Patient v. Stief

363 N.E.2d 927, 49 Ill. App. 3d 99, 7 Ill. Dec. 6, 1977 Ill. App. LEXIS 2733
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 3, 1977
Docket76-102
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 363 N.E.2d 927 (Patient v. Stief) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patient v. Stief, 363 N.E.2d 927, 49 Ill. App. 3d 99, 7 Ill. Dec. 6, 1977 Ill. App. LEXIS 2733 (Ill. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE KARNS

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, Oscar and Grace Patient, brought an action against defendants, Robert and Ruth Stief, in the Circuit Court of Bond County seeking to enjoin them from entering upon property to which plaintiffs claimed title by adverse possession. Plaintiffs also sought to quiet their title to the disputed property. After a bench trial, the court entered an order denying the relief sought by plaintiffs. This appeal followed.

Gladys and Claud Smith, on behalf of Grace B. Kelly, also filed suit against defendants. As indicated on the diagram reproduced below, 1 Mrs. Kelly owns the property which abuts the southern border of defendants’ land. The Smiths’ complaint alleged that Mrs. Kelly owned all of the land south of the gravel road appearing at the bottom of the diagram. Defendants contended, however, that the border between their property and Mrs. Kelly’s was south of the gravel road. The Smiths’ case was tried at the same time as plaintiffs’. The trial court subsequentiy entered judgment in the Smiths’ favor, holding that Mrs. Kelly had gained title to the shaded area at the bottom of the diagram by adverse possession. Defendants did not appeal from that judgment, and it is not directly involved in the case at bar. Nevertheless, it will be necessary in this opinion to refer to the Smiths’ action against defendants.

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The parties to this action are adjoining landowners; at issue is the location of the boundary line separating their properties.

Plaintiffs are the record owners of blocks five, eight and 11 in Hugh’s First South Addition to the Town of Woburn (Hugh’s First Addition). The official plat of Hugh’s First Addition, filed in 1838, indicates that each of these blocks is divided into four 50' x 99' lots. The description of defendants’ property depends upon an unrecorded and, apparently, nonexistent plat of Hugh’s Second Addition to the Town of Woburn. It is, therefore, of no value in resolving this case.

Plaintiffs contend that the southern boundary of their property is a tree line, represented by the dotted line on the diagram, which marks the northern border of what was once an alley. Defendants argue, however, that the boundary is located north of the tree line, at the point represented on the diagram by the heavy black line. The area of land involved in this dispute is trapezoidal in shape. It measures 198 feet on its northern side, 61.5 feet on its western side and 48.5 feet on its eastern side. The length of its southern side (the tree line) does not appear in the record. Its area is approximately 10,900 square feet, or about one-fourth of an acre.

Defendants established the northern boundary of their property by a survey prepared in 1973 by Aurther Sheathelm. In the absence of the plat of Hugh’s Second Addition, Sheathelm surveyed plaintiffs’ property and assumed that defendants owned whatever, according to the survey, plaintiffs did not own. The descriptions of plaintiffs’ property and of the Town of Woburn are not tied to a monument or marker established by any Federal survey. Sheathelm, however, located an iron pin which he assumed was properly placed at the northwestern comer of block two in Hugh’s First Addition. He then determined the northeastern comer of block two through the results of an earlier survey by which he had established the width of Main Street, which fronts the northern side of block two. In making this earlier survey, Sheathelm relied upon several fence lines, one of which ran east and west on the northern side of block one of the Town of Woburn. Sheathelm stated at trial that these fences appeared to be 50 to 70 years old. He also testified, however, that none of the area residents with whom he spoke could tell him if the fences were located on property lines. After determining the two northern comers of block two, Sheathelm measured off the distances called for in the plat of Hugh’s First Addition and located what defendants now insist is the correct southern border of plaintiffs’ property.

Plaintiffs argue that the survey conducted by Aurther Sheathelm is unreliable because he failed to tie it to a federally established comer. 2 In support of this contention, they cite Westgate v. Ohlmacher, 251 Ill. 538, 96 N.E. 518 (1911). In Westgate, plaintiff contended that three separate surveys of block 15 in the city of Sycamore established that a structure built by defendant encroached upon a 10-inch strip of plaintiff’s land. Each of the surveys was begun at the northwestern corner of a building presumably located near the northwestern comer of block 15. At trial, however, none of the surveyors could state whether or not the point from which the surveys were started corresponded with the comer of block 15. The supreme court, therefore, held that the surveys were too unreliable to warrant a change in the already established boundary fine and affirmed a judgment against the plaintiff. The court noted that:

“In case of a disputed boundary line in a town, city or village, where the monument from which the town, city or village was platted is lost or destroyed, the courts ought not to disturb boundary lines between lot owners which have been acquiesced in for years and upon which the lot owners have erected improvements, upon uncertain evidence, or upon the mere conjecture of a surveyor or a number of surveyors * ° 251 Ill. 538, 541, 96 N.E. 518, 519.

Later in its opinion, the court quoted with approval the following statement made by Justice Cooley in a similar case:

«‘«os Nothing is better understood than that few of our early plats will stand the test of a careful and accurate survey without disclosing errors. This is as trae of the government surveys as of any others, and if all the lines were now subject to correction on new surveys, the confusion of lines and titles that would follow would cause consternation in many communities. Indeed, the mischiefs that must follow would be simply incalculable, and the visitation of the surveyor might well be set down as a great public calamity/ ” 251 Ill. 538, 542, 96 N.E. 518, 519-20.

We agree with the general principles expressed by the supreme court in Westgate, but do not find them to be controlling in the case at bar. The surveyors in Westgate, apparently, had no idea whether the starting point of their surveys was accurately located. Here, however, Aurther Sheathelm testified that the points from which he began his survey were, in fact, the northwestern and northeastern comers of block two in Hugh’s First Addition. He also explained why he had reached that conclusion. We feel that it was for the trial court, as the trier of fact, to determine whether Aurther Sheathelm’s survey was accurate as a factual determination. See Kandlik v. Hudek, 365 Ill. 292, 6 N.E.2d 196 (1936) (location of boundary line is generally a question of fact).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 N.E.2d 927, 49 Ill. App. 3d 99, 7 Ill. Dec. 6, 1977 Ill. App. LEXIS 2733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patient-v-stief-illappct-1977.