Kandlik v. Hudek

6 N.E.2d 196, 365 Ill. 292
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 23915. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 196 (Kandlik v. Hudek) 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
Kandlik v. Hudek, 6 N.E.2d 196, 365 Ill. 292 (Ill. 1936).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

On May 4, 1925, the complainants, Ludmil Kandlik and George B. Archer, filed their bill in the circuit court of Lake county making defendants thereto Anton Hudek and his wife, Louise Hudek, and others. The relief sought was that (1) the court determine and locate the boundary line between certain lands owned by Hudek and lands owned by Archer; (2) establish and locate a right of way over and across the Hudek premises for the use of Kandlik; (3) the Hudeks be restrained from interfering with Archer and Kandlik in the occupation of the respective premises severally owned by them; and (4) from interfering with the passage by Kandlik over his easement on the Hudek property.

The bill alleged that the complainants were respectively the owners in fee and in possession of two adjoining tracts of land in the southwest quarter of section 9, township 43 north, range 9 east of the third principal meridian, in Lake county; that the Hudeks owned premises adjoining those of Archer and claimed to own some portion of the Archer property; that they had threatened to injure, and had injured, the premises claimed by the complainants; that Kandlik has a right of way across the Hudek premises, but the Hudeks had refused to permit Kandlik to cross any portion of their premises for the purpose of ingress to and egress from his premises; had forcibly ejected him from his right of way, had assaulted him while he was endeavoring to reach his premises by means of his right of passage, and had threatened to injure his property. The Hudeks answered. The special master found for the complainants. The trial court confirmed the master’s report after sustaining the complainants’ exceptions to some of the findings and entered a decree granting the relief prayed. The Hudeks have appealed.

The question involved in the litigation arises over the construction of descriptions used in the deeds under which the parties acquired title to their respective premises. On July 11, 1848, Stanton M. Thomas and LaFayette Thomas were the owners, of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 9. LaFayette Thomas was the owner of the west fraction of the southwest quarter of section g, (being all that portion of the east half of the southwest quarter lying west of the Fox river). On that day Stanton M. Thomas conveyed to LaFayette Thomas his equal undivided one-half of the south part of the premises last mentioned by the following description: Commencing at a post on the southwest corner of said section 9, thence north two degrees east 21.98 chains to a post, thence north 89^ degrees east 39.82 chains to a post on the west bank of Fox river, thence with said river down-stream 27.20 chains to a post on the south side of said section 9, thence south 89*4 degrees west 24.67 chains to the place of beginning, containing 70.53 acres more or less, which tract is hereinafter referred to as tract A. On the same day Stanton M. and LaFayette Thomas conveyed to Eli Henderson the north part of the west portion of the southwest quarter of section 9 by the following description : Beginning at the quarter post on the west side of said section 9. at the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of section 9, thence south 87 degrees east 41 chains to a post in the center of said section, thence south two degrees west 7 chains to a post on the west bank of Fox river, thence with said river down-stream 8.90 chains to a post, thence south 8g}4 degrees west 39.82 chains to a post on section line, thence north two degrees east 18.44 chains to the place of beginning containing 70.53 acres more or less, which tract is hereinafter referred to as tract B.

It will be noted that by the descriptions in these two deeds Stanton M. and LaFayette Thomas divided that part of the southwest quarter of section 9 west of the Fox river into two parts of an equal area of 70.53 acres, the south part herein referred to as tract A and the north part as tract B; that measuring on the west line of the southwest quarter (tract A), that line under the voluntary division extended north 21.98 chains, and tract B, on the same line, extended south 18.44 chains in order to, create a division line east and west through the southwest quarter, with the acreage west of the Fox river in the southwest quarter north of such line equal to the acreage south of such line. Such division line was approximately 1.98 chains north of the government survey line dividing the north half from the south half of such quarter-section. A division fence was erected and had been maintained on such voluntary division line between tracts A and B for at least fifty years prior to the filing of the bill. That fence was still standing when the bill was filed.

On February 2, 1906, Mina Rohrhof by a connected chain of conveyances acquired title to tract B by the description of -the north half of the southwest fractional quarter of section 9. During all the time from July 11, 1848, to February 2, 1906, tract B was transferred by mesne conveyances under such last mentioned description although during that same period the different owners occupied tract B and no other part of the southwest quarter. On February 8, 1906, Mina Rohrhof conveyed to Charles F. Busch all her interest in the premises stated in her deed to be a parcel of land in the north half of the fractional southwest quarter of section 9, described as follows: Beginning at a point on the west bank of Fox river at the southeast corner of that portion of the said north half of the southwest fractional quarter which lies west of the Fox river, running thence northerly along the river bank 100 feet, thence due west 400 feet, thence southwesterly and parallel with the Fox river to the south line of said north half of the southwest fractional quarter, thence east along said south line 400 feet to the place of beginning.

On March 8, 1906, Mina Rohrhof entered into a contract in writing with Busch, which was recorded the following day, setting forth, among other things, that she had purchased of Busch certain premises in sections 9 and 10 and had deeded back to Busch a strip of land along the Fox river 100 feet by 400 feet in the north half of the southwest fractional quarter of section 9, and therein further agreed with Busch that he “shall have a right of way or easement over all the Nji of the SWJ4 of said section 9 or over any of the adjoining land designated and owned by the first parties for the purpose of giving said Busch free access to the road from said strip deeded back to him.”

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 196, 365 Ill. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kandlik-v-hudek-ill-1936.