Markoe v. Wakeman

107 Ill. 251, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 257
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 107 Ill. 251 (Markoe v. Wakeman) 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
Markoe v. Wakeman, 107 Ill. 251, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 257 (Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dickey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a petition for partition, filed by Hartman Markoe, in the Superior Court of Cook county, December 6, 1870, claiming to be the owner in fee of the undivided half of eighty acres of land, known as the east half of. the south-east quarter of section 27, township 38, range 14, and lying a few miles south of the present city of Chicago. The entire quarter section, containing one hundred and sixty acres, was originally entered at the land office of Chicago by Herman Bond, on June 27, 1835. On December 4, 1835, Bond, by an instrument in writing filed in the land office, sold and assigned his certificate of purchase and his interest in the land to Edward Shepard and Hartman Markoe, the petitioner, and requested that the patent issue to them. The patent was issued to Shepard and Markoe, as tenants in common, on October 1, 1839. Before that time, Shepard (September 8, 1836,) had sold and conveyed, by deed and warranty of title, to Maurice Wakeman the whole of the east half of that quarter section. Wakeman was dead before the petition was filed, and by amendment the heirs and grantees of Maurice Wake-man were made defendants. Those claiming under Maurice Wakeman claim title in fee to the ichole of the tract of land known as the east half of the quarter, by their answer to the petition, and also by a cross-bill, asking that the title thereto be confirmed in them. Markoe, and those claiming under him through conveyances made after the partition suit was brought, but before answer and cross-bill filed, claim to own the undivided half of the tract, known as the east half of this quarter.

A careful examination and consideration of all the documents and other proofs in the case lead clearly ,to the conclusion that at some time between the 7th of July, 1836, and the 8th of September of the same year, Shepard and Markoe, being the owners in common of the entire quarter section, containing one hundred and sixty acres, each owning.an undivided half thereof, did make partition thereof between themselves, whereby Markoe became the owner in fee of the west half of the quarter, and Shepard became the owner in fee of the east half of the quarter, and shows that Markoe was thereby divested of all interest in or title to the east half,—the undivided half of which he and his grantees now claim. The proof of this seems very satisfactory, although the same is chiefly circumstantial.

When the certificate of purchase was assigned by Bond to Shepard and Markoe, December 4, 1835, Shepard was a partner in business of one Breese. Their store was in Chicago, which at that time was a small town. Markoe was a book-keeper and principal clerk in the service of the firm of Breese & Shepard. Markoe and Shepard were both residents of Chicago,, and roomed together in a room over the store, and were very intimate friends. They thus dwelt together until Shepard moved to New York City, in the summer or fall of 1836. Shepard had money with which to buy lands, but Markoe had none. Shepard, under an arrangement between him and Markoe, (made upon the suggestion of Shepard, as a professed act of friendship to Markoe,) paid the whole of the price of the land to Bond, and Markoe was charged on the books of Breese & Shepard, in account against his salary, with one-half of the purchase money. Shepard kept all the papers relating to the purchase, and was relied upon by Markoe to make sale of Markoe’s interest for him. In July, 1836, Maurice Wakeman, of New York City, being in Chicago, on the 7th day of that month signed a contract in writing with Shepard, for the purchase from Shepard of Shepard’s interest in some thirteen different tracts of land, and, among others, Shepard by that writing contracted to sell to Wakeman the undivided Half of the whole of the quarter in question. At that time evidently no partition of the land had been made between Markoe and Shepard. By that contract of July 7, 1836, the deeds from Shepard to Wakeman were to he made “on the arrival of Shepard” in the city of New York. Shepard did go from Chicago to New York in the summer of 1836. Markoe gave to Shepard, when he was about starting to New York City, a power of attorney authorizing him to sell for Markoe, not the undivided half of this quarter, but the west half of the same. This is shown by the statements in Markoe’s bill in chancery, hereafter spoken of.

This indicates pretty clearly that after Shepard’s contract of July 7, 1836, with Wakeman, and before Shepard went on to New York, a partition of this quarter had been made between them, by which Markoe had come to claim the exclusive right to the west half instead of the undivided half of the whole quarter. Not only só, but-we find Shepard, in fulfillment of his contract with Wakeman, (made July 7, 1836, and by which he agreed to convey the undivided half of this quarter,) makes, on September 8, 1836, a warranty deed, conveying to Wakeman, not the undivided half of the quarter, but the east half of the quarter. He then had in his possession the power of attorney from Markoe authorizing him, as his agent, to sell the west half as Markoe’s separate property, and probably had also with him the deed of partition..

In further proof that such partition had been made, we may note that James Grant, an attorney at law in Chicago, and familiar with the nature and evidence of title to real estate in Chicago, surpervised for Wakeman, as his attorney, the exchange of properties between Shepard and Wakeman, and Wakeman, with full knowledge that on July 7, 1836, Shepard claimed the undivided half of that quarter, did, on the 8tii of September, 1836, under the advice of Grant, accept from Shepard, in lieu thereof, a deed for the east half of the quarter. There must, at that time, have been extant some evidence of such a partition. It may have been, and probably was, made, with Wakeman’s consent, after the contract of July 7, 1836, and before Wakeman left Chicago for New York City. Further in support of the view that such a partition was in fact made about that time,, we find Markoe in New York City on November 29, 1836', when and where he signed, sealed and acknowledged a deed of that date conveying the west half of the quarter section to> Eeid, and covenanting that he owned the same in fee simple.

From the fall of 1836 until the commencement of this suit in 1870, a period of more than thirty-four years, Markoe, so far as the proof show's, never, by word or act, claimed to have.any interest in or title to the east half of this quarter section. Not only so, but while Markoe still lived in Chicago, having discovered that the securities which he accepted as the consideration for his deed to Eeid for the west half of this quarter were, as he says, absolutely worthless, he went to New York City, and instituted there a suit in chancery, on the 10th day of July, 1838, to set aside the sale to Eeid and re-invest himself with the title to the entire west half of this quarter. In that hill he charges that on and before the 29th 'of November, 1836, he was seized in fee of the west half of this quarter section, containing eighty acres; that he had given to Shepard, who was then in Chicago and about to go to New York, a power of attorney to sell this tract (the west half of this quarter) and another tract lying in Illinois. He states the time of giving this power of attorney as “about the month of June,” 1836, hut as it is evident Shepard did not go on to New York until after this contract with Wake-man of July 7, 1S36, it seems plain this power of attorney was not given until after the 7th of July, 1836.

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Bluebook (online)
107 Ill. 251, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markoe-v-wakeman-ill-1883.