Town of Kaneville v. Meredith

198 N.E. 857, 361 Ill. 556
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1935
DocketNo. 22596. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 857 (Town of Kaneville v. Meredith) 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
Town of Kaneville v. Meredith, 198 N.E. 857, 361 Ill. 556 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee, the town of Kaneville, (hereinafter referred to as the complainant,) filed a bill in the circuit court of Kane county against the appellant, Lyle B. Meredith, (hereinafter referred to as the defendant,) for a mandatory injunction commanding him to remove a fence on a certain ten-aeré parcel of land along the contiguous highway, or so much thereof as would enable the complainant to remove the gravel therefrom, and for a restraining order enjoining the defendant, his heirs, agents, servants and assigns, from in any manner interfering with it, its highway commissioner, agents, servants or employees, from going upon or moving gravel from the land. By its bill the complainant alleged that it acquired the property for the purpose of using the gravel upon the premises and removing the same therefrom in the construction and building of roads within the township of Kaneville. The complainant further charged that the title of the defendant, while consistent with, was subject to its title and its right to remove the gravel. The defendant answered the bill and filed a cross-bill, by which he claimed title to the property in controversy by recorded deed, by twenty years’ adverse possession, and by seven years’ possession under claim and color of title and payment of taxes, and prayed that his title therein be quieted. The chancellor heard evidence and entered a decree finding that the complainant was not entitled to the relief sought, dismissed its bill for want of equity, and quieted the title to the property in the defendant. The complainant appealed to this court, and in an opinion filed on February 23, 1933, the decree was reversed and the cause was remanded to the circuit court without directions. (Town of Kaneville v. Meredith, 351 Ill. 620.) When the cause was re-docketed in the circuit court the defendant filed a supplemental answer averring that since the filing of the complainant’s original bill he had continued in open, peaceable and adverse possession of the property; that since filing his previous answer he had paid all the taxes levied upon the real estate; that the complainant was barred by the Statute of Limitations from commencing its suit, and that he, the defendant, was the owner both under the twenty-year and the seven-year sections of the Limitations act. He also withdrew his cross-bill and re-filed it as of March 1, 1934, claiming that he, himself, had been in possession more than seven consecutive years under claim and color of title and had paid all taxes. The parties stipulated that as to the pleadings the cause should be heard upon the amended original bill, the cross-bill, the answers to these bills, the defendant’s supplemental answer and the replications to the answers, and that as to the evidence it should be heard upon the bill of exceptions made up and preserved when the cause was first tried. It was further stipulated that certain additional evidence should go into the record. The chancellor then entered a decree finding, among other things, that the defendant had continued to occupy and cultivate the land and pay the taxes thereon from the day of the filing of the bill, as he had prior thereto. The decree granted the relief sought by the complainant and dismissed the defendant’s cross-bill for the want of equity. From that decree the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The facts, so far as material to this inquiry, are as follows: Both the complainant and the defendant claim title from a common source, namely, Ann E. Young, a widow, and Frank P. Young and Mae Young, his wife. The complainant’s chain of title consists of a warranty deed from the Youngs, dated January 21, 1905, to the Aurora Construction Company; a warranty deed from the construction company to the Aurora, DeKalb and Rockford Traction Company, dated January 23, 1905; a deed from the master in chancery of the circuit court of Kane county in foreclosure proceedings against the Aurora, DeKalb and Rockford Electric Traction Company, dated October 6, 1909, to the Chicago, Aurora and DeKalb Railroad Company; a deed from the special master of the circuit court of Kane county in a foreclosure proceeding against the Chicago, Aurora and DeKalb Railroad Company to Israel Joseph, dated January 31, 1923, and a quit-claim deed from Joseph and his wife to Kaneville township, dated January 20, 1928. Each of the deeds covered the premises in question, and those following the deed dated January 21, 1905, were made subject to the condition contained in that deed, as follows: “It is further understood and is a part of the consideration for this conveyance that when the gravel upon the said property hereby conveyed shall be entirely removed, the said premises shall thereupon without further conveyance revert to the grantors herein their heirs and assigns, except a strip of land running through said premises one hundred (100) feet in width to be then designated by the grantee herein and its assigns, which said one-hundred-foot strip shall not revert as aforesaid, but be retained by the said grantee and its assigns for railway purposes. Alb timber on said premises is expressly reserved by said grantors, who agree for themselves and their heirs and assigns, to remove the same so as to interfere in no way with the removal of gravel from said premises or the construction of railway tracks on or through the same.”

The defendant’s chain of title consists of a warranty deed from the Youngs to Charles E. Underwood, dated July 21, 1911, which recites that it is made subject to a deed executed by the grantors on January 21, 1905, and a warranty deed from Underwood and his wife, dated March 19, 1924, to Lyle B. Meredith, conveying, with other land, the following described real estate: “The south sixty-one acres of the east half of the northeast quarter of section 25, township 39 north range 6, east of the third principal meridian, in the township of Kaneville, Kane county, Illinois, (excepting therefrom the right of way of the Aurora, DeKalb and Rockford Railway Company).” The south ten acres of this tract is the real estate the title to which is in question in this litigation.

Additional facts and circumstances are disclosed by the record. On July 3, 1928, the complainant cut down a fence which had been on the property prior to January 21, 1905, and entered upon the premises with certain machinery for the purpose of removing gravel. The defendant promptly removed the machinery from the premises and repaired the fence. Two days later he caused to be served upon the complainant, through its highway commissioner, a notice forbidding the complainant, its highway commissioner or employees, from going upon the premises, under threat of criminal prosecution. Neither the complainant nor any of its predecessors in title ever was in actual possession of the land, or, so far as the record discloses, ever entered or attempted to enter upon it prior to July 3, 1928. The complainant filed its bill six months later, namely, on January 25, 1929.

When the cause was before this court on the former appeal the evidence failed to show how the Chicago, Aurora and DeKalb Railroad Company acquired title to the property in controversy. “For all that appears in this record,” the court said, “the title to the premises in question is still in the Aurora, DeKalb and Rockford Electric Traction Company.” It was accordingly held that on the record then presented the complainant could not maintain its bill for injunction for the reason that it had failed to show title in itself.

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 857, 361 Ill. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-kaneville-v-meredith-ill-1935.