Quick v. Nitschelm

28 N.E. 926, 139 Ill. 251
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 926 (Quick v. Nitschelm) 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
Quick v. Nitschelm, 28 N.E. 926, 139 Ill. 251 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Magbuber

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action of ejectment begun on August 1,1888, im the Circuit Court of Peoria County by the appellant against the appellee, Louisa Nitschelm, owner, and the appellee, Butler, tenant, to recover possession of a strip of ground on the north east side of Lot 7 in Block 123 in Parrish’s Addition to the City of Peoria, laid out on part of N. E. J of section 3, Town 8, N. R. 8, E. of 4th P. M., and adjoining Lot 8 in said Block. The following diagram shows the location of the property in dispute:

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It is not disputed that plaintiff helow owns lot 7 in block 123, and that Mrs. Nitschelm, lessor of the defendant Butler, is the owner of Lot 8 in block 123. The dispute is as to the proper location of the boundary line between lots 7 and 8 in block 123. Although the lots and streets upon the diagram lie northeast and southwest of each other, the directions will 'be here spoken of, for convenience, as being east and west and north and south. The plaintiff in his declaration describes a strip of ground twenty feet wide, but we do not understand him to claim that the strip enclosed by the defendant had a greater width than eleven feet. He says in his testimony; “Mrs. Nitschelm’s fence was not down twenty feet on me on the northeasterly side of lot 7; * * * Mrs. Nitschelm occupied about eleven feet of my lot,” etc.

We think that the strip of ground, eleven feet wide, which is in dispute between the parties, is a part of lot 7, and not of lot 8 ; in other words, that the defendant, instead of confining her possession to the land lying east of the east line of lot 7, has infringed upon the east part o,f lot 7 to the extent of at least eleven-feet. The evidence, including the various plats and subdivisions to be found in the record, is so complicated that we cannot do more than indicate in a general way the reasons for our conclusion.

In 1851, John Birket owned the land which now includes Birket’s Addition, Parrish’s Addition, Randall’s Addition, and Randall’s lot in Peoria. April 24, 1856, Birket made a plat, called Birket’s Addition, which includes the above blocks 126 arid 125, the latter lying between Jefferson and Adams Streets on the north and south, and Mary and Cornhill Streets on the west and east. In Birket’s Addition, according to said plat as executed and recorded, Mary, Jefferson, Cornhill and Adams Streets are 80 feet wide; the alley between Jefferson and Adams Streets is 18 feet wide; the lots in blocks 125 and 126 are 57 feet wide and 177J feet deep; a stone is indicated as being located at the northeast corner of lot 12 in block 125 on Cornhill Street.

On August 25, 1857, one Joseph W. Parrish, by mesne conveyances from said Birket, became the owner of 2-i2060. acres of land, and on August 25, 1857, made a plat of the same, called Parrish’s Addition, which includes, as we understand it, the above lots 1, 2, 11 and 12 in block 122, and lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 in block 123, the two last being the lots of plaintiff and defendant herein. In Parrish’s Addition, according to said plat as executed and recorded, lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 in block 123 are each 57 feet wide and 177J feet deep; Caroline Street is 70 feet wide between Jefferson and Adams Streets; the alley in block 123 is 18 feet wide; Caroline and Mary Streets are at right angles to Adams Street, and a stone is indicated as being at the northeast corner of lot 1 in block 122.

On August 18, 1854, said Birket conveyed to Ellis Bandall the land covered by Bandall’s Addition and Bandall’s lot. Bandall’s Addition includes block 121 lying north of block 123, and the plat shows that a stone was placed at the southeast corner of block 121. Bandall’s lot, as we understand it, consists of the land in block 123, lying east of lots 5 and 8 therein, as noted on the above diagram, and between said lots on the west and Mary Street on the east, and between Adams and Jefferson Streets on the south -and north. Bandall’s lot seems never to have been platted, but the portion thereof south of the alley was divided into 4 lots, each 57 feet wide and 177J feet deep, which were sold to different parties; and of the portion north of the alley, a lot, 57 feet wide and 177J feet deep, lying just east of lot 5 (and which may be called lot 4) was sold to one Cross. A stone was placed by the surveyor at the northeast corner of the portion of the lot south of the alley, being at the southwest corner of the alley and Mary Street, as indicated on the plat of Parrish’s Addition.

The three additions above named were all surveyed and platted within a period of about three years by one surveyor, named Braley, who located the stones, which have been mentioned, in order that future surveys might be made therefrom. But the stones thus set by the surveyor in said blocks 121, 122 and 123 have all disappeared.

August 25, 1857, Parrish conveyed lots 7 and 8 in Block 123 to Robert M. Clark, who conveyed them on July 31, 1863, to Samuel W. Van Gulin. Van Gulin is the common source of the titles of both the plaintiff and defendant. By deed, dated March 1,1877, and recorded April 10, 1877, Van Gulin conveyed Lot 8 in Block 123 in Parrish’s Addition to the City •of Peoria to the defendant Louisa Nitsohelm; by deed, dated October 22, 1880, and recorded November 16, 1880, he conveyed lot 7 in said block 123 to Ann Bond; and by deed, dated June 29, 1887, and recorded the same day, Ann Bond and her husband conveyed said lot 7 to the plaintiff, George T. Quick.

By deed, dated April 21, 1873, Willard M. Randall, one of the heirs of Ellis Randall, then deceased, conveyed to Alfred L. Archambeau “Lot 9 in Randall’s Lot,” describing the same as “Commencing on Adams Street 171 feet southwest from Mary Street, thence along Adams Street southwest 57 feet, thence at right angles with Adams Street 177J feet towards Jefferson Street, thence towards Mary Street, parallel with Adams Street 57 feet, thence parallel with Mary Street 1771-feet to the place of beginning.” On November 17, 1877, the other heirs of Ellis Randall conveyed to Archambeau the same property. From the recitals in the Archambeau deed, it appears that the southeast corner of lot 9, as shown in block 123 on the above 'diagram, is 171 feet west of the corner of Mary and Adams Streets, and that the southwest corner of said lot 9 is 228 feet west of said corner. It is stipulated and agreed between the parties, that said lot 9 adjoins defendant’s lot 8 on the northeast (or east) side of said lot 8, and that the Additions herein described were platted as above indicated, and that the copy of the plat of Parrish’s Addition introduced in evidence, from which the above diagram is taken, is correct.

It follows from what has been said, that the southwest corner of plaintiff’s lot 7 at the corner of Adams and Caroline Streets is 342 feet west from the southeast corner of block 123 at the corner of Mary and Adams Streets, and that the north and south lines of block 123 are each 342 feet long.

The stone, placed by Braley at the northeast corner of lot 12 in Block 125, was found there in 1888 by two surveyors and John G. Birket, a son of John Birket. John C.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 926, 139 Ill. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quick-v-nitschelm-ill-1891.