Jones v. Scott

145 N.E. 378, 314 Ill. 118
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1924
DocketNo. 15674
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 378 (Jones v. Scott) 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
Jones v. Scott, 145 N.E. 378, 314 Ill. 118 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed suit in ejectment to recover a tract of approximately seven acres of farm land in Champaign county from appellees. The issue was submitted to a jury in four separate trials. In the first trial the jury found the issues for appellant and in the subsequent trials for appellees. The location of the land in dispute is shown by the following plat:

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It is the tract lying north of the highway where it crosses the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 8. The declaration was also for the small tract in the northeast corner of said forty-acre tract lying south of the road and east of the drainage ditch, as the same is shown on the plat. The jury found for the appellant as to this tract and there is no dispute here over it.

It is not disputed that the plaintiff proved title to the premises in herself by showing a continuous chain of title from the United States government and that she and her predecessor in title paid all taxes. Her father, Samuel Koogler, purchased the forty acres of which these seven acres form a part, on the 30th of April, 1867. Appellees’ predecessor in title to the land lying immediately north of this strip was Abel S. Scott. Scott lived about a quarter mile east of the tract of land in controversy, on the same side of the road. Koogler lived about a half mile west of the strip of land in controversy and on the south side of the road. Scott owned the forty acres joining the strip on the north. Koogler owned the forty acres lying just west of this last named forty of Scott’s. It is not disputed that for more than thirty years Scott farmed the land in question and Koogler farmed a strip of Scott’s land off the west side of the forty acres lying immediately north of the land in controversy of approximately the same size. The road, as shown by the plat, does not run on quarter section lines. The evidence shows that in an early day the strip of land in question was low and swampy, and the road, by reason of that condition, followed the high ground on the south side of the swamp, and thereby became located in such a way as to separate the strip in controversy from the balance of the forty acres lying south of it. Scott and Koogler were both dead at the time of the trials.

Appellees defend on the ground, first, that the boundary lines between Scott and Koogler were established by agreement between them, and that they recognized and conceded the rights of each other as fixed- and determined by the fences establishing and determining the lines between the farms. They also defend on the ground of adverse possession for more than twenty years.

The rule is, that whenever a boundary line between adjoining owners of land is unascertained or in dispute they may establish it by parol agreement and possession in pursuance of that agreement, and the line so established will be binding on the parties and their privies. The effect of such an agreement is not to pass the title of real estate from one party to another by parol, for such cannot be done, but to fix the location of an unascertained or disputed boundary. If the location of the true boundary line is known to the owners they cannot transfer the land from one to the other by an agreement changing such location. There are but two conditions under which the rule in relation to establishment of boundary lines by agreement applies: One is where a line is in dispute, and the other is where it has not been ascertained. In either case the agreement is for the purpose of establishing the disputed or unascertained line. So the rule does not apply if the intention of the parties is merely to determine the exact or true line. Under such an agreement the line will not be established merely because of such agreement previously being entered into by the parties. Marks v. Madsen, 261 Ill. 51; Purtle v. Bell, 225 id. 523; Sonnemann v. Merts, 221 id. 362; Grubbs v. Boon, 201 id. 98; LaMont v. Dickinson, 189 id. 628; Clayton v. Feig, 179 id. 534; Sheets v. Sweeney, 136 id. 336; Yates v. Shaw, 24 id. 368.

The record is barren of any evidence of those elements held by courts generally to be necessary in order to establish boundary lines by agreement. The evidence showed a government survey of these lands. There is no evidence whatever that either of these parties did not know the true boundary line. In fact, all of the evidence shows that they did know the true boundary line, and that whatever the arrangement was, it did not have for its purpose the establishment of a boundary line. Under this condition of the record the appellees offered, and the court gave, an instruction which in effect told the jury that if they believe from the evidence that Scott and Koogler made an oral agreement, by the terms of which they settled the boundary lines between them as to the south and west boundaries of the forty acres lying north of the tract in question, by which the tract in controversy was included in said forty acres, and if they further find that under such agreement they held possession of their respective lands under the boundaries so established by such agreement, they should find the defendants not guilty as to the tract in question. As the record contains no evidence to which the rule with reference to the establishment of boundary lines by agreement could apply, there was therefore no evidence upon which to base this instruction and it should not have been given.

The controversy on the facts in the case arises over the character of the possession of these two strips of land, appellees contending that Scott’s possession was adverse for more than the statutory period of time, while appellant contends that such possession was at no time adverse but was at all times permissive under a mutual arrangement between Scott and Koogler for the exchange of use of the two strips as a matter of convenience. The record tends to show that Koogler and Scott took possession' of these separate tracts under a mutual arrangement of some character. While adverse possession may be shown by acts of proprietorship as well as by verbal claims, the Statute of Limitations does not run against permissive use or use by consent, and in computing the running of the period of such statute it is incumbent upon one urging it as a defense that he show that the relation by which the defendant holds the land has changed from a permissive use or use by consent to an adverse possession. Adverse possession cannot be made out by inference or by implication. Proof to establish it must be clear, positive and unequivocal. All presumptions are in favor of the true owner. To prove adverse possession the evidence must show that the possession was hostile, actual, visible, notorious and exclusive, and that it has been continuous for twenty years or more under claim of ownership and without any recognition of the title of the true owner. (Haley v. Johnson, 292 Ill. 525; Theiner v. Speckin, 290 id. 181; Horn v. Metzger, 234 id. 240; Zirngibl v. Calumet and Chicago Canal and Dock Co. 157 id. 430.) Possession, to be adverse to the true owner, must be under claim of ownership on the part of the one seeking the benefit of the Statute of Limitations, and where one goes into possession of land by agreement with the true owner without any claim of ownership, the statute will not run against the true owner by reason of such permissive possession. Page v. Bellamy, 222 Ill. 556; Brettmann v. Fischer, 216 id. 142; Shaw v. Schoonover, 130 id. 448.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 378, 314 Ill. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-scott-ill-1924.