Rich v. Naffziger

94 N.E. 1, 248 Ill. 455, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2275
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 1 (Rich v. Naffziger) 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
Rich v. Naffziger, 94 N.E. 1, 248 Ill. 455, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2275 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action quare clausum fregit, brought by plaintiff in error against defendants in error. The declaration charges that defendants, on the 5th of May, 1909, and at subsequent dates, with force and arms entered the close of plaintiff (describing the premises) and tore down, broke and removed certain posts, wire and fence of the plaintiff, and covered up, tore out and destroyed certain grass, clover and oats of plaintiff, laying the damagés at $1000. Defendants pleaded not guilty, and a special plea averring that the premises upon which the alleged trespasses were committed were the close, soil and freehold of defendants, and no unnecessary damage was done in committing the alleged trespasses. The cause was tried by jury and a verdict returned in favor of defendants. Judgment was rendered on the verdict, and, a freehold being involved by the plea of liberum tenementum, the case is brought direct to this court by writ of error.

The litigation grows out of a dispute between the parties as to the correct location of the boundary line between their respective farms. Plaintiff owns the south-east quarter of section 5, township 25, north, range 2, west of the third principal meridian, in Tazewell county, and defendant Christian Naffziger owns the north half of the south-west quarter of said section. Plaintiff acquired title to his land by deed from his father. The deed is dated, acknowledged and recorded in 1885, but plaintiff testified it was not delivered to him until he had completed payment for the land, which was some time in the year 1890. For some time prior to defendant Christian Naffziger acquiring title to the north half of the south-west quarter the whole of that quarter section was owned by Christian Schwarzentraub. Schwarzentraub died in 1888, and at a sale of the north half of the south-west quarter by the master in chancery of Tazewell tpounty, in 1889, it was purchased by defendant Christian Naffziger. Prior to 1885 there had been a fence between the north half of the south-east quarter and the north half of the south-west quarter on a line known in this record as the “King line.” This line does not appear to have been recognized as the true boundary line between said tracts, and in 1885 Schwarzentraub caused a survey to be made for the purpose of locating the true line. This was made by a surveyor by the name of Oswald, and the line run by him is called the “Oswald line.” A fence was located on the Oswald line, and thereafter, until the commission of the alleged grievances in the declaration mentioned, the owner of the north half of the south-east quarter had possession of and cultivated the land up to the fence on the west, and the owner of the north half of the south-west quarter had possession of and cultivated the land up to the fence on the east. Plaintiff claims that the Oswald line was not the true line, and that it was considered by Schwarzentraub when he owned the land on the west side, and by himself, that that line was as much too far east as the King line was too far west. In August, 1907, plaintiff instituted a proceeding under the statute entitled “An act to provide for the permanent survey of lands,” (Laws of 1901, p. 307,) for the purpose of establishing the true and permanent line between said tracts of land. A commission of surveyors appointed by the court located the line between the King line and the Oswald line. According to the line run by the commission of surveyors the Oswald line was fifteen feet east of the true line at the north end and nine feet east of the true line at the south end, and the alleged trespasses were committed on this narrow strip of land. An order was entered approving the survey made by the commissioners appointed by the court on March 6, 1909, and in April following, plaintiff removed the south forty rods of the fence and placed it on the line run by the commission and sowed oats up to it on the east side. On the 22d of May defendants tore this fence down and placed the wire and posts back on the Oswald line and planted corn on the west side up to that line. On May 27, 1909, plaintiff rebuilt the fence on the line of the commission survey, and in July following, defendants again tore it down. Thereupon this suit was instituted.

In the view we take of this case the judgment must be reversed for error committed by the trial court in giving an instruction, and as the case will go back for another trial it is neither proper nor necessary for us to set out the evidence in detail or to express any opinion as to which side had the greater weight of testimony.

Plaintiff proved, beyond controversy, record title to the premises described in the declaration. The line run by the commission of surveyors must be accepted as the true line. That line showed that a strip of land fifteen feet wide at the north end and nine feet wide at the south end, off the west end of the north half of the south-east quarter, was in the enclosure and possession of defendants. They claimed title to it by virtue of the twenty year Statute of Limitations. Defendant in error Christian Naffziger had not owned the north half of the south-west quarter twenty years, but he had been in possession of the strip of land in controversy ever since he had owned it,—a period of between nineteen and twenty years. Schwarzentraub, who was Christian Naffziger’s predecessor in title to said eighty acres, had been in possession of said strip from the time the Oswald line was run, in 1885, and a fence placed thereon, up to the time of his death and the sale to Naffziger.

Defendants in error contend that both the possession of Schwarzentraub and the possession of Christian Naffziger were hostile and adverse and together make a period of more than twenty years, and constitute a complete bar to the action and to any claim by plaintiff for possession of said strip of land. That said strip was in the possession of Schwarzentraub and Naffziger from 1885 continuously down to the time plaintiff moved the fence on the commission survey line is proven beyond controversy. In fact, it is not denied. If such possession was hostile or adverse during all that period, then clearly plaintiff’s right of action was barred. In Zirngibl v. Calumet Dock Co. 157 Ill. 430, it was said (p. 447) : “The adverse possession which is required to constitute a bar to the assertion of a legal title by the owner of it must include these five elements: It must be (1) hostile or adverse; (2) actual; (3) visible, notorious and exclusive; (4) continuous; and (5) under a claim or color of title.”

For the purpose of showing that the possession of Schwarzentraub and Naffziger was not hostile or adverse, plaintiff testified to certain statements made by Schwarzentraub in his lifetime, in which it is claimed he recognized that the Oswald line was not the true line but was as much too far east as the King line was too far west. Schwarzentraub had the Oswald survey made and paid for it himself. Plaintiff testified that Schwarzentraub recognized its incorrectness and requested him (plaintiff) to procure another survey to be made. Plaintiff also testified to certain conversations with defendants in which he stated the Oswald line was on his land, to which defendants replied, in substance, that he need not worry about the matter,—that they would do what was right. Defendants denied they had such conversations with plaintiff. As to whether, if Schwarzentraub and defendants did make the statements testified to by plaintiff, they were sufficient to take the case out of the Statute of Limitations we express no opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 1, 248 Ill. 455, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rich-v-naffziger-ill-1911.