Torrence v. Shedd

156 Ill. 194
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 156 Ill. 194 (Torrence v. Shedd) 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
Torrence v. Shedd, 156 Ill. 194 (Ill. 1895).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

Upon the second hearing of this cause we said:

“This was a bill brought by the appellant on the 29th day of August, 1881, for partition of a certain tract of land in Cook county, known as the north quarter of section 7, township 37, north, range 15, east of the third principal meridian, containing about one hundred and forty-three acres. On the first hearing the court entered a decree dismissing the bill, and the complainant appealed to this court, where a judgment was entered reversing the decree and remanding the cause for another hearing. (See Torrence v. Shedd, 112 Ill. 466.) A statement of the leading facts involved in the case will be found in the opinion of the court when the case was before,us on the former appeal, and it will not be necessary to repeat them here, except so far as new facts were developed on the last hearing.

“Upon looking into the record when the case was here before it will be found that appellees contended, first, that the deed from Edward Sorin to the complainant, under which he claimed title to the property, was invalid because the agreement in pursuance of which it was made was, as alleged, champertous; second, that the deed from Edward Sorin to James H. Bowen of April 25, 1871, under whom the defendants claimed title, was in such form that it passed to Bowen the title and all interest in the land which Sorin might thereafter acquire; third, that the Onahan contract, so-called, of the 29th of January, 1876, was binding on Sorin and that appellant was concluded by it. As to these positions it was then said: ‘We have carefully considered these positions, and after having availed ourselves of all additional lights thrown upon the subject by the petition for a rehearing, , and given it our best thought, we are fully satisfied that said positions, and each of them, are not tenable, and they must, therefore, henceforth be regarded as conclusively settled against appellees.’ The remanding order left all other questions arising in the record, except the three, open for further consideration upon a second hearing, after the cause should go back to the Superior Court. After the cause was re-docketed in the Superior Court the appellees set up and relied upon a contract executed by Haines and Sorin in 1877, which had not been relied upon on the former hearing. That contract was as follows :

“ ‘This agreement, made this 8th day of March, A. D. 1877, between John C. Haines, of the city of Chicago, and Edward Sorin, of Notre Dame, Indiana, witnesseth :

“ ‘Whereas, the said Haines has become seized and possessed of a title in and to an undivided two-thirds of all the north quarter of fractional section 7, town 27, range 15, east, south of Indian boundary line, and I have agreed with the said Sorin that if he will procure and convey to me the outstanding one undivided third of the same property, that I will convey to him all my interest, including the said one-third as well as the two-thirds interest of which I am at present seized, in and to seventeen acres of the said north quarter, to be selected by agreement between them.

“ ‘Now, therefore, it is mutually covenanted and agreed by and between the said parties, that as soon as Edward Sorin procures, or causes to be procured, a good title to the said outstanding undivided one-third interest, and shall convey, or cause to be conveyed, by good and sufficient deed or deeds of conveyance to the said Haines, the title of the said undivided one-third interest in and to said north quarter, then the said Haines will well and truly convey, or cause to be conveyed, to the said Sorin, all of said interest, including the interest now held by said Haines as well as the interest of one-third to be so conveyed -in and to the seventeen acres to be selected and agreed upon between them, and conveyed to said Sorin in his own separate right, and to his heirs and assigns forever. The covenants are to extend to and be mutually binding on the respective heirs, administrators and assigns of said parties.

“ ‘Witness the hands and seals of the said Haines and

John C. Haines,

By Charles J. Haines, Atty. in.facV

“The contract was in duplicate, one executed by Haines and delivered to Sorin, the other executed by Sorin and delivered to Haines. At the time this contract was executed, Edward DeSeille, who owned one-third of the quarter of land in question, resided in Belgium, and was then, and had been for many years, insane. On September 19, 1877, Haines sold and conveyed, by quit-claim deed, to Susan M. Shedd, a portion of the north quarter, and in February, 1878, he deeded, by quit-claim deed, the remainder to Turpin, the receiver of the Fidelity Bank. On the 17th day of November, 1878, Edward DeSeille died, and his one-third interest in the section of land passed to his sister, Melanie DeSeille, and to the children of his brother, Charles DeSeille. On the sixth day of March, 1879, Melanie DeSeille conveyed to Sorin the entire section, and in 1881 Sorin acquired, by purchase from the children of Charles DeSeille, their interest.in the section of land.

“By these conveyances Sorin acquired the title to the one-third of the section which was originally owned by Edward DeSeille, and on the last hearing of the cause it was claimed by appellees, when Sorin obtained Edward DeSeille’s title he became, under the agreement between himself and Haines, a trustee for Haines and his grantees as to the north quarter of the section, and his conveyanee to Torrence, and Torrence’s contract with Brown, were in fraud of their rights. Appellees are entitled to the benefit of that title. The contract between Haines and Sorin was not assigned by Haines to the parties to whom he conveyed the land, and much importance is attached to this fact by appellant in his argument. It is no doubt true that the conveyance from Haines to Mrs. Shedd and Turpin would prevent him from conveying the seventeen acres named in the contract to Sorin; nor could he, after having parted with the title to the land, maintain a bill in his own name against Sorin for a specific performance of the contract. But we are inclined to hold that the deeds made by Haines transferred^ to his grantees all title and interest he had in' the land, regardless of the manner in which he acquired that interest. Whatever title he held, either legal or equitable, obtained by deed or contract, was transferred by the deeds to his grantees, and it was not necessary that the deeds should specify the Sorin-Haines contract. In other words, after the conveyance the grantees of Haines, as respects his title, stood in his shoes, and any relief he was entitled to as against Sorin, his grantees would be entitled to the same relief.”

We still entertain the views expressed in the foregoing extract, and re-adopt the same. Before proceeding to a further discussion of the contract of March 8,1877, it may be well to refer to the course of proceeding after the first decree entered by the Superior Court of Cook County on December 15, 1883, dismissing appellant’s bill, was reversed by this Court on April 6, 1885. After the cause had been docketed in the court below, and on May 5,1885, Sorin, who had not been before that time a party, was allowed to come in and be made a defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
156 Ill. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torrence-v-shedd-ill-1895.