Siegle v. Criss

136 N.E. 706, 304 Ill. 338
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1922
DocketNo. 14245
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 N.E. 706 (Siegle v. Criss) 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
Siegle v. Criss, 136 N.E. 706, 304 Ill. 338 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. JusticRDuncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs in error, John Siegle and E. J. Strauss, began on October 25, 1919, in the Pike county circuit court, an action of ejectment to recover from defendants in error, John Criss and E. W. Pausek, the possession of about 26.6 acres of land described in the declaration in the ordinary form as a strip of land about 4.38% chains wide at the north end and about 8.y6}4 chains wide at the south end, off the east side of the southeast quarter of section 36, in township 7, south, range 5, west of the fourth principal meridian, in Pike county, or all that part of the southeast quarter in the possession of the defendants and east of the fence now maintained by them across the quarter section. Defendants in error filed a plea of the general issue and three verified special pleas. The first special plea is to the effect that Criss has been in the adverse possession of the premises, claiming to own the same, for a period of more than twenty years before the suit was begun. The second is that Criss is the owner in fee simple of the premises and that Fausek is his tenant, and that they are not guilty as charged. The third special plea denies that plaintiffs made demand on defendants for possession before the suit was begun. On a trial by jury the verdict was not guilty, and the court rendered judgment on the verdict in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiffs. This writ of error is prosecuted to review that judgment.

The parties will hereafter be referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, as in the court below.

Township 7, south, range 5, west, in Pike county, is known as Ross township, and east and adjoining that township is township 7, south, range 4, west of the fourth principal meridian, known as Pleasant Hill township, also in Pike county. The south line of these townships is the line between Pike and Calhoun counties. Plaintiffs have the record title to the southeast quarter of section 36, in township 7, range 5, and that is conceded by defendants. The natural stream Sny E’Carte, referred to in the record as the Sny, enters the southwest quarter of section 31, township 7, range 4, at the northwest corner and flows thence southeasterly across that quarter section. Defendant Criss is conceded to be the owner of the record title to all that part of the southwest quarter of section 31, township 7, range 4, lying south and west of the Sny, and containing, according to the government survey, 46.97 acres. The line running between plaintiffs’ land and Criss’ land is a township line.

To prove title to their land plaintiffs introduced a quitclaim deed from Alexander W. Bothwell to James S. Irwin dated December 24, 1874, purporting to convey the west half of the southeast quarter of section 36, township 7, range 5; also a quit-claim deed from Hezekiah S. Bundy to Irwin dated January 15, 1875, purporting to convey the east half of said southeast quarter; and a quit-claim -deed from Irwin and wife to Melissa Gruell dated December 8, 1879, purporting to convey all of said southeast quarter. Plaintiffs have a connected chain of title from Calvin Gruell and Melissa Gruell, his wife, as shown by other deeds introduced in evidence by them, the deed from the Gruells being dated April 12, 1907. They also proved the payment of taxes and drainage assessments on the land from 1906 to 1918, including both of said years, by the Gruells and their subsequent grantees. The other evidence for the plaintiffs shows that Calvin Gruell, known as Captain Gruell, had charge of the land of Melissa Gruell aforesaid and built a house near the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of section 36, and cleared for cultivation and occupied through tenants land on the tract in 1893, and continued to occupy and clear land on said tract for cultivation up to the time the Gruells conveyed the same, in 1907, and that the subsequent grantees of the Gruells, including plaintiffs, continued to occupy and clear land for cultivation up to the time this suit was brought. The evidence tends to show that 135 or more acres were cleared on the southeast quarter, known as the Gruell land, at the time this suit was brought, and that these clearings began at the house built by the Gruells in 1893, near the southwest corner of the tract, and were extended north and east of the house until they had almost reached the disputed strip when this suit was brought. If the east section line of section 36, which is a township line, runs due north and south the disputed tract is a part of the southeast quarter of section 36, bounded by the section and county line on the south, on the east by the section and township line, by the quarter section line on the north, and by an angling line on the west, beginning about 275.9 feet west of the northeast corner of the section and running southwesterly to a point about 651 feet west of the southeast corner, enclosing a tract of about 28 acres. The record does not disclose that the Gruells, or any subsequent grantee of the southeast quarter, known as the Gruell land, had any actual occupancy or possession of any part of the disputed strip except a very small part thereof and for temporary use, as later explained.

The tract of land known in the record as the Criss land, and to which Criss is conceded to have the record title, is a triangular piece of land bounded on the north and east by the Sny, on the south by the section and county line, and on the west by the section and township line. As shown by the evidence, Criss obtained his record title by virtue of a bond for deed executed by one Chamberlain on May 13, 1905, and a deed by Chamberlain and wife pursuant to the provisions of the bond, in which the land is described as all that part of the southwest quarter of section 31, township 7, range 4, containing 47 acres more or less. Criss has been in possession of portions of this fractional quarter under claim of ownership since about the date of his bond for deed, occupying it by tenants, except about two years, 1913 and 1914, when he lived on it. Since his occupancy in 1905 he has continued to clear the land from year to year, and in about 1910 he had the present fence built that encloses the disputed strip, according to his testimony. The entire strip, or about all of it, is now cleared and is being cultivated by him. The fractional southwest quarter was formerly owned by Criss’ father-in-law, Whiteside, who purchased it in 1887 and lived in a house built on it about the same year, until he'died, in 1897. Criss testified that the widow of Whiteside “had control and possession” of the fractional quarter of section 31 from the death of White-side until Chamberlain purchased it for him at a master in chancery’s sale in 1905 and executed the bond for a deed.

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147 N.E.2d 356 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1958)
Siegle v. Criss
144 N.E. 307 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.E. 706, 304 Ill. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siegle-v-criss-ill-1922.