Milliken v. Marlin

66 Ill. 13
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 Ill. 13 (Milliken v. Marlin) 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
Milliken v. Marlin, 66 Ill. 13 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

This was an action of ejectment, brought in the circuit court of Stark county, for the recovery of a quarter section of land. The declaration contained two counts, the first in the name of John Brandon, and the second in the name of Augustus Marlin as his' conservator. The plea of not guilty was filed. The venue of the case was changed to the Peoria circuit court. Some years after the suit had been commenced Brandon died, and his heirs were made plaintiffs.

On the trial in the court below, plaintiffs read in evidence a copy of a patent from the United States government to Brandon for the land in controversy, and made proof of heir-ship of plaintiffs, and that defendant was in possession of the premises.

Appellant then offered and read a tax deed for the premises, conveying the land to Wm. S. Moss, dated the 14th day of May, 1844, Also' read in evidence a power of attorney from Moss to Whitaker, and a sale of the land under this power to appellant, dated on the 11th of December, 1854. He also introduced a power of attorney from Brandon, the patentee, to Wm. B. Beeves, dated March 17th, 1857, authorizing him to sell the land, and a certified copy of a deed under the power to Wm. Eeed. He then introduced parol testimony of payment of taxes from 1842 to 1854 by Moss, whilst he held the tax title, and while the land was vacant and unoccupied, and that appellant took possession of the land soon after the year 1854, and had continued in possession to the time of the trial.

Appellees then, in rebuttal, introduced evidence to show that Brandon had been insane from 1833 till the time of his death, and appellant introduced evidence to prove his sanity during that period. On the trial by the court and a jury a verdict was found against the defendant, whereupon he entered a motion for a new trial. Plaintiffs then asked and obtained leave to make James V. Guthrie, one of the heirs of Brandon, a party plaintiff, and the motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered in favor of James V. Guthrie with the other plaintiffs, and defendant appeals to this court.

The alio Avance of appellees’ motion to make an additional plaintiff after the jury had returned a verdict, is urged as error in the court below. The practice seems to be novel, after a trial has been had and the issues found by a jury, to permit a person claiming in his own right, to become a plaintiff. That executors, administrators, etc., may, on the death of a plaintiff, and before judgment is entered, become or be substituted plaintiffs, is perhaps true; but in such cases they appear and are substituted in their representatji'e character. And in an ejectment suit, where the land descends to the heirs, on the death of a plaintiff after verdict and before judgment rendered, no doubt, under our statute, the heirs might revive in their own names, prevent the suit from abating, and have judgment. But in such case they represent the title of the deceased in the land, as the executor or administrator does the deceased in personal actions.

When Brandon died, the heirs had themselves substituted parties plaintiff, and prosecuted in their OAvn right, and thus became the real plaintiffs in the suit, and to recover they had to show that the person under whom they claimed was seized of the title, and that they were his heirs. There was no verdict standing in favor of Brandon at the time of his death. If there had been, then any and all of his heirs could have been made plaintiffs on an order of the court, and had judgment in their favor, and no one would question its regularity, because there would have been a trial between the ancestor and the defendant. Or if after verdict and before judgment any one of the substituted plaintiffs had died, then his heirs could no doubt have been substituted in the place of the deceased plaintiff, because they represented and succeeded to the rights of a plaintiff who had litigated his rights with the defendant, and obtained a verdict.

In this case, however, James V. Guthrie represented no one who had litigated the right which he claims, with the defendant. He claims as an heir of Brandon, but never was a party to the suit, and appellant has not been called upon to defend himself against the title James V. Guthrie now claims to a portion of the land in controversy. If the jury had returned a verdict in favor of some person not a party to tile record either as plaintiff or defendant, and 'found that he owned the premises in fee, and he had come forward and asked to be made a party to the action, and the court had admitted him, and rendered judgment on the verdict in his favor, would any one .contend that such was regular and proper practice? It seems to us such a practice would be unprecedented, and could not be sustained. And yet in such a case there would be a verdict finding that he was the owner, but the insuperable objection would be that he was not a party to the record when the trial was had, nor would he represent any one who was.

In this case, however, the jury have not found that James V. Guthrie had any title of any kind as against appellant or any one else. He was not a party to the record, nor has the jury, on his assertion of title against appellant, found any thing. His rights have not been litigated or found by a court or a jury. Nor has appellant been afforded any opportunity or means to defend himself against James V. Guthrie’s claim to ownership in the land. Here stands a judgment in favor of a person who was not a party to the record, was not a plaintiff in any suit, so far as this record shows, nor did he, so far as we can see, even claim to be an owner of any interest in the property, yet he has recovered a judgment, and an execution is awarded to put him in possession. This, we think, was error. R

Appellees should have, before the trial, made him a party plaintiff, or amended their declaration so as to have recovered any interest or portion in the land claimed by them independent of the claim of James V. Guthrie. Either of these courses was open to appellees. Had they made him a party plaintiff before the trial, then the case would have fallen within the rule announced in some of the cases referred to in the brief for appellees. Or had he been the son of one of the plaintiffs in the suit, and a trial had resulted in a verdict, and the parent had died before judgment, the case would have fallen within some of the other cases to which reference is made.

It is urged that the judgment for taxes was void, and hence there could not have been good faith in defendant in acquiring the color of title, and for that reason the judgment should not be reversed even if the defense in other respects showed a compliance with the statute so as to form a bar to the action. As early as the case of Woodward v. Blanchard, 16 Ill. 424, it was held that the holder of color of title was not affected by the fact that the judgment under which the sale was made was void. That case has been followed by a large number of decisions, and if apy rule of property can be considered as settled in this State, it is, that the law will not presume the holder of the color knew of a defect in a prior deed in the chain of title to charge him with bad faith. We have no inclination to review the large number of cases announcing the rule.

It is also urged that it was error to permit appellant to prove the payment of taxes by any other evidence than the tax receipts themselves. In the case of Hinchman v. Whetstone, 23 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ill. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milliken-v-marlin-ill-1872.