Knobloch v. Mueller

17 N.E. 696, 123 Ill. 554
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 17 N.E. 696 (Knobloch v. Mueller) 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
Knobloch v. Mueller, 17 N.E. 696, 123 Ill. 554 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the C.ourt:

The bill in this case seeks to remove as a cloud upon the title of appellee, Solomon Mueller, derived under the will of 1855, the deed of Catharine and Emil Bebhan to appellant, and to restrain, by injunction, the prosecution of an action of ejectment brought by appellant to recover the land partitioned to Catharine Bebhan in the proceedings instituted by her for partition of the lands of which her father died seized, and to enjoin a certain trespass suit brought for alleged trespasses upon said land by appellee, and to restrain Mrs. Bebhan from collecting $1638.97, decreed her as rents and profits in said partition proceeding. Mrs. Bebhan not having appealed from the decree against her, the latter branch of the case made by the bill is not before us.

"When the instrument dated March 14, 1870, purporting to be the last will and testament of George C. Mueller, who died March 20,1870, was set aside upon bill filed for that purpose, it was supposed by all the parties in interest that his estate had descended to his heirs-at-law as intestate estate, and letters of administration were granted accordingly. All the parties acquiesced in this condition of affairs, and rested in the belief that the property had so descended, until the discovery, in March or April, 1883,—thirteen years after the death of the ancestor,—of the will of the 9th of March, 1855, by which the estate in question was devised to George and Solomon Mueller. The good faith of the parties is not questioned. No fraud or misconduct is alleged, or laches imputed or imputable to any one, on account of the delay in the production of this will, or in any of the proceedings had in respect to the real or personal estate prior to its discovery. When Catharine Eebhan, daughter and one of the heirs-at-law of said George C. Mueller, deceased, on the 22d day of March, 1879, filed her bill for partition of the real estate of which said George C. had died seized, and when Solomon Mueller filed his answer, admitting the intestacy of his father, and consenting to the partition to Mrs. Eebhan and Mrs. Eeinhardt, his sisters, each a one-fourth part or interest in the land of which their common ancestor died seized, and consented to the decree therefor, the several parties, in good faith, believed the facts alleged in her bill to be true, and that the land had descended to the four children of George C. Mueller, deceased, in equal parts, in fee. It is also equally clear that when appellant, Thomas Knobloch, purchased the interest of Catharine Eebhan in said land, and paid her therefor $5050, he did so in good faith, relying upon the title of said Catharine as found and declared by the circuit court of St. Clair county, in said partition proceeding, by the consent of appellee. Upon the production and probate of the will of 1855, in April, 1883, it became manifest that the title to said land had not, in fact, so descended to the heirs-at-law of said George Christian Mueller, but by virtue of that will the legal title thereto, at the death of the testator, vested in the devisees, George and Solomon Mueller, and that by the last will of said George Mueller, who died February 29, 1875, the legal title to the whole of said land became vested in appellee, Solomon Mueller. It is apparent that all of the parties, while acting in good faith, were mistaken, and that the decree of the circuit court finding one-fourth interest of said land in fee in Catharine Eebhan, would not have been entered had the court or parties been aware of the true condition of the title to the land.

It is said by counsel for appellee, that this bill may be maintained, if upon no other ground, as a bill in the nature of a bill of review. This is manifestly a misapprehension. In neither the frame of the bill, nor in the prayer, has the pleader attempted a review of the decree rendered in the partition proceeding of Rebhan v. Mueller et al. The bill sets out the filing of that bill, the decree of partition, and for rents and profits, but it nowhere seeks to re-open that decree, or reverse, impeach or alter it, or to procure a rehearing of that cause upon the alleged newly discovered matter. The prayer is to remove appellant’s title derived thereunder, as a cloud upon appellee’s title, and to restrain proceedings under that decree, without re-opening it or setting it aside. The whole scope of the bill is to procure the relief sought, upon the equitable ground of mistake of fact as to the title at the time of the entry of that decree, without in any way interfering with it, but seeks to enjoin proceedings under it.

The two grounds upon which a bill of review, or bill in the nature of a bill of review, will lie, are errors of law appearing on the face of the decree, without further examination of facts; and new fact or facts discovered since the decree, which are material, and which it was impossible for the party to produce at the time the decree passed. (Daniell’s Ch. Pr. 1576; 2 Smith’s Ch. Pr. 50.) Bills containing newly discovered matter are in the nature of original bills, in so far as such new matter presents an issuable fact, and therefore admitting an answer and formation of an issue; but only so far as it relates to the truth and sufficiency of the alleged new matter, and its admissibility for the purpose of affecting and opening the original decree. (Authorities supra; Buffington v. Harvey, 95 U. S. 99.) The purpose of the bill of the character named, is to procure a reversal, alteration or explanation of the former decree. The bill should state the former bill, the proceedings thereon, and the decree rendered by the court, the grievance under the decree of the party presenting the hill, and the error of law or new matter discovered upon which it is sought to reverse, re-open or impeach it. In hills of review, if the former decree has not been carried into execution, the prayer may simply be that the same may be reversed and set aside; if the former decree has been executed, that the decree be reversed, and the complainant be restored to his former condition or status as if it had not been rendered. In bills in the nature of bills of review, instead of praying the reversal of the former decree, the prayer should be that the cause be reheard in respect to and considering the new matter, at the same time it is reheard upon the original bill, etc. Daniell’s Ch. Pr. 1581, 1582.

The decree of partition, rendered at the February term, 1880, and the subsequent decree approving the report of the commissioner, rendered at the May term, 1881, of said court, remain unreversed, and in full force and effect. The court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, and rendered its decree determining the several interests of the complainant Catherine Eebhan and appellee, by the consent of appellee, as appears by his answer filed in said cause, and by the recitals in said decree of partition.

Decrees of courts of chancery, in respect of matters within their jurisdiction, are as binding and conclusive upon the parties and their privies as are judgments at law; and a decree by consent, in an amicable suit, has been held to have an additional claim to be considered final. (Alleson v. Stark, 9 A. & E. 225.) Decrees so entered by consent can not be reversed, set aside or impeached by bill of review or bill in the nature of a bill of review, except for fraud, unless it be shown that the consent was not, in fact, given, or something was inserted as by consent that was not consented to. Daniell’s Ch. Pr.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E. 696, 123 Ill. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knobloch-v-mueller-ill-1888.