Rush v. Collins

8 N.E.2d 659, 366 Ill. 307
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1937
DocketNo. 23992. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 8 N.E.2d 659 (Rush v. Collins) 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
Rush v. Collins, 8 N.E.2d 659, 366 Ill. 307 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

George Fred Rush filed in the superior court of Cook county a complaint against the owners of two tracts of land over which there was a private alley in which he claimed an easement. An answer and a cross-bill were filed by certain of the defendants. John J. Gill, a defendant, filed no answer and was defaulted. Upon a hearing the cross-bill was dismissed, and. the complaint was dismissed as to the defendant Thomas A. Collins. The decree permanently restrained the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff’s use of the alley. Mary A. Collins and Hejen H. Collins prosecute this appeal as owners of the property.

The land, over a part of which the alley extends, is located in the block immediately south of Fifty-seventh street between Blackstone and Harper avenues in the city of Chicago. The plaintiff owns two six-apartment buildings at the northwest corner of the block at the intersection of Fifty-seventh street and Blackstone avenue, and fronting on the latter street. His land extends 101 feet along the south side of Fifty-seventh street and 90 feet along the east side of Blackstone avenue. There is a jog of land owned by the plaintiff, 42 by 14 feet, on the south of the land described which extends easterly to the alley in question. The eastern three feet of the plaintiff’s land is a passageway in the rear of his building extending from Fifty-seventh street to the jog of land mentioned.

Immediately east of the plaintiff’s apartment buildings (separated only by the passageway) is the land of the defendants. It is improved with a brick building consisting of two parts, connecting over the alley, both parts facing Fifty-seventh street. The western or smaller part of the building is between the passageway on the plaintiff’s land and the alley on the defendant’s land, and the eastern part extends from the alley to Harper avenue. Eleven feet of the southern portion of the alley, immediately east of the .jog of the plaintiff’s property and land extending on to the south, is owned by the defendant Gill. Subsequent to the erection of the apartments by the plaintiff he, the plaintiff, constructed a garage on the fourteen-foot strip of his land. The doors of the garage open toward the alley a very short distance from the eastern boundary line of the jog. Gill has a garage on the south end of the alley which he owns, standing eleven feet south of his north lot line. The alley is the only means of access for automobiles to the two garages. The plaintiff and the defendants each owned their respective tracts of land previous to the construction of the improvements thereon and when the block was largely unimproved.

The principal testimony on behalf of the plaintiff was that offered by himself and two other witnesses, with certain documentary evidence. The plaintiff testified that in March, 1904, when he was contemplating the purchase of the property which he subsequently bought and .improved, he had a conversation with respect to the alley with one Lander Whiton who had title to a part of the land. Whiton told the plaintiff he had an offer from one Dr. Cook who owned a part of the alley, and Whiton asked the plaintiff if he would go with the former to see Dr. Cook. The plaintiff and Whiton saw Dr. Cook. The latter told Whiton that he wanted only the part of the forty-two by fourteen-foot-jog which Whiton owned. Whiton replied that he could not sell that jog because the plaintiff wanted it as a way to reach the alley. Whiton then said that the plaintiff desired to know about the alley. Dr. Cook replied, “You know all about the' alley. We made the alley years and years ago and you have been using it ever since. There is no question about the alley.” The evidence shows an agreement of John C. Cook and Jennie L. Cook, (predecessor owners of the Gill property) with the Rosalie Music Hall Company (predecessor owner of the Collins property) allowing “free and unobstructed passage from Fifty-seventh street to the party of the second part” (the Cooks) “over the E. 13.7 feet” etc. being the alley in question.

The plaintiff then purchased an undivided one-half interest from Whiton and a one-half interest from the Joseph A. Sleeper estate. The plaintiff told Whiton at the time he made the purchase that he desired to see Chandler (who was or had been president of the Rosálie Music Hall Company) the owner of the other part of the alley. The plaintiff and Whiton saw Chandler the following day. Whiton said to Chandler, “Rush wants to know about the alley. He is talking about buying it. He wants to know about the arrangement about the alley.” Chandler replied, “We all made it together and there is no doubt about the use of it.” There was no written agreement by the plaintiff or, so far as the record shows, by his predecessor with either the owner of the Gill or Collins property or their predecessors for the use of the, alley in question.

The plaintiff testified that he lived diagonally across from the land in question since 1892, and ate at the Rosalie Music Hall, which was on the land before and during the World’s Fair. When he purchased the land it was vacant, had a strong- fence around it and the only entrance to it was through the alley by a gateway. Whiton had his horse pastured on the land. The old Music Hall and a small drug store were in that block. The alley was paved with macadam at least since 1892. After the plaintiff purchased the land he used it as a pasture for his horse. About the end of 1905 the plaintiff built on his land two six-flat buildings facing on Blackstone avenue, having the passageway, heretofore mentioned, in the rear of the buildings. A double door gateway opened to the alley. The plaintiff informed the tenants of his building that they might use the alley and they did so, and it was used both by vehicles and pedestrians. The tenants in the south tier of flats used the gateway mentioned to reach Fifty-seventh street through the alley. The plaintiff testified that he asked the permission of no one to use the alley, and that the only time he and his tenants refrained from using it was during the temporary period of construction work in progress in the erection of the building by Thomas A. Collins in 1923. The building which, previous to that time, stood on the site was torn down in order to permit the erection of the new building. Collins, at that time, told the plaintiff that he was going to build the overhead and connecting structure over the alley, and the plaintiff said it made no difference to him if it did not to Gill. It did not interfere with the plaintiff’s use of the alley. The plaintiff testified that nothing was said by Collins at that time about the plaintiff’s use of the alley, and that the plaintiff continued to use it. In 1925 and 1926 the plaintiff built his garage on the strip of land abutting the alley. When he was building the garage, the plaintiff testified that Collins said, “Build that fence so they can’t get through.” Collins was then referring to a small fence two or three feet in height between the southeast corner of the plaintiff’s garage and the northwest corner of Gill’s garage, the purpose being to keep persons from the south of the alley going by a short cut from that direction to the alley. The plaintiff testified that he thought he had the right and acted as if he had the right to use the alley.

On April 20, 1935, Mary A. Collins wrote to the plaintiff informing him that he would have to discontinue the use of the alley as a thoroughfare unless he signed a lease for its use.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.E.2d 659, 366 Ill. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rush-v-collins-ill-1937.