Stead v. President & Trustees of the Commons

90 N.E. 654, 243 Ill. 239
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 N.E. 654 (Stead v. President & Trustees of the Commons) 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
Stead v. President & Trustees of the Commons, 90 N.E. 654, 243 Ill. 239 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an information in the nature of a bill in chancery, filed by the Attorney General and the State’s attorney of Randolph county, against the president and trustees of the commons of Kaskaskia and others, charging said trustees with a breach of their official duties and asking that they be removed from office and that certain of their acts be annulled and set aside, and for an accounting, and for general relief. Answers and replications were filed and a trial was had, and a decree was entered granting, in part, the relief prayed for in the information. An appeal has been prosecuted to this court by the defendants, and errors have been assigned by the appellants and cross-errors by the appellees.

All the facts necessary to an understanding of the case and the decree from which the appeal is prosecuted will be hereinafter stated in this opiniop.

The first contention made by the appellants is that the information cannot be maintained, as it is said the Attorney General or said State’s attorney, or the inhabitants of the island of Kaskaskia, who reside outside of the limits of the village of Kaskaskia and upon whose behalf relief is sought, have no interest in the commons of Kaskaskia or the administration of said commons by said trustees, as the title to said commons is vested in the inhabitants of the village of Kaskaskia, and the president and trustees of the commons of Kaskaskia are administering said commons for the benefit of the inhabitants of said village of Kaskaskia, none of whom are complaining in this proceeding of the action of the president and trustees of the commons of Kaskaskia. The determination of the question of the right of the Attorney General and said State’s attorney to file the information necessarily, therefore, involves a determination of the question whether the legal and beneficial title to the lands known as the commons of Kaskaskia rests absolutely in the inhabitants of said village of Kaskaskia as said village now exists, or whether the State has such an interest in said commons as will authorize the Attorney General, or in this case the Attorney General and the State’s attorney of the county in which they are situated, as the representatives of the State, to file an information in the nature of a bill in chancery to require the president and trustees of the commons of Kaskaskia to carry out, honestly and efficiently, the duties imposed upon them by the act of the legislature under which they were elected.

The title to the lands composing the commons of Kaskaskia, like the title to all other lands in the Mississippi valley, was of a possessory character prior to the French occupation of that territory and rested in the American Indian. In 1673 Joliet and Marquette discovered the Illinois country, and in 1682 LaSalle took possession of the country tributary to the Mississippi river in the name of Louis XIV, and the lands of which the commons of Kaskaskia form a part were held by France until the year 1763. In 1675 Marquette established the mission of the Immaculate Conception at a point on the Illinois river near where is now located the village of Utica, in LaSalle county. In 1700 the mission of the Immaculate Conception was transferred to the French settlement established by James Gravier, a Jesuit missionary, near the mouth of the Kaskaskia river, which settlement was known as Our Lady of Kaskaskias and was located near where the village of Kaskaskia now stands. Subsequent to the year 1700 the commons of Kaskaskia were granted to the parish of the Immacu- . late Conception of Kaskaskia by the French government. No record, however, of this grant has been preserved. It was, however, confirmed to the inhabitants of the parish of the Immaculate Conception of Kaskaskia by a patent issued August 14, 1743, by Pierre de Rigault de Vaudreuil, Governor, and Edme Gatien Salmon, commissary orderer of the province of Louisiana, subject to certain conditions, in the following words: “Seen the petition to us presented , on the 16th day of June of this present year by the inhabitants of the parish of the Immaculate Conception of Kaskaskia, dependence of the Illinois, tending to be confirmed in the possession of a common which they have had a long time for the pasturage of their cattle in the point called Le pointe de bois, which runs to the entrance of the river Kaskaskia. We, by virtue of the power to us granted by his majesty, have confirmed and do confirm to the said inhabitants the possession of the said common,” etc. In 1763 ' this territory was ceded by the French to Great Britain and in 1765 taken possession of by the English government, and in 1778, at the time of the conquest of the North-west territory by George Rogers Clark, it was wrested from the English and acquired, by right of conquest, by Virginia, and was retained by Virginia until the year 1784, when, on March 1 of that year, it was ceded by that commonwealth to the United States. The deed by which it was ceded, among other things, próvided “that the French and Canadian inhabitants and other settlers of the Kaskaskias, St. Vincents and the neighboring villages, who have professed themselves citizens of Virginia, shall have their possessions and titles confirmed to them and be protected in. the enjoyment of their rights and liberties.” On December 31, 1809, a commission appointed by the Congress of the United States to examine certain old French grants, among which was that of the commons of Kaskaskia, re-. ported that “on the 14th August, 1743, Monsieur Vaudreuil, Governor, and Monsieur Salmon, commissary ordonnateur of the province of Louisiana, granted to the inhabitants of Kaskaskia a tract of land as a common for the use of the said inhabitants, which seems to have been bounded north by the southern limit of the village, east by the Kaskaskia river, and south and west by the Mississippi and the limits of the common field, so called, which will be found laid down in the plat-annexed, on certain conditions unnecessary here to state, since they relate to the domestic police of said village, reserving, however, to the government a right to grant away to such individuals as had settled or might settle in said village, such portions of said common as it might think necessary.” And by acts of Congress approved May 1, 1810, and February 20, 1812, the action of the said commissioners was approved, as follows : “That all the decisions made by the commissioners appointed for the purpose of examining the claims of persons claiming lands in the district, of Kaskaskia, in favor of such claimants, as entered in the transcript of decisions bearing date the 31st day of December, 1809, which have been transmitted by the said commissioners to the Secretary of the Treasury according to law, be and the same are hereby confirmed.” (Act approved May 1, 1810, 2 U. S. Stat. 607.) “The decisions made by the commissioners heretofore appointed for the purpose of examining the claims of persons to lands in the district of Kaskaskia, in favor of such claimants, to town or village lots, out-lots or rights in common to commons and common fields, as entered in the transcript of decisions bearing date the 31st day of December, 1809, which have been transmitted by the said commissioners to the Secretary of the Treasury according to law, be confirmed to all such rightful claimants according to their respective rights thereto.” (Act" approved Feb. 20, 1812, 2 U. S. Stat. 678.)

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 654, 243 Ill. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stead-v-president-trustees-of-the-commons-ill-1909.