Keightley v. Glass

275 Ill. 149
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 Ill. 149 (Keightley v. Glass) 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
Keightley v. Glass, 275 Ill. 149 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case comes to this court by writ of error to review a decree of the circuit court of Calhoun county in a parti-, tion suit, entered at the October, 1910, term of said court.

George Keightley and J. M. Keightley filed their bill for the partition of certain lands therein described. The bill alleged that complainants and nine persons named as defendants to the bill were the owners in fee of the land described in the bill and which it was sought to partition. The land described in the bill was four islands in the Mississippi river, in Calhoun county. It is unnecessary to refer to any other of the islands described except Island 45, which is the only land in dispute in this litigation. That island lies in the Mississippi river on the Illinois side, in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, and is in sections 25 and 26, township 8, south, range 4, west of the fourth principal meridian, in Calhoun county. The briefs state 48.97 acres are in section 26 and 26.34 acres in section 25. Complainants and defendants to the bill were organized but not incorporated as a hunting and fishing club, and said islands in the Mississippi river were used by the club for hunting and fishing purposes. The bill alleges complainants and defendants were the owners in fee simple of the north part of Island 45, in section 26, town 8, range 4, west, containing 48.97 acres, more or less; that the complainant George Keightley had expended upwards of $512.50 in obtaining title to all of the premises acquired by the club, and that the members of the said club were indebted to him for the sum so expended, and interest. The bill further alleged the defendants had disposed of timber cut off the property of the club and asked that an accounting be had.

Defendants answered the bill, denying that complainants owned any part of the premises described in the bill, as tenants in common or otherwise, except that complainant George Keightley claimed to own fifteen acres off the north end of Island 45, in section 26. The answer further alleged the organization of the hunting and fishing club under the name of “The Clarksville Hunting and Fishing Club,” of Clarksville, Missouri; that said club was desirous of securing suitable grounds and preserves for hunting and fishing, and purchased of George Keightley, among other lands described, all of Island 45 in section 26, commonly known as Carroll island, except fifteen acres off the north end thereof. The answer further avers that immediately after the purchase the complainant George Keightley, from and through whom they were purchased, caused the lands to be surveyed, pointed out the lines and boundaries of all of said premises and put defendants in possession, and that they have so remained in open, notorious, uninterrupted, exclusive possession of all of said lands and are now in the actual possession of same as absolute owners thereof. The answer avers that from the time of the purchase from George Keightley defendants paid him the full purchase price, $300. Defendants deny the expenditure by George Keightley of money in obtaining title to the premises, as alleged in the bill, deny defendants owe him anything on that account, deny they have sold or disposed of logs, as charged in the bill, and deny the right of complainants to an accounting.

On October 14, 1910, by leave of court, complainants amended their bill, and alleged George Keightley to be the sole owner in fee of all of Island 45, in sections 25 and 26, and that he was in possession thereof, but that defendants, without right, claimed a portion of said island, which claim constituted a cloud upon complainants’ title, and the prayer of the bill was amended so as to ask that said claim be decreed to be null and void.

Defendants answered the amended bill and again denied George Keightley was the sole owner of Island 45, in sections 25 and 26, or that he was in possession thereof, or that he owned any part of said premises except fifteen acres off the north end of said Island 45. Further answering, defendants averred that for more than fifteen years before the commencement of the suit defendants had been in undisputed possession of Island 45, except fifteen acres in the north part, claiming title to the same by virtue of a contract made between complainant George Keightley and defendants, by the terms of which it was agreed that George Keightley would procure title to Island 45 from the owners thereof and procure a deed to be made to defendants for said island, except fifteen acres off the north end ther'eo f; that in furtherance of said agreement George Keightley, for a stipulated consideration agreed upon, procured a conveyance to be made from one Kamp 'to defendants, under the name and style of “The Clarksville Hunting and Fishing Club,” of all of Island 45 except fifteen acres off the north end, and that under and by virtue of said agreement, defendants, with the knowledge and consent of George Keightley, entered into possession of said premises, have made valuable and lasting improvements thereon, paid all taxes and assessments and have claimed to own the same. The answer further avers thát if complainant George Keightley has any kind of title to the disputed premises he has acquired it since the procurement of title .under the original agreement referred to and holds it in trust for the benefit of defendants. The answer avers that there was an error made by the scrivener in drawing the deed from Kamp to defendants, in that the deed purported to convey to defendants the north part of the island, whereas, in truth and in fact, it was intended to convey, and should have conveyed, all of said Island 45 except fifteen acres off the north end.

After replication filed, proofs were taken before the master in chancery and reported to the court, where the case was tried upon the bill, answer, replication and proofs reported by the master. No decree was filed at the term at which the hearing was had, but on the first day of the May, 1912, term a decree was filed, which found that the deed from Kamp describing the property conveyed as the north part of Island 45, in section 26, was a mistake; that it was intended to convey, and the deed should have recited the conveyance of, the south part of Island 45, in section 25, containing 26.34 acres, and it was ordered that the deed be reformed in accordance with the intention of the parties to convey the south part of said island, containing 26.34 acres. The decree therefore found that complainants and defendants owned said 26.34 acres off the south side of Island 45, and a partition thereof, together with other islands described, was ordered.

On the same day said decree was filed defendants to the bill for partition filed a bill making the complainants in the partition suit, together with Kamp and wife, defendants, alleging the decree was procured to be signed by the judge and entered through the fraud of one of the solicitors for the complainants in the partition suit and praying that it be vacated and set aside. The solicitors now representing the plaintiffs in error, who were the complainants in the bill for partition, were not at that time their solicitors and did not appear in the case until the suing out of this writ of error. The bill set out in hcec verba the bill for partition and the amendment thereto, the answer and amended answer and the decree entered in said partition suit.

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Bluebook (online)
275 Ill. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keightley-v-glass-ill-1916.