Nickrans v. Wilk

43 N.E. 741, 161 Ill. 76
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 N.E. 741 (Nickrans v. Wilk) 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
Nickrans v. Wilk, 43 N.E. 741, 161 Ill. 76 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

When appellee’s husband, Fred Dose, died in 1868, her possession at that time and up to the rendition of the partition decree of May 16, 1871, was not adverse, so far as the sister and brothers of her deceased husband were concerned. She owned an undivided one-half of the land and dower in the other half, and they owned an undivided half thereof, subject to her dower and homestead rights. She and they were tenants in common, and her possession was theirs and is presumed to have been for their benefit, until some act was done showing a contrary intent. “As a general proposition, the entry of one co-tenant enures to the benefit of all. * * * As both have an equal right to the possession, the law presumes that, if one only enters and takes the rents and profits, he does this act as well for his companion as for himself. But this presumption may be rebutted by the overt acts of the one so entering; by such acts as show, that he means to hold exclusively for himself without being accountable to any one.” (Freeman on Co-tenancy and Partition, sec. 166).

As we understand the position of appellee, it is conceded, that her possession was not hostile or adverse prior to May 16, 1871, but it is claimed that the tenancy in common was destroyed by the decree of partition entered on that day, and that, thereafter, her possession of the whole of the premises for more than twenty years, together with her payment of the taxes and appropriation of the rents and profits, gave her title to all of the tract to the exclusion of the other heirs.

In order to constitute a disseizin of a co-tenant by a tenant in common, there must be an ouster, or some act which the law deems equivalent to an ouster; and, where there is a decree of partition, setting off different tracts of land in severalty to the persons therein named, possession taken of the whole thereunder is an act of ouster; an entry under it, claiming the whole of the land, will operate as the beginning of a prescription, except as against persons under disability; and possession under it, if actual, continued, visible, notorious, distinct and hostile, will ripen into a bar against a tenant in common thus disseized. (1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 232; Freeman on Co-tenancy and Partition, sec. 227). If appellee’s possession of the whole tract partitioned had been adverse and exclusive during the period of twenty years, without recognition in any way of the rights and interests of the other heirs, her title would be good by prescription.

But after the decree of May 16, 1871, and on September 8, 1871, appellee and her husband, John Wilk, filed a second bill against the sister and brothers of her first husband, Fred Dose, which was in effect a new bill for partition of the same premises involved in the former suit begun on October 20, 1870. The proceeding begun by the filing of this new bill on September 8, 1871, was pending and not finally disposed of until July 7, 1874. Twenty years did not elapse between July 7, 1874, and the filing of the present petition on May 14, 1892. The records of the proceeding having been destroyed by the great fire of October, 1871, it is impossible to tell what the full scope of the bill filed on September 8, 1871, was, but the minutes of its contents, so far as preserved, show that the appellee therein prayed, that the decree of partition of May 16, 1871, entered in the former suit begun on October 20, 1870, might be “reviewed, set aside, canceled and annulled, and that said original cause proceed de novo.” By the proceeding begun in September, 1871, appellee evidently regarded herself as still a tenant in common with the other heirs, and sought to set aside the former decree and have a new partition. The intent not to be bound by the former decree is manifest. So long as the second proceeding was pending, it cannot be said, that the appellee was holding the possession of the whole tract by a possession which was adverse and hostile to the other tenants in common.

The evidence to sustain an ouster by a co-tenant must be stronger than the evidence to sustain ordinary adverse possession. (Barrett v. Coburn, 3 Metc. (Ky.) 513; Forward v. Deetz, 32 Pa. St. 72; Bailey v. Trammell, 27 Tex. 328). To create an ouster there must be an actual and exclusive possession of the whole premises, claiming the whole. (Florence v. Hopkins, 46 N. Y. 182; Culver v. Rhodes, 87 id. 348). By the proceeding of September, 1871, appellee recognized the rights and interests of the defendants thereto as tenants in common with herself in the land, and this recognition was inconsistent with a claim of the whole of it on her part.

Adverse possession, to constitute a bar to a right of entry, must not only be hostile in its inception and character and so continue uninterruptedly for twenty years, but it must be under a continuous assertion of ownership, hostile to all others. (Shaw v. Schoonover, 130 Ill. 448). There could be no continuous and hostile assertion of ownership of the whole of the land by the appellee during the period from September 8, 1871, to July 7, 1874, because she was during that time seeking a partition between herself and the other heirs as owners with her of undivided interests in the land. “The difficulty of determining whether a given state of facts constitutes an ouster of one co-tenant by another may be removed by circumstances or declarations, from which the true intent of the party is clearly manifested.” (Freeman on Co-tenancy and Partition, sec. 223). The intent, manifested by appellee by the institution and prosecution of the suit of September, 1871, was other than an intent to oust the other tenants in common of their respective interests; it was rather an intent to set off such interests to them in severalty.

For the reasons thus stated we are of the opinion, that the appellee did not establish title to the whole of the land in question by twenty years’ adverse possession, and that the finding below in her favor in this respect in accordance with the prayer of her original petition was erroneous.

We think, however, that the cross-bill of appellants was properly dismissed. The object of the cross-bill was to get a partition of the property, and it proceeded upon the assumption, that there had been no previous partition, in other words, upon the assumption that the decree of May 16, 1871, was void. The ground upon which it is claimed, that the decree of May 16, 1871, was void and did not effect á partition between the parties, is that the minutes of the lost record of the partition suit begun on October 20, 1870, do not show service upon the defendants therein, and that, for this reason, the circuit court is not shown to have had jurisdiction to render that decree. It cannot be held that the decree was void, or that the property had not been partitioned thereby, upon the ground thus alleged.

The abstract, copies, extracts from the records and minutes produced by the abstract makers, and made evidence under the amendatory-act of June 15, 1887, in regard to the restoration of records, (3 Starr & Curtis, Stat. p.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.E. 741, 161 Ill. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickrans-v-wilk-ill-1896.