Kamphouse v. Gaffner

73 Ill. 453
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 73 Ill. 453 (Kamphouse v. Gaffner) 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
Kamphouse v. Gaffner, 73 Ill. 453 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of trespass quare clausmn, by appellants against appellee and John Gaffner, Jr., who died pending the litigation in the court below. The suit was commenced in the Jo Daviess circuit court, whence it was removed, by change of venue, on the petition of appellee, to the Winnebago circuit court. Trial was had in that court, resulting in a judgment in favor of appellee, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellants’ claim is, that appellee and his co-defendant entered certain premises to which they were entitled to possession, and mined therein and carried away large quantities of lead ore. The premises are in what is now known as the “ Sand Prairie ” or Mew California diggings, situated near the Mississippi river, in the township of Bice, in Jo Daviess county. The mining territory at this place consists of a series of bluff's, the general course of which is from north to south, rising abruptly to a considerable height, from the margin of a slough that puts back from the river. The usual mode of mining there is by running levels or drifts, horizontally, from the slough into the bluffs. The ore is found in crevices or openings in the rocks, running back from the base of the bluffs.

There is no dispute in regard to the fee simple title to the premises involved in the controversy. It was in one John Kamphouse. who died intestate in 1854, leaving, him surviving, a widow and two children, who were his only heirs at law. The widow subsequently married one Lenfers, and is still living. One of the children, a daughter, intermarried with one Henke. The other child, when about eighteen months old, died, leaving its mother, Mrs. Lenfers, and its sister, Mrs. Henke, its only heirs at law. Before 1870, Mrs. Henke and her husband both died intestate, leaving their infant daughter, Anna Caroline Henke, their sole surviving heir.

Appellants claim under two leases, by virtue of which, they insist, they are entitled to the possession, for mining purposes, of all the territory of the width of the frontage on the bluff, embraced by their leases, extending thence due east across the Kamphouse lands. Appellee claims in part under a lease, jj and in part under a parol license to mine. He denies that ap-' pellants are entitled to run due east from their frontage on the hluff, but insists they are only entitled to follow any crevice or mining range, starting from their frontage on the bluff, across the Kamphouse land. He also insists that he is entitled to follow any crevice or mining range, starting from his own frontage on the bluff, although it shall cross a due east and west line extending from that part of appellants’ frontage on the bluff nearest his possession, across the Kamphouse land.

There was evidence tending to show that appellee, in following what he claims to be a crevice or mineral range, starting from a point on the bluff entirely beyond the frontage emoraced in either of the leases under which appellants claim, crossed and went beyond a due east and west line extending from appellants’ frontage nearest his possession, across the Kamphouse land, and there took out a large amount of ore.

The first question, in determining whether there was error in giving and refusing instructions, in the respects indicated by appellants’ objections, is, what is the proper construction of the words descriptive of the premises leased, as found in the leases under which appellants claim ?

The first lease is dated August 12, 1871, and it purports to lease “ all the interest of said party of the first part (which is one-lialf) in all that part of the lands of the estate of the late John Kamphouse, deceased, in the township of Kice, between John Gaffner’s sand level, and the range he is working now. Said claim is seventy-five feet wide, and is known as the old Bardwell & Robinson range. The ground hereby leased fronts on the slough on the west half of the north-east quarter of section 28, township 27 north, of range 1 east, of the fourth principal meridian, and shall run from thence east on all the lands of said Kamphouse estate.”

The second lease is dated February 17,1872, and it purports to lease “ all the interest of said party of the first part (which is one-half) in all that part of the lands of the estate of the late John Kamphouse, deceased, in the township of Rice, north of the leased mining claim to Kamphonse and Roddweig, as per lease dated August 12, 1871, (known as the old Bardwell & Robinson range.) and adjoining John Gaffner’s mining claim. Said claim has been vacant for mining heretofore, and is a strip six feet ten inches, according to an old survey, laying between said Kamphouse and Roddweig claim and the claim of John Gaffner. The ground hereby leased fronts on the slough on the west half of the north-east quarter of section 28, township 27 north, of range 1 east, of the fourth principal meridian, and shall run from thence east on all the lands of the Kamphouse estate.”

It is argued by appellants that the word “ east,” as it occurs in the language quoted from the leases, was an absolute term of description, and that the leases gave no other terms of description by which the boundaries of the premises could be discovered.

We are unable to yield our assent to this construction. Brant v. Ogden, 1 Johns. 158, referred to as sustaining it, has, in our opinion, no application. There, the term northerly, which was held to mean due north, was alone used, withoxit any object to direct its inclination to the east or to the west, while here, the boxxndaries are given with reference to previous leases, and it is, therefore, impossible it could have been intended any other teiTitoxw was to be ixiclxxded than that within those bouxidai’ies. The rule is universal, where boundaides are uiven O with reference to fixed and known objects, they coixtrol courses and distances. 4 Kent’s Com. (8th Ed.) 519; 2 Washb. on Real Estate, (2d Ed.) 673.

The lease to appellee bears date on the 16th day of Jxxne, 1871, axid it exnbraces “ all the intex-est of said party of the first part, being the undivided half ixi the Sand Level range, north of Bni-richter & Hands’ minixig claim, and of two other ranges xxorth of William Kaxnphoixse’s xnining claixn, on land of the estate of the late John Kamphouse deceased, in the township of Rice. The ground hereby leased fronts on the sloxxgh, on the west half of the north-east quarter of section 28, township 27 north, of range 1 east, of the fom’th pi’incipal meridian, and shall run from thence east on all the lands of said Kamphonse estate.”

Here, as in the leases to appellants, it is evident the words “ and shall run from thence east,” etc., are controlled by. the previous words designating the location.

Evidence was also given showing the location and course of the range that appellee was working on the 12th day of August, 1871, and to which reference is made as a boundary by the lease to appellants of that date.

There can be no question of the competency of this and all other evidence introduced for the purpose of explaining the circumstances under which the leases were executed, Stanley v. Green, 12 Cal. 162, Hildebrand v. Fogle, 20 Ohio 147, 157; or of applying the leases to their proper subject matter, Bradley v. The St. I. and G. St. P. Co.

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73 Ill. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kamphouse-v-gaffner-ill-1874.