Graham v. O'Connor

182 N.E. 764, 350 Ill. 36
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1932
DocketNo. 21358. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 764 (Graham v. O'Connor) 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
Graham v. O'Connor, 182 N.E. 764, 350 Ill. 36 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

As a result of proceedings had under a bill in chancery therein filed in 1931 by the appellees, Harry IT. Graham and Jesse D. Graham, (herein called complainants,) the circuit court of Winnebago county entered a decree quieting title to 122 acres of farm land in that county. From that decree the present appeal was taken by Kate E. O’Connor, (herein called defendant,) who claims title to about 15 acres of the land involved.

The defendant derived her title through mesne conveyances and by descent from one who obtained title by a tax deed. Hugh Graham, the father of complainants, obtained title to the tract in question in 1879 by a warranty deed. By descent on the death of Hugh Graham, by will on the death of their mother, and by a conveyance, the complainants took title to the tract. The defendant secured her title by a tax deed in 1895 and by the payment of taxes on the tract for over thirty-five years. In March, 1926, after the death of Hugh Graham, she filed her bill in the circuit court of Winnebago county seeking to quiet the title to the 15-acre tract now in dispute. In her action she saw fit to name among the defendants to her suit the “unknown widow, heirs-at-law, legatees and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased.” On the same day she filed her affidavit, setting forth, among other things, that she was unable, after she had made “diligent search and due inquiry,” to ascertain the proper names and places of residence of the defendants the “unknown widow, heirs-at-law, legatees and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased,” and “that on due inquiry the above named defendants cannot be found and that upon diligent inquiry the place of residence of said above named defendants cannot be ascertained.” Again, at the same time she made another affidavit, to the effect “that the names and addresses of unknown widow, heirs-at-law, legatees and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased, * * * are each and all unknown to this affiant; that this affiant has been unable, after diligent search and due inquiry, to learn the proper names of the parties heretofore described or their addresses; that this affiant, as complainant herein, is desirous of making said parties defendants to the above named bill of complaint for the purpose of quieting the title to the above described premises, and that this affidavit is made for the purpose of causing process to issue against all of said parties by the name and description given as aforesaid as well as for the purpose of giving notice by publication, as required by the statutes of the State of Illinois.” In April, 1926, the defendant secured a decree in that proceeding quieting title to the 15-acre tract in herself.

The complainants alleged in their bill that the action brought by the defendant to quiet title in herself was without lawful force or effect, inasmuch as the defendant in her action had filed false affidavits in respect to the unknown widow, heirs-at-law, legateés and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased. They said that when the defendant secured her tax conveyance they we're in the open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession of the tract, and being so, process was never served upon them by virtue of the defendant’s bill, and that they had no knowledge of her action prior to the filing of the final decree in her case. The defendant in her answer to their bill denied the falsity of her affidavits.

The defendant contends that since her suit to quiet title to the tract was determined in her favor the complainants are barred from bringing their action to quiet the title to the same land. Under the circumstances in the present case this contention is without merit. It must be remembered that in the defendant’s suit the jurisdiction of the lower court over the complainants was based upon service by publication upon the “unknown widow, heirs-at-law, legatees and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased.” The constructive service thus obtained by publication was solely predicated upon the affidavits of the defendant that the widow, heirs-at-law, legatees and devisees of Hugh Graham, deceased, were unknown to her after she had made “diligent search and due inquiry” to ascertain the proper names and places of residence of that particular class of persons. Section 7 of our Chancery act (Cahill’s Stat. 1931, chap. 22, par. 7,) provides that in all suits in chancery and suits to obtain title to lands, if there be persons interested in the same whose names are unknown, such persons shall lawfully be made parties to the suit by the name and description of unknown owners, or unknown heirs or devisees of any deceased person who may have been interested in the subject matter of the suit previous to his or her death. The statute requires that the person desiring to make unknown persons parties shall file an affidavit stating that the names of such persons are unknown, and process shall then issue against such parties by the name and description given. That section of the statute created a particular class of defendants called “unknown parties.” Section 43 of the same act makes all decrees, orders, judgments and proceedings binding and conclusive upon such class. Section 12 of the act also provides specifically just how service shall be had upon those unknown parties. It compels the complainant or her attorney to file in the office of the cleric of the court wherein the proceeding is instituted, an affidavit showing that any defendant on due inquiry cannot be found, and that upon diligent inquiry being made the place of residence of a defendant cannot be ascertained. Thereúpon the clerk shall cause publication of notice of the pendency of the suit to be made in a newspaper, one of the necessary parts of this notice being the names of the parties to the action.

At the time the defendant filed her verified bill of complaint and her affidavits Hugh Graham was dead. That she had knowledge of this fact is disclosed by the language of the bill and of the affidavits. Her testimony discloses that she was acquainted with Graham in his lifetime, had conversed with him over the telephone a short time before his death, and that she knew about his last illness. Her testimony further shows that she knew Graham died a resident of New Milford, in Winnebago county; that he owned land close to or adjoining the tract she now claims; that she was well acquainted with the vicinity of the Graham farm, had been on the Graham land, knew Graham had children and had talked with one (Jesse) about her claiming title to the tract in question. At the time she prepared her bill and made her affidavits certain instruments were on file in the office of the probate clerk of Winnebago county as part of the public records of that office. Those instruments pertained to the estate of Graham and included a petition for letters of administration, setting forth the names and addresses of the decedent’s heirs-at-law, an order of heirship showing the names of his widow and heirs-at-law, and an inventory wherein it appears that the tract in question was inventoried as a part of Graham’s estate.

To secure jurisdiction over unknown parties by constructive service thr'ough publication is a concession of the law to the hard circumstance of necessity. The statute is particular in enumerating the necessary steps. The phrases “due inquiry” and “diligent inquiry” in that statute are not intended as useless phrases but are put there for a purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 764, 350 Ill. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-oconnor-ill-1932.