Sawyer v. Campbell

22 N.E. 458, 130 Ill. 186
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 458 (Sawyer v. Campbell) 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
Sawyer v. Campbell, 22 N.E. 458, 130 Ill. 186 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill filed in July, 1881, in the Cook circuit court, by Philetus Sawyer and George F. Harding, to quiet the title or remove clouds from the title to lot 2, in the subdivision of the east half of the south-west quarter of section 15, town 38, range 14, in Cook county. Possession of the lot, seizin thereof in fee, and freedom of the premises from incumbrances, were alleged in the bill.

Ambrose Campbell, appellee herein, who was one of the defendants to the bill, claimed that he was the owner in fee of the land, under and by virtue of certain sales made in conformity with the powers given in a trust deed executed in 1868 by Frederick A. Weage, to secure the payment to Charles W. Clayton of purchase money due on that part of said lot 2 lying west of the Vincennes road, and a trust deed executed in 1868 by Hiram Canfield, to secure the payment to Charles W. Clayton of purchase money due on that part of said lot lying east of said road, and in a trust deed on the entire lot, made in 1877 by Francis Canfield to Granville S. Ingraham, in trust, to secure the payment of notes for $18,000 and interest, payable to John McNab.

It is manifest, that if both Campbell, appellee, and Sawyer and Harding, the appellants, claim from said Charles W. Clayton as a common source of title, and the title of appellants is subsequent and subordinate to that derived under the trust deeds, and there have been valid sales and conveyances under said trust deeds, then the contention of appellants is not well grounded, and their bill of complaint was properly dismissed by the circuit court.

It appears from the evidence, that the land records of Cook county were destroyed by fire on or about the 9th day of October, 1871, and that fact, no doubt, is the primary and principal cause of the present controversy, and of the difficulty which has been experienced in arriving at a proper and just conclusion in respect thereto. That Campbell derives title from Clayton, is patent from the evidence. The parol testimony of Joel D. Harvey and Frederick A. Weage shows that Clayton executed and delivered to said Weage a deed of conveyance for that part of lot 2 lying west of the center of the Vincennes road, and to Hiram Canfield a conveyance of that part of said lot lying east of the center of said road. It is satisfactorily shown that these original conveyances are not in the possession or control, of appellees, but, on the contrary thereof, it sufficiently appears that they were destroyed by the same fire that burned the public record that was made of them. The record before us contains a trust deed from said Weage to Joel D. Harvey, trustee, dated August 26,1868, and recorded September 3, 1868, in book 475, page 329, in which it is recited that it was given to secure a part of the purchase money of that part of lot 2 lying west of the center of the Vincennes road; and also a trust deed from said Hiram Canfield to said Joel D. Harvey, trustee, dated October 27,1868, and recorded October 31, 1868, in book 490 of deeds, page 112, in which it is recited, it was given to secure a part of the purchase money of that part of lot 2 that lies east of the center of the old Vin-cennes road. It also appears that on December 22, 1876, and after the death of said Charles W. Clayton, his executors and heirs transferred and delivered said two deeds of trust, and the promissory notes secured thereby, duly assigned, to John McNab. The evidence further shows, that on the 28th of May, 1877, said Joel D. Harvey, trustee, sold, under said trust deeds, respectively, said west part and said east part of said lot 2, and conveyed the same, by trustee’s deeds, to Francis Canfield, and that said Francis Canfield, by his trust deed dated June 5, 1877, conveyed the whole of said lot 2, along with other-property, to Granville S. Ingraham, in trust, to secure the payment of certain notes described therein; and that after-wards, on July 27,1881, said lot 2 was sold by said Ingraham, trustee, under said trust deed, and struck off to Campbell, appellee, and conveyed to him by deed from said Ingraham. So the title now held by Campbell is connected with and dependent upon the titles of said Charles W. Clayton.

It appears from the record, that upon the hearing of this cause the decision of this court, “as found in McNab v. Young, 81 Ill. 11 to 15,” was, without objection, considered as read in evidence. In the opinion in that case, as so found, it was, among other things, said: “We place our decision on the following grounds: The title acquired by Parsons at the judicial sale was the legal title. * * * He held the title unchallenged for more than four years, when he sold and conveyed to Clayton. * * * Clayton purchased Heald’s interest, paying him $5000 therefor. Parsons, holding the legal title, sold and conveyed it to Clayton.”

The title of appellants to lot 2 is derived immediately from Alonzo J. Sawyer. The latter, by deed dated April 23,1870, conveyed an undivided one-half interest in the premises to appellant Harding, and by deed made in 1876, conveyed the other undivided one-half interest to appellant Philetus Sawyer. The evidence shows that one Benjamin F. Haddock, by his conveyance of April 23, 1870, deeded the lot to said Alonzo J. Sawyer, but that the latter purchased the same for the joint interest of himself and said Harding, and that they went into possession under such conveyance. It further appears from the evidence, that Horatio N. Heald, who, as was decided in McNab v. Young, as reported in 81 Ill. supra, sold his interest in that and other land to Clayton for $5000, quitclaimed, along with his wife, the premises in controversy, on December 20, 1871, to said Alonzo J. Sawyer and Harding, and the quitclaim deed then executed, following the description of the property, contained this language: “Being the same property described in the deed heretofore made by us to Charles W. Clayton, dated October 9,1867, filed April 2, 1870, and recorded in book 573, page 326, of the records of deeds of Cook county, Illinois. This deed is made to clear away certain objections made to said last named deed, or to the abstract thereof, and is made to confirm the title of said grantees claimed under said deed.”

The fact that Sawyer and Harding accepted this deed from Heald, and had it recorded, is an admission they claimed title under Clayton, and under the deed made by Heald to Clayton, and that this quitclaim deed was procured by them merely in confirmation of such title. The date of the quitclaim deed, and the recitals therein, afford evidence to show that their prior deed from Haddock was in the line of conveyance from and through Clayton. The parol evidence of appellants themselves is, that they “claim to have originally .derived title from Clayton,” and that they “entered into possession under the deeds from Haddock and from Heald.” They introduce in evidence no deeds other than the deeds from Haddock and from Heald. Mr. Harding, in his testimony, said: “I have no recollection of any other title deeds save those produced here. So far as I know, I have produced all that ever were in my possession.”

The deed from Haddock to Alonzo J. Sawyer recites: “This deed is made subject to certain incumbrances, which, with interest up to the 1st day of April, 1870, amount to ten thorn sand four hundred and thirty-four and y2^ (10,434.22) dollars, which the party of the second part assumes and agrees to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 458, 130 Ill. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-campbell-ill-1889.