Steele v. Gellatly

41 Ill. 39
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 Ill. 39 (Steele v. Gellatly) 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
Steele v. Gellatly, 41 Ill. 39 (Ill. 1866).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a petition for dower heard upon the following agreed state of facts, and a decree was entered pro forma for the defendant.

“ That the petitioner was married to Ashbell Steele, at Rochester, in the State of Hew York, in the year A. D. 1827, when she was eighteen years of age; that they lived and cohabited together, and were known and recognized in said county of Cook as husband and wife, for about thirty years. ‘That said Ashbell Steele died in said county of Cook, in the month of September, A. D. 1861, and that the said petitioner has continued to reside in said county of Cook ever since.

“ That, on the 25th day of August, A. D. 1834, the said Ashbell Steele became seized and possessed of an estate of inheritance, in the law, in fee simple, of, to and in the premises described in the petition filed in this cause by the petitioner, and in which she therein claims dower.

“ It appears of record in said county, that, on the 8th day of June, 1835, said Ashbell Steele, and his wife, the petitioner in this suit, joined in a deed to Horatio J. Lawrence, as it seems, intending to convey said lot, but described it as in block 35 instead of block 34. But the certificate of acknowledgment of said deed does not state that the contents of said deed were made known to her, nor does said certificate state that she relinquished her dower in said premises.

“That Ada B. Gellatly, then Ada White, now wife of Francis Gellatly, one of the defendants in this cause, acquired a claim and color of title in good faith to said premises, by deed on the 28th day of October, A. D. 1855, under which she has been in the actual possession of said premises, and has paid all the taxes assessed on said premises, ever since she so acquired a claim and color of title.

“That the buildings now on said premises, were erected thereon by the said Ada B. Gellatly, within the last six years in place of other buildings, which were standing on said premises, at the time she acquired her claim and color of title to said lot.”

We decided at the April Term, 1865, in the case of Owen v. Peacock, 38 Ill. 33, that, where the statute of limitations of 1839 run against a widow after she had become discovert, and counting the seven years from the time her right of action for her dower had accrued, the statute could be set up as a bar. We entertain no doubt as to the correctness of that decision, but the question presented by the record before us is widely different. In this case the husband of the petitioner had not been dead seven years at the filing of the petition, and the statute therefore had not run from the time such an interest had vested in the petitioner as could be asserted by action. It is, however, insisted that the terms of our peculiar limitation law are of a character to bar her claim.

We freely concede the language may be so interpreted, and we are disposed to give to that law as large an operation as can be constitutionally given, and the legislature intended it to receive. It was in that view we held the widow to be. barred in Owen v. Peacock. A right of dower has not been ordinarily considered as falling within the operation of the usual limitation laws; but we held in that case, that statutes of limitation belonged to a species of legislation peculiarly local in its character, to be established by each State according to its emergencies, and that if a State thought proper to pass a law applicable in its terms to a right of dower, there was no reason why the courts should not apply it to a right of that nature resting in action merely, as well as to a determinate and vested estate. But we were only considering cases, like the one before us, where the statute had run after the right of action accrued, and, although that opinion, being still in manuscript and not before the writer of this, cannot be quoted 'verbatim, he is under the impression that it is carefully limited to cases of the character then before the court.

But, while we still hold that there is no reason why a claim to dower should not be held subject to the statutory limitation, as well as any other species of estate, if the language of the law clearly embraces it, yet we cannot suppose the legislature intended such claim should be barred before the widow had had the opportunity of asserting it, and if they had so intended their act wrould have been void. But no such intention is to be imputed to them. However comprehensive may be the language of an act of limitation, we think no case in this country is to be found where the courts have held that the act begins to run, or can begin to run, until there is some person in being bywhom an action can be brought. So decided have the courts been upon this point, that, although it is a general rule, when the statute has once begun to run, it shall continue to run in spite of supervening disabilities, yet, in the case of Jackson v. Johnson, 5 Cowen, 74, the court held that the statute, having commenced to run, actually ceased during the period when the person having the right had no legal power to enforce it. This question is, of course, wholly distinct from that of mere disabilities. Whether married women, or infants, or any other class of persons having an estate, shall be considered as under disabilities, and, therefore, excused from bringing suit, or what period of time shall be allowed them after such disabilities are removed, are, undoubtedly, questions for the legislature, and the courts have only to obey its behests. But the case we are considering is not one of technical disabilities in the ordinary sense of that term, where the persons having the right have also the legal power to assert it in the courts, but are excused on account of infancy or coverture, but it is one where the claim sought to be barred has been in such a position that it could not be asserted by any one. If a claim of this character could be barred, it would be simple confiscation, without crime, fault or laches, on the part of the owner, and we cannot suppose the legislature so intended.

As to the constitutionality of the law of 1839, it has been several times before the court, and we are not disposed to re-open the question. It has been held constitutional to the extent that it can be fairly applied as a limitation law, and no further. To this ruling we adhere, and as it has been for some years a rule of property, under which titles have been bought and sold, it would be most unwise to disturb it. It is urged by the counsel for defendant in error, that even limitation laws, while acting professedly upon the remedy, practically transfer the title. This is true, but this result is only consequential, and only follows after the law has run its course as a strict bar of the remedy. An illustration of this doctrine is afforded in the case of Paullin v. Hale, decided at the present term of court (40 Ill. 274), in which, while adhering fully to the former decision, that the mere payment of taxes unaccompanied at any time by possession, cannot be made available as an offensive title, we hold that, when a person has paid the taxes under color of title for a period of seven years, and then takes possession so as to be in a position where he can set up the statute as a bar to the paramount title, he may oust the owner of even the paramount title, if he afterward enters when the possession is temporarily vacant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cummings v. Schreur
214 N.W. 199 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1926)
Henze v. Mitchell
140 N.W. 149 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1913)
Haller v. Hawkins
92 N.E. 299 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Lucas v. White
95 N.W. 209 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1903)
McNeeley v. South Penn Oil Co.
44 S.E. 508 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1903)
Miller v. Pence
23 N.E. 1030 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1890)
Pka-o-wah-ash-kum v. Sorin
8 F. 740 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Ill. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-gellatly-ill-1866.