Stewart v. Duffy

6 N.E. 424, 116 Ill. 47
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 N.E. 424 (Stewart v. Duffy) 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
Stewart v. Duffy, 6 N.E. 424, 116 Ill. 47 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this case was exhibited in the circuit. court of Knox county, against Catharine V. Duffy, and is for the partition of a certain tract of land described in the bill, and was filed April 20, 1883. Both parties.concede the title was originally in Francis McDonough, since deceased. He obtained a patent to the land from the government of the United States in 1817, and never made any conveyance thereof to any one. The theory of complainant’s bill is, the original owner, died intestate, and that the land • therefore passed to his heirs at law by descent. There does not seem to be any very definite evidence in the record as to the time of the death of Francis McDonough, but. it is conceded his death occurred as early as 1856. Surviving him was óne son, Lawrence McDonough, one daughter, now Mrs. Catharine V. Duffy, and one grandson, George B. Smythe, the son of a daughter who had died before her father. Afterwards, Lawrence McDonough died intestate, without ever having been married, and leaving as his only heirs at law, his sister, Mrs. Catharine V. Duffy, and his nephew, George B. Smythe. In that way the bill alleges the title to the whole tract of land vested in Mrs. Catharine V. Duffy and George B. Smythe.- Afterwards, George B. Smythe, it seems, became a bankrupt, and such proceedings were had by his assignee that the interest the bankrupt was supposed to have inherited from his grandfather and deceased uncle, was sold to complainant for the sum of fifty dollars, but at his request, the assignee made the conveyance to M. M. Tilton, who subsequently reconveyed the property to complainant. It is in this way complainant claims to be the owner of one undivided half of the tract of land involved in this litigation. On July 6, 1883, defendant, Mrs. Duffy, filed her answer to the original bill, in which she admitted her father, Francis McDonough, had been the owner of the land in his lifetime, hut averred that before his death, in consideration of natural love and affection, he gave the land to her and put her in possession, and from that time she had remained in possession, making improvements as owner, and that during all that time she claimed to be the absolute owner, and therefore she denies that George B. Smythe, the son of her deceased sister, ever inherited any interest in the land, either from his grandfather or from his uncle. Afterwards, defendant filed an amended answer, in which she stated that any and all interest acquired by complainant under the conveyance from the assignee, from the bankrupt, Smythe, were procured in fraud of her rights; that he was her trusted adviser concerning her interest and.title to the premises in question, and to whom she confided all her business, and hence he is estopped to claim any title to such premises as against her, and that he holds the same as trustee for her, subject only to be reimbursed for any disbursements and expenses incurred in the matter, which she was ready and willing to repay on receiving a conveyance from complainant. Afterwards, defendant filed a cross-bill, in which she stated the principal facts contained in her original and amended answer, and claimed affirmative relief against complainant, whom she made defendant to her cross-bill. On the final hearing of the cause the court dismissed the original bill for want of equity, and granted relief on the cross-bill of defendant, upon terms fixed by the court in its decree.

There are many equitable considerations in support of the decree, and it is thought it is sufficiently sustained by the evidence to permit it to stand. Twenty years’ adverse possession of land under a continuous assertion of ownership hostile to all others, will constitute a bar to any right of entry by one not within any saving clause of the statute, claiming to have paramount title, whether the claim of the party in possession is rightful, or even under a muniment of title. (Turney v. Chamberlain, 15 Ill. 271; Kerr v. Hitt, 75 id. 51.) The evidence is quite sufficient to warrant the conclusion defendant was in the adverse possession of the premises for more than twenty years prior to the filing of the bill in this case. It is evident she entered upon the premises as early as 1856, and this bill was not filed until 1883. There is little room to doubt she entered under a parol agreement with her father that he would give her the land, which he did, and enjoined upon her not to sell, but to keep it for a home for herself and family. Since then she has occupied the premises under a claim of ownership, making improvements upon them and asserting that dominion over the property a rightful owner may do. When she first took possession, her husband, Michael Duffy, was living, and resided with her on the premises. Prior to his death, which occurred in 1862 or 1863, the taxes on the entire tract were paid and the receipts taken in the name of the husband. After his death Mrs. Duffy paid the taxes herself. These facts would seem to bring the case within the provision of the statute that forbids any person to commence an action for the recovery of lands, or make any entry thereon, unless within twenty years after the right to bring such action or make such entry accrued. (Sec. 1, chap. 83, Rev. Stat. 1874.) Here was continuous adverse possession, open and notorious, for nearly thirty years, under claim of ownership, with the super-added fact of payment of 'taxes 'during that entire period. There was no one that could have disputed her title, unless it was George B. Smythe, a grand-son of her donor. The evidence is full to the point he always treated the land as belonging to defendant: In the receipt he took .for erecting a fence on the premises, which he wrote himself, he referred to the farm as defendant’s farm.' So in conversation with the neighbors concerning it, he spoke of the farm as the property of defendant, and never attempted to assert any claim to it of to interfere in any way with her possession. It seems he tried to get the neighbors tó induce' her to sell it,—not a part of it, but the whole of it,—and re-invest the money for her sole benefit. "No claim was ever put forth by Smythe to any interest in the- land, and when he went into bankruptcy he did not schedule with his assets any interest in this land. Having treated the land as belonging to defendant for more than twenty years, his assignee, or any one claiming under him, is as much estopped by the statute to commence an action for the recovery of the land as Smythe himself would-be.' Stress is laid on the fact that in borrowing money defendant secured it on the undivided half of the quarter section, as showing she did not claim the entire tract. No great importance need be attached to that fact or circumstance. It did not appear she had any title of record or by inheritance to more than one undivided half, and it may have been, the parties loaning the money did not care to take security upon any part ’ of the land to which it did not appear she-had a perfect title, derived .through mesne conveyances, from the government or otherwise. That is all very businesslike, and by no means proves she did not claim ownership to the entire tract. There was clearly no error in dismissing the original bill, as was done, for want of equity.

The remaining question is, whether the decree on defendant’s cross-bill, giving her affirmative relief, can be sustained. Whether he was her legal adviser in any technical sense or not, it is certain complainant was her trusted and confidential adviser and agent in a good many matters. One witness says he drew leases for her for this land, and her private papers were left in a box in his safe.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E. 424, 116 Ill. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-duffy-ill-1886.