall establish that his adversary’s title is invalid and but a cloud on the title of the complainant. Prima facie proof of title in fee in the complainant in a bill to remove a cloud would not, of itself, entitle the complainant to a decree declaring the tax deed or other apparent title held by the defendant to be invalid, but, in addition to such prima facie case, the complainant, to entitle himself to a decree canceling the deed of the defendant, must allege and prove the defendant’s claim of title is but a mere cloud. The proceeding at bar is not a bill in equity to remove a cloud, but is an application, under the statute, for the initial registration of the title to the lots. The principal object to be subserved by this statute is, to provide a system of registration whereby it shall be possible for an intending purchaser of land to ascertain, by an inspection of the register, who may convey to him the title. A proceeding under this statute, if it shall result in a decree of registration of the title of the applicant as the title in fee, should subject the titles of all parties to the proceeding, and every other title or claim to the land, to judicial investigation, in order that the true state of the title in fee should be ascertained and declared. The applicant for registration in the case at bar must therefore establish that the true title in fee is in him before he can have relief or require those whom he has brought before the court as defendants to bring their titles before the court for adjudication. If the applicant does not prove such a title as is entitled to be registered as a title in fee he cannot have relief, either in the way of the registration of his own title or a declaration finding that .the adverse claimants have no title, or that the claims are but clouds on such prima facie title as the applicant may be able to show. If the applicant in a proceeding, under the statute, for the registration of his titlej produces evidence establishing title in him, then thosfe who had been brought in, under the application, as holders of claims to the title may be required to produce proof to establish the validity of their claims to the title or to a lien on the title, as the case may be. Defendants to the proceeding may therefore be heard in the trial court to.urge that the applicant has not shown a title of the nature proper to be registered, for if that be true the application should be dismissed, and that without any regard whatever to the question whether the title or claims of the defendant to the title are but mere clouds.

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Bluebook (online)
207 Ill. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glos-v-kingman-co-ill-1903.