Orthwein v. Thomas

4 L.R.A. 434, 127 Ill. 554
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 4 L.R.A. 434 (Orthwein v. Thomas) 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
Orthwein v. Thomas, 4 L.R.A. 434, 127 Ill. 554 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion' of the Court:

This was a proceeding in equity to establish title, and for the partition of all that part of United States survey No. 764, in St. Clair county, lying between Water street, in the village of Brooklyn, and the Mississippi river, being 1995 feet long north and south, and about 2000 feet wide, and which has been formed by accretion since 1837, when the village was platted. The complainants in the original bill claim to be the owners of the premises in question in fee, as tenants in common, under mesne conveyances from Thomas Osborn. The village of Brooklyn, one of the defendants, claims the premises by virtue of a town plat, made and recorded by Thomas Osborn and his immediate grantees in 1837, and as accretions to Water street; and the appellant, also one of the defendants, claims an undivided thirty-three thirty-fifth interest in the same premises, under mesne conveyances from the heirs of Susannah Osborn. Answers were filed to the bill, and defendant Orthwein exhibited his cross-bill, which was also answered. Beplications were filed and testimony taken under the original and cross-bills and answers, and upon the hearing both the original and cross-bills were dismissed. The defendant Orthwein alone perfected his appeal, and brings the record into this court, assigning for error the dismissal of his cross-bill.

Hannah Ratcliff, or Hannah Hillman, the same person, is the common source of title. Hannah Hillman was the daughter of James and Fanny Hillman. About 1808 she removed from Pennsylvania and settled in St. Clair county. She bought the militia claim of John Moredock, No. 610, for one hundred acres of land, which was located upon United States survey No. 764, which is the tract of land to which the land in controversy is an accretion, and upon which she settled about 1813, occupying it as a residence while she lived, and owned it in fee at the time of her death, in 1822. She died intestate, leaving surviving one child, Susannah, born in 1786, who, in 1807, intermarried with Thomas Osborn. Susannah and her husband moved upon this land of her mother’s about 1816, and also occupied it as a residence from that time till the death of Susannah, in 1832. Susannah died intestate, leaving surviving, her husband, Thomas Osborn, and six children.

It appears that Hannah Hillman emigrated to this State with one William Ratcliff; that they here lived together upon this survey, as man and wife, until Hannah’s death. There is no direct evidence of their marriage. The first serious question presented is as to the legitimacy of Susannah. She was the daughter of said Hannah, but the original bill charges- that she was a bastard, and incapable of taking, by descent, the lands owned in fee by her mother at the death of the latter. When Hannah died, her father and mother, James and Fanny Hillman, were still living in Pennsylvania, and the theory of the bill is, that James and Fanny Hillman took by descent, as heirs of their daughter, Hannah, survey No. 764, and that Susannah took nothing.

At the time of Hannah’s death, in 1822, the common law had not been modified by statute, and a bastard could not inherit, even from its mother. It is true, that -from the earliest organization of civil government in the territory north-west of the river Ohio, the descent of property had been regulated by written law. The rule of descent was first declared in the ordinance of 1787, and the act of March 23, 1819, (Laws 1819, sec. 21, p. 230,) in force in 1822, was a literal transcript of the second section of the ordinance. And although the rule had, meantime, been thrice declared by legislative authority, viz., by the Governor and judges of the territory north-west of the Ohio river in 1795, (Ter. Laws 1795, sec. 4, p. 92,) by the legislature of the Indiana Territory in 1807, (Eev. Stat. Ind. Ter. 1807, p. 77,) and by the Governor and judges of the Illinois Territory in 1809, (1 Pope’s Digest, sec. 22, p. 207,) in every instance the persons first taking from the ancestor were described as “children.” Susannah was the child of Ham nah, and within the letter of the statute; but if illegitimate, she would nevertheless be excluded from the inheritance, for, under the rule of construction as applied to statutes, the word “child” or “children” embraces only legitimate children. (Blacklaws v. Milne, 82 Ill. 505.) It was not until 1829 that the rule of the common law was so modified in this State as that illegitimates could inherit from their mother. (Rev. Laws 1829, sec. 47, p. 207.) And this has been the rule of descent from that time to the present.

If, then, the complainants have shown that Susannah was illegitimate, the estate of Hannah descended, “in equal parts, to'the next of kin in equal degree,” namely, to the father and mother, brothers and sisters (if any), and their descendants. Act of March 23, 1819.

For the purpose of showing illegitimacy, reliance is placed upon a deed from James and Fanny Hillman, executed and acknowledged hy them in Alleghany county, Pennsylvania, February 19, 1825, to Thomas Oshorn. This deed recites:

“Whereas, Hannah Eateliff, wife of William Eateliff, of said State of Illinois, daughter and heir of the said James Hillman, departed this life in the month of October, 1822, leaving the said James Hillman, her father, and Fanny, his wife, her heirs-at-law: Now, for the purpose of vesting said Thomas Osborn, and Susannah, his wife, who is the daughter of said Hannah Batcliff, with all the real estate, to-wit, lands, tenements, "hereditaments, which the said Hannah Batcliff "was possessed at the time of her death, situate and being in the State of Illinois, aforesaid, and for the sum of one dollar to us in hand paid by the said Thomas Osborn at and before the ensealing and delivery hereof, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have granted, bargained and sold to the said Thomas Osborn, and Susannah, his wife, and their heirs and assigns forever, all lands, tenements, hereditaments, of whatever nature or kind, which descended to us at the death of our daughter, Hannah Batcliff, late of the State of Illinois, deceased.”

It is manifest that the recitals of fact in this deed operate by way of estoppel upon Thomas Osborn, and, after its record in the proper county, August 9, 1827, upon his grantees. . As was said in Pinckard v. Milmine, 76 Ill. 453: “We recognize the doctrine of estoppel by the recitals in a deed, and that a party claiming under such deed can not be permitted to deny any fact admitted to exist by such recitals, ”—citing Byrne v. Morehouse, 22 Ill. 603, and Rigg v. Cook, 4 Gilm. 336; and adding: “The principle of these cases is, that whatever rights legitimately arise on such admitted facts may at all times be asserted, whether it be to obtain or defend the possession of such rights.” Thomas Osborn would not have been permitted, nor can the appellees, his remote grantees, now be heard, to deny the facts recited in this deed, namely, that Hannah Hillman and William Batcliff were man and wife, and that Susannah Osborn was the daughter of Hannah Batcliff. Hannah Batcliff was then a married woman, and Susannah Osborn was her only child. In contemplation of law, Susannah is presumed to have been born in lawful wedlock, and this presumption must prevail until the legal presumption of legitimacy, and which attaches to every child, is overcome by clear and convincing proof; and the burden of showing illegitimacy is, by the law, cast upon those who allege it.

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Bluebook (online)
4 L.R.A. 434, 127 Ill. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orthwein-v-thomas-ill-1889.