Schoonmaker v. Doolittle

8 N.E. 839, 118 Ill. 605
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 N.E. 839 (Schoonmaker v. Doolittle) 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
Schoonmaker v. Doolittle, 8 N.E. 839, 118 Ill. 605 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action of ejectment, begun on July 27,1885, by appellee against appellant in the circuit court of Winnebago county, to recover a strip of land, 36 links wide and 32^°^. chains long, near the middle of the south-west fractional quarter of section 18, township 45, range 2, in the town of Harlem, in that county. The ease was tried before a jury in the court below, and verdict was returned, and judgment rendered in favor of appellee. Appellant appeals to this court.

In 1849, appellee and one David Goodhue, whose farms adjoined, agreed to buy the quarter section of land, above described. It was then owned by an estate of which Martin McCoy was administrator, and was duly sold, at public auction, by the administrator, and bid in by appellee for himself and Goodhue. Each was to pay one-half of the purchase money, and each to have one-half of the fractional quarter section, though the title to the whole of it seems to have been taken in the name of appellee. A surveyor, by the name of Armstrong, was at once employed to survey the land. He ran a line through the tract, running east and west, and dividing it into two parts, Goodhue taking the north part, and appellee the south part. The division line, as established by the surveyor, was agreed to by appellee and Goodhue, and they built a division fence upon that line, and at once went into possession, Goodhue of the portion, north of the fence, and appellee of the portion, south of the fence. The south portion, so taken by appellee, included the whole of the strip, for which this suit is brought, the north line of the strip being the division line established by the surveyor, and upon which the division fence was built.

On January 29,1854, appellee executed a deed to Goodhue, who had by that time paid up his half of the purchase money, intending thereby to convey to him the north portion of the tract, which was assigned to him in 1849. It was supposed at the time, that this deed only conveyed such part of the quarter section, as lay north of the division fence, established in 1849. Goodhue and his grantees have been in possession of the land, north of the division fence, ever since 1849. Appellee was in the open, notorious and uninterrupted possession of the land, south of the division fence, including the strip, now in controversy, from 1849 down to the spring of 1885, a period of thirty-six years,

In the spring of 1885, appellant purchased the Goodhue tract from one Odgers, who then owned it, and discovered, that the description of the land in his deed from Odgers, instead of covering only the part of the tract, north of the original division line, did, as matter of fact, embrace the strip, now in controversy, which lay south of that line. Examination disclosed the fact, that the original deed from appellee to Goodhue, and the deeds from Goodhue and his successive grantees, all contain the same description, as that which is shown in the deed made directly to appellant. Appellant thereupon took possession of all or a portion of the strip, now in dispute.

The proof clearly shows, that, when this suit was commenced, appellee had become the owner of this strip, by reason of his adverse possession thereof, “hostile to all the world” and under a bona fide claim of ownership, for a period of more than twenty years. Hence, the judgment in his favor should stand, unless the errors, assigned by appellant, are sufficient to reverse it.

It is objected, that, according to the evidence in the record, appellee did not acquire his title, until after the date of the demise, laid in his declaration. The declaration avers, that “plaintiff, on the 1st day of June, 1860, was possessed of a certain close, ” etc. The proof shows, that the term of twenty years, during which the plaintiff held adverse possession, did not expire until 1869 or 1870, and, therefore, that he did not acquire the legal estate, until some nine or ten years after-June 1, 1860. There is great force in this objection, and it is difficult to understand, why the pleader did not lay the time of the demise, as of some date, subsequent to the lapse of the twenty years.

The 11th section of chapter 45 of the Revised Statutes provides, that “it shall be sufficient for the plaintiff to aver, in his declaration, that (on some day therein to be specified, and which shall be after his title accrued,) he was possessed of the premises in question,” etc. This same provision was contained in the 7th section of chapter 36 of the Revised Statutes of 1845, and was construed by this court in Wood v. Morton, 11 Ill. 547, which case was referred to, with approval, in Pitkin v. Yaw, 13 Ill. 251, and Holt v. Rees, 44 id. 30. In Wood v. Morton, the proof showed, that the plaintiff acquired his title on June 21, 1844, while the declaration averred, that he was possessed of the premises, and also, that “he was ejected by the defendant,” on June 1, 1844. In Holt v. Rees, the proof showed, that the title was acquired on August 22, 1865, while the declaration laid the date of the demise and also the date of the ejection, as being on May 3, 1865. In Pitkin v. Yaw, the deed, introduced to show title, was dated January 4, 1851, and the declaration alleged title on June 1, 1850, but the facts, as recited, do not disclose, on what date the declaration avers the ouster to have taken place.

The cases in 11 and 44 111. are distinguishable from the case at bar, in that, in those cases, the title, entry and ouster are all laid in the declaration, as of an earlier date, than the date, when the testimony showed the title to have been acquired. In the case at bar, the declaration alleges the ouster to have taken place on May 28, 1885. It avers, that, on that day, which was long subsequent to the acquisition of the title, “defendant * * * entered into the said premises and ejected the said plaintiff therefrom.” Where the plaintiff is-alleged to have been in possession at. one date, and to have been ejected therefrom at a later date, it is a reasonable presumption, that he continued in possession until the date of the ouster. The declaration, in the present case, alleges, that plaintiff on June 1, 1860, was possessed of the strip, and that “the said plaintiff being so possessed, ” the said defendant, on May 28, 1885, entered and ejected him. We regard this allegation as equivalent to an averment, that plaintiff was in possession on May 28, 1885. He could not have been, ousted, unless, at the time of ouster, he was in possession.

In the cases of Wood v. Morton and Holt v. Rees, supra, it does not appear, that the objection, here under consideration, was not made before the trial court. In Pitkin v. Yaw, supra, it was made upon the trial below, and the deed, showing the-title, was excluded, on the ground, that it bore a later date than the time of the demise, as laid in the declaration. The objection points out a variance between the proofs and declaration. The defendant should have objected to the evidence at the time, or, at any rate, after the evidence was all in, should either have entered a motion to exclude it from the jury, or have asked the court to instruct the jury to find for the defendant. But nothing of this kind was done.

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8 N.E. 839, 118 Ill. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoonmaker-v-doolittle-ill-1886.