McMahon v. Borland

104 N.E. 701, 262 Ill. 358
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 104 N.E. 701 (McMahon v. Borland) 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
McMahon v. Borland, 104 N.E. 701, 262 Ill. 358 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees filed their bill in chancery in the circuit court of Cook county to declare and quiet title to land and to enjoin alleged trespasses. The bill, in substance, alleged appellee Fannie McMahon was the owner of the south half of lot 4 in block 126, School Section addition to Chicago, being section 16, town 39, north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian; that appellee Mary A. Crowe was the owner of the north half of lot 9 in said block; that each of said parcels is 25 feet wide, fronting on the east side of Clark street, and running east 100 feet to and abutting upon an alley 10 feet wide, which runs north and south through said block 126; that they and their predecessors in title have since 1866 enclosed and occupied said lands their full depth of 100 feet; that the alley running north and south through the block was laid out and dedicated to the public use as an alley prior to 1866; that it is 10 feet wide, and its east line is 100 feet west of the west line of Federal street and its west line is 100 feet east of the east line of Clark street; that said alley is a continuation of an alley laid out by a plat of a subdivision of block 125, which lies immediately north of block 126. The bill further alleges appellant, Harriet B. Borland, owns lots 5, 8, 11, 14 and 17 in block 126, east of said alley and fronting on Federal street; that the lots on each side of said alley, fronting upon Clark street and Federal street, are ioo feet deep, but that appellant claims said alley is a private alley laid out over her own land; that she owns the fee under it and 4.5 feet west of the west line of the alley; that she claims her lots are 115 feet deep from the west line of Federal street and that appellees’ lots are only 95.5 feet in depth from the east line of Clark street; that appellant has begun the construction of a large building on her lots, and without notice to or permit from appellees or the city of Chicago has commenced to excavate said alley and to erect upon the property of appellees, 4.5 feet west of the alley, a certain concrete structure for her private use, and that she has torn down fences and sheds of appellees on their property. The bill "further avers that upon complaint to the city of Chicago by appellees the work of excavation and construction was stopped temporarily by the city, but as appellant claimed the fee in the alley the city of Chicago advised appellees that if appellant should demand and request a permit to use the said io-foot strip for construction purposes it would be issued to her. The bill alleges that the city has no power to grant such permit to appellant or anyone else to obstruct or encumber the alley, either above or below the surface of the ground; that 'such use of said alley would greatly injure and inconvenience appellees and the public. The prayer of the bill is that the south half of lot 4 and the north half of lot 9, respectively, be decreed to be in appellees, respectively, for a depth of 100 feet from the east line of Clark street to the west line of said 100-foot alley, and that appellant be enjoined from further proceeding with the work upon or below the surface of the alley or upon the premises of appellees west of the alley; that the city of Chicago be enjoined from issuing a permit to any person to tear up the alley or place any construction thereunder which would in any way interfere with any public purpose for which the alley might thereafter be desired to be used by said city, and that appellant and other co-defendants named account to appellees for the cost of restoring the premises and alley to their normal condition.

In her answer to the bill appellant denied the continuous possession of appellees’ lots to the depth of too feet east of the east line of Clark street; denied that an alley was laid out by the owners of block 126, the east line of which was 100 feet west of the west line of Federal street and the west line of which was 100 feet east of the east line of Clark street, and denied that appellees or their predecessors in title had fenced, occupied and controlled the south half of lot 4 and the north half of lot 9 to the depth of 100 feet from the east line of Clark street. The answer avers that appellant’s lots extend from the west line of Federal street west 115 feet; that the west line of her lots is 115 feet west of and parallel with the west line of Federal street; that the owners of lots in said block fronting on Federal street used the west 15 feet off the Federal street lots for a private alley, and that travel over said alley by the owners of the lots fronting on Clark street, and by the public, was permissive until such time as the owners of the Federal street lots should desire to improve them. The answer denies that the owners of lots fronting on Clark street own all the property in said block .west of the west line of the alley, and avers that appellees and their grantors well knew the lots fronting on Federal street extended west from the west line of said street 115 feet, and that none of the grantors of appellees claimed any rights in the alley and well knew that travel over it was permissive, only. The answer avers that appellant is the owner of the fee in the premises referred to as an alley and has the right to construct vaults under the surface; that block 126 was subdivided June 19, 1836, by J. C. Goodhue into twenty-four lots; that the lots fronting west on Clark street, in said block, were laid out with a depth of 115.5 feet; that the lots fronting east on Federal street were laid out with a depth of 115 feet, the west line of the Federal street lots and the east line of the Clark street lots being - the same; that Clark street was widened in 1846 and 20 feet taken off the west end of the Clark street lots in block 126 by condemnation, for the purpose of widening said street, and that thereafter the lots fronting on Clark street had a depth of only 95.5 feet from the east line of Clark street as widened to the west line of the Federal street lots. Appellant also filed a cross-bill, setting up her claim substantially as set out in her answer, and praying that her title as claimed be quieted to the depth of 115 feet, and that appellees and the city be enjoined from interfering with her use and enjoyment of the premises.

Appellees answered the cross-bill, denying the making of the Goodhue subdivision in 1836, and averring that about that time the block was divided into three tiers of lots, those fronting on Clark street having a depth to the east of 126 feet; the next tier extending east from a north and south line 126 feet east of Clark street 107 feet to a street now known as Federal street and which street was then 40 feet wide; the third tier of lots extending from the east line of Federal street to the west line of Dearborn' street 107 feet. The answer avers that subsequently 20 feet was taken off the front of the Clark street lots, leaving the lots fronting on that street with a depth of 106 feet, and that afterwards the owners of the Clark street lots and the Federal street lots laid out a io-foot alley on the line which divided their respective lots, five feet of said alley being on the lots fronting on Clark street and five feet on the lots fronting on Federal street; that said alley has existed, been paved and used for more than sixty years.

The city of Chicago answered the bill and cross-bill, setting up that an alley had existed in block 126 and for more than forty years had been recognized by the city and all the owners of abutting property. It neither admitted nor denied the allegations as to the dimensions of the lots in said block 126.

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Related

Kuney v. Zoning Board of Appeals
516 N.E.2d 850 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.E. 701, 262 Ill. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmahon-v-borland-ill-1914.