Green v. Dietrich

3 N.E. 800, 114 Ill. 636
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 800 (Green v. Dietrich) 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
Green v. Dietrich, 3 N.E. 800, 114 Ill. 636 (Ill. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this ease was brought by George V. Dietrich, in the circuit court of Knox county, against Florence Green and Barbara A. Green, and is to compel a specific performance of a contract made by and between Stephen B. Allen and Alfred Thurman, since deceased, for the sale to Thurman of the premises involved in this litigation. One of the defendants, Barbara A. Green, is the widow of Alfred Thurman, and the other, Florence Green, is his only child and heir-at-law. Whatever title Alfred Thurman had in the premises is now claimed by defendant Barbara A. Green. Complainant alleges that whatever title Stephen B. Allen had to the property in controversy, has since been acquired by him through certain mesne conveyances, and he asks by his bill to have the written contract between Alfred Thurman and Stephen B. Allen, in regard to the land, performed by defendants in his favor, if they shall elect to do so, and on their failure to perform such contract, that certain titles which it is alleged Thurman acquired to the property, be declared to have been held by him in trust for Stephen B. Allen and his grantee, and that defendants be decreed to convey such titles as they have, by inheritance or otherwise, to complainant, and for other relief. On the hearing in the circuit court, it was decreed substantially according to the prayer of the bill, and defendant Barbara A. Green brings the ease to this court, and assigns numerous errors on the record.

The agreement between Allen and Thurman, concerning the land, was entered into on the 2d day of November, 1864. It recited that Allen had sfeld to Thurman the land described in the bill, for $3500, to be paid within three years from the date of the contract, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, but the purchase money was not to be paid until the vendor should make and deliver to the vendee or his legal representatives a good and sufficient warranty deed therefor, with a perfect title to the premises. The agreement contained the following paragraph: “It is further agreed between the said parties hereto, that in case the said Stephen B. Allen or his legal representatives shall fail to make, execute and deliver unto the said Alfred Thurman or his legal representatives said deed of conveyance, as before stated, the said Thurman shall have full and continued possession of said premises until the expiration of three years, to pay all taxes which may be hereafter assessed on said premises; and in case of the failure aforesaid of the party of the first part to make said deed, the said Thurman is to pay the said Allen a reasonable rent for said premises so long as he can hold peaceable possession of the same. ” It may be necessary further on to give a construction to this clause of the contract. At the time this contract was made there is no pretence that Allen had any legal title to the land. All he had was possession, and that he delivered to Thurman. Nor is it claimed he was in a position, at any time within three years after the date of the contract, to make a perfect title of the land to Thurman. It is clearly proved that Stephen B. Allen did not then have any legal title to the land, nor has he since acquired such legal title. Whether he had any equitable title that he could convey to complainant, must depend on what conclusion shall be reached as to the titles subsequently acquired by Thurman from other sources,—that is, whether Thurman acquired such titles for himself in his own right, or as trustee for Allen and his grantee.

It seems Everett Messenger and William H. MeWhirter were sureties for Stephen B. Allen in some matters, and in, order to indemnify them, he made to them an equitable assignment of his contract with Alfred Thurman, concerning this tract of land. After the death of Everett Messenger, to make that assignment more effective he made a deed of the land to M. J. Messenger, the administrator of Everett Messenger, deceased. Since then, Frank S. Murphy bought of M. J. Messenger whatever interest in the land he obtained by his deed from Allen, for the sum of $1000, and for his convenience had the deed made to complainant. In his deposition Stephen B. Allen distinctly states he derived title to this land from his brother, Elisha B. Allen, by a deed sent to him from Oregon, and that he never had any title to the land until he received that deed. All the title complainant has to the land in controversy is the title that was in Stephen B. Allen, which he derived from his brother, Elisha B. Allen. No other title is insisted upon.

Both parties seem to concede that prior to February 25, 1858, John Comstock owned the entire quarter section now in dispute. On that day he conveyed the undivided half of the quarter section to Benjamin F. Allen. Afterwards, on the 3d day of March, 1859, Benjamin F. Allen, his wife, Mary, not joining with him, conveyed this quarter section, with other lands, to his son, Elisha B. Allen. This deed was recorded April 14, 1862. Prior to that date,—that is, on the 15th day of October, 1859,—John Comstock had conveyed the other undivided one-half of the quarter section to Andrew Crawford. This latter deed was recorded August 16, 1861, which was before the recording of Benjamin F. Allen’s deed to his son, Elisha B. Allen. In May, 1862, by virtue of an execution issued on a transcript judgment in favor of Owen Conlin, against Elisha B. Allen, the interest of defendant in execution, in the land, was levied upon and sold to the plaintiff in execution, for $318. There was no redemption from that sale by any one, and afterwards the sheriff made Alfred Thurman, as the assignee or holder of the certificate of purchase, a deed for the land that had been sold to Conlin. The title to the undivided half of the quarter section that was in Crawford, afterwards, through certain mesne conveyances, came to Alfred Thurman. That title he held at the timé of his death. Since the death of Alfred Thurman, defendant, Barbara A. Green, purchased from the widow of Benjamin F. Allen, for the sum of $1000, her dower in this quarter section, and in other lands claimed to have been owned by her late husband, and took a conveyance of the same to herself and her daughter, Florence Green. Subsequently to the making of this latter deed, Barbara A. Green and Florence agreed to a parol partition of the land, in which it was agreed Barbara. A. Green should have the quarter section in controversy in this suit, and that Florence Green should have certain lands, that had been conveyed to her by Alfred Thurman, and his. wife, Barbara A. Green, and in consideration of that agreement Florence relinquished and gave to her mother all her interest and title to the land in dispute. That was in 1875, and since then Barbara A. Green has been in the exclusive-possession, and Florence has claimed no interest in this particular parcel of land adverse to her mother, and does not now claim any.

From this statement of the evidence it is apparent the title-that was in Comstock, who seems to have been the source of' title claimed by both parties, was vested in Alfred Thurman, and since his death, by the parol partition of land made by the heir and the widow, the land in controversy is now the-property of Barbara A. Green, unless it shall be held the titles-acquired by Alfred Thurman in his lifetime were taken in his-name in trust for complainant’s remote grantor, Stephen B.. Allen. That is really the only question of any moment in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 800, 114 Ill. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-dietrich-ill-1885.