Newland v. Marsh

19 Ill. 376
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 19 Ill. 376 (Newland v. Marsh) 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
Newland v. Marsh, 19 Ill. 376 (Ill. 1857).

Opinion

Skinner, J.

The defendants in these three cases showed color of title made in good faith, and payment of taxes under such •title for seven successive years, whilst the land was vacant and unoccupied, and were served with declaration afterwards, and when in possession. They seek to defend their possessions, first, upon the ground that by force of the second section of the act of the legislature, approved March 2,1889, and entitled “An Act to quiet possessions and confirm titles to lands,” they are seized in fee simple of the land ; and, second, upon the ground that, treating this section as a limitation of the remedy, the plaintiffs’ actions are barred.

We will examine these positions in connection :

The first section of this act provides: “ That, hereafter, every person in the actual possession of land or tenements, ¡’under claim or color of title made in good faith, and who shall, for seven successive years after the passage of this act, continue in such possession, and shall also, during said time, pay all taxes legally assessed on such land or tenements, shall be held and adjudged the legal owner of such land or tenements, to the extent and according to the purport of his or her paper title.”

The second section provides that, “ Hereafter, whenever any person having color of title, made in good faith, to vacant and unoccupied land, shall, after the passage of this act, pay all taxes legally assessed thereon, for seven successive years, he or she shall be deemed and adjudged the legal owner of said vacant and unoccupied land, to the extent and according to the purport of his or her paper title.”

The third section gives to owners under legal disability the right to avoid the forfeiture of their lands under the second section, by paying “ to the person or persons who have paid the same,” within three years after their legal disability is removed, “ all taxes, with interest thereon at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum, that have been paid on such vacant and unoccupied land.”

The first section of this act, notwithstanding the language used, has been uniformly treated by this court as a limitation law — a law barring the remedy. Irving v. Brownell, 11 Ill. R. 402 ; Woodward v. Blanchard, 16 Ill. R. 424 ; McConnel v. Street, 17 Ill. R. 258 ; McClellan v. Kellogg, ibid. 498.

In the case of Harding v. Butts, 18 Ill. 502, this court held that, under the second section of this act, color of title to, and payment of taxes for seven years on, vacant and unoccupied land, could not operate to vest in the party having the color of title and paying the taxes, the title to the land ; and that this section, if construed to effect such result, would be unconstitutional and void.

This decision, concurred in by the whole court, and having become a rule of property, we are now called upon to overrule. The importance of the question, as well on account of the principle, as the large amount of property involved, justifies a reexamination of the grounds of that decision.

The judicial department of the government, being ordained for the administration of the laws, under the sanctions,of and in obedience to the mandates of the federal and State constitutions, and the limits upon the legislative power in them contained, will consider acts of the legislature in connection with those constitutions and their limitations, and give the force of law to acts of the legislature in so far, and in so far only, as they are within the competency of the law-making power.

And, although the coui’ts will never pronounce acts of the legislature unconstitutional without mature reflection and clear conviction, yet, under no specious pretext or sophistical reasoning, can they rightfully avoid the high and imperative duty imposed, of declaring them void, whenever, in their enactment, the legislature assumes powers not within the scope of legislation, and withheld from it or reserved to another department, by the written constitutions of the country.

The constitution of this State declares that, “ The powers of the government shall be divided into three distinct departments, each of them to be confided to a separate body of magistracy, to wit: Those which are legislative, to one; those which are executive, to another; and those which are judicial, to another.” And prohibits each department from exercising any power confided to another. Const., Art. 2, Secs. 1, 2.

The legislative authority is vested in the General Assembly ; the executive in the Governor; and the judicial in the courts. Const., Art. 3, Sec. 1; Art. 4, Sec. 1; Ai’t. 5, Sec. 1.

The powers of government are thus wisely distributed among the three independent departments, and each is prohibited from exercising only such authority as is specially confided to it; thereby creating checks and balances indispensable, in a representative government, to the security of the people against usurpation and the preservation of their rights and institutions in fact as well as in form.

It is the province of the judiciary to declare what is the law, in any given case for judicial determination, and to enforce only valid enactments of the legislatoe.

An act, therefore, of the legislative department, notwithstanding the powers confided to it, when brought in question judicially, must, of necessity, be held void ; otherwise, the natural tendency to the concentration of power in the most powerful branch of the government, would, in time, effect a silent, but sure revolution in our political system. The legislative department assuming, and being allowed to judge of the character and extent of its own powers, would soon become the ex pa/rte arbiter of private rights, and the frequent dispenser of justice between citizen and citizen, unrestrained, and according to its own notions of right.

The people have wisely, by constitutional provisions, guarded against such consequences, and so long as these provisions are sacredly regarded and enforced, their rights of person and property will remain secure from aggression under color of authority.

The constitution of this State provides, that no freeman shall, “ in any manner, be deprived of life, liberty, or property, but by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land.”

These provisions— a part of our ancestors’ Magna Gharrta— are embodied substantially into all, it is believed, of the constitutions of the States of the Union; and by uniform judicial interpretation, the words, “ by judgment of his peers,” means a trial by jury in the courts, according to the. accustomed course of judicial proceedings; and the words, “ law of the land,” a trial in the courts according to such course of judicial proceedings.

The citizen cannot be deprived of his property by involuntary divestiture of his right to it, or by such transfer of it to another, except by judgment of law; and the legislature, having no judicial power, cannot impart to their enactments the force of a judicial determination.

The legislative power extends only to the making of laws, and in its exercise, is limited and restrained by the paramount authority of the Federal and State constitutions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ill. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newland-v-marsh-ill-1857.