Moore v. Hunter

6 Ill. 317
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ill. 317 (Moore v. Hunter) 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
Moore v. Hunter, 6 Ill. 317 (Ill. 1844).

Opinions

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Lockwood, J.

The appellants filed their bill in the Madison Circuit Court, in November, 1841, and an amended bill in May, 1842, for the purpose of obtaining a decree of that Court, requiring the defendants to surrender up to complainants, all their right and claim to the North West fractional quarter of section thirteen (13), township five (5) north, in range ten (10) west of the third principal meridian. The prayer of the bill also asked that defendants be required to deliver possession of said tract to complainants, and account for the rents and profits of the land. The original bill required the answers to be put in on oath, but the amended bill dispensed with the oaths of the defendants to their answers. The answers of the defendants were filed in September, 1842, and were sworn to.

The cause was heard on bill, answers, depositions and exhibits, and a final decree rendered at the November term 1843, denying the prayer of the bill, and dismissing it with costs to be paid by complainants. From this decree, they have appealed to this Court.

It appears from the facts in the case, that on the 19th day of August, 1814, an entry was made, in the name of Andry Dunnegan, in the land office of the United States at Kaskaskia, of several tracts of land, among which was the North West fractional quarter of section thirteen (13), township five (5) north in range ten (10) west, being the tract claimed by complainants, and containing in all, five hundred, thirty two, and fifty one one hundreths acres. The price of the land was two dollars per acre, making the full purchase money of the whole $1065*02. With a certificate of a confirmed unlocated claim of Davis Dubois for two hundred acres, payment in full was made for two hundred acres of the tracts above mentioned, which left the residue, amounting to $665*02, to be paid in money. One fourth of this sum was paid down, and a certificate was obtained from the land office, setting forth these facts, and stating that upon the payment of the remaining three fourths by annual instalments, the last of which was to be paid on or before the 19th day of August, 1818, a Patent would issue to Andry Dunnegan, or his assignee, or other legal representatives, for all the tracts of land mentioned in said certificate.

On the 10th day of October, 1814, Dunnegan and wife conveyed by deed in fee simple to one John Bates, the North West fractional quarter of section thirteen (13), township five (5) north, range ten (10) west, being one of the tracts of land mentioned in said certificate. The consideration mentioned in the deed is $228. This deed was acknowledged and recorded in the recorder’s office of Madison county, being the county in which the tract of land is situated, on the 28th day of February, 1815. The complainant, Betsy Moore, claims under this deed, as sole heir at law of John Bates deceased.

On the 25th day of December, 1817, Andry Dunnegan assigned the certificate of purchase issued by the land office at Kaskaskia, as before stated to Rufus Easton, and acknowledged the- same before a justice of the peace in the manner prescribed by the laws of Congress, in consideration of five dollars. The time of payment having been extended by Congress, it appears by a certificate issued by the register of the land office at Kaskaskia, that Rufus Easton, on the 31st day of March, 1820, made final payment for the whole of the tracts embraced in the certificate of purchase aforesaid by paying into the said land office, $442-784 being the amount of the second, third and fourth instalments mentioned in said certificate, and also $149-22 for interest due on said instalments, and obtained a Patent in his own name, as assignee of Andry Dunnegan, which Patent was issued on the 16th of June, 1820. The defendants claim title under this Patent. These are the two principal chains of title, to wit, the complainants’ chain under the conveyance of Dunnegan to John Bates, and the defendants’ chain under the Patent to Rufus Easton.

It further appears from the facts of the case, that John Bates and wife, on the 2d day of March, 1818, conveyed the tract of land in dispute to one Joseph Meacham for $3800, and Meacham mortgaged the same land back to Bates to secure the payment of the purchase money, and both were recorded March 10,1819. In July, 1818, Bates entered into a written contract with Meacham to release and discharge from the operation of the said mortgage, all purchases under Meacham,. upon Meacham or the purchaser paying to Bates- a, proportional sum of money equal to $40 per acre, for the quantity of said purchase. Bates died about the autumn of 1818, leaving an only child, Betsy, who is one of the complainants in this cause. In 1822, one Levi Crosby, as guardian of said Betsy, then an infant, foreclosed the mortgage by scire facias, sold the property, purchased it and procured the deed to be made in his own name. One John Scott became a purchaser under Crosby, but was compelled by a decree of the Circuit Court of Madison county, to transfer his interest in the land in dispute to complainants. Whatever title, therefore, Crosby received under the purchase aforesaid, was vested in complainants by that decree. This terminates the complainants’ chain of title, to wit: First, entry of Dunnegan and payment of a confirmed unlocated claim and first instalment; Second, deed from Dunnegan and wife to Bates; Third, mortgage from Meacham to Bates; Fourth, a foreclosure of said mortgage, a purchase of the premises by Crosby, and a decree of the Circuit Court in favor of complainants, by which whatever title Bates had originally, was recovered by complainants.

The following additional facts appear as regards the defendants’ chain of title, to wit: In 1822, and after the Patent was issued to Easton, Archibald Gamble purchased all of the land mentioned in the Patent, except whatever claim or right C. W. Hunter may have to said fractional section, either in law or equity, at sheriff’s sale under an execution issued out of the Circuit Court of Madison county against Easton, and received a sheriff’s deed therefor. Easton, in 1825, conveyed by quitclaim all the lands mentioned in said Patent to Russell, one of the defendants. Gamble also, in 1826, by quitclaim deed, conveyed to Russell all the land mentioned in said Patent, but referring to the sheriff’s deed aforesaid as his source of title. By virtue of these conveyances, Russell claims title to.all the lands described in said Patent, with the exception of such portions of said lands as he had sold and conveyed to other persons.

In 1835, Russell conveyed by quitclaim deed a number of lots to Hunter, the other defendant, being part of the premises in controversy. Hunter, also, in November, 1818, purchased by deed a number of lots of said land from Meacham, and procured on the 31st of August, 1821, a release, as to these lots, from the administrator of Bates, in accordance with the written agreement between Bates and Meacham.

The foregoing statement contains a concise view of the paper title of the respective parties to this controversy.

After a lapse of about twenty five years, it is extremely difficult to explain with reasonable certainty an involved transaction of this nature from the recollection of witnesses.

The depositions are, therefore, what might be expected in sucha case, very unsatisfactory, and calculated rather to create doubt and hesitation, than conviction, in a cautious mind.

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Related

Brush v. Ware
40 U.S. 93 (Supreme Court, 1841)

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6 Ill. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-hunter-ill-1844.