Walsh v. Dunn

34 Ill. App. 146, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 220
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 146 (Walsh v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Dunn, 34 Ill. App. 146, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 220 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

TJpton, P. J.

This is an action in covenant, brought to recover for the loss of fourteen inches of land in width, north and south, and extending seventy-five feet east and west, in the south part of the north twenty-two feet of lot 3 in block 27, in the original town of Joliet, as surveyed, etc., and for costs sustained by appellee in prosecuting an action of ejectment, in the Circuit Court of Will County, of Dunn against Warnock.

The original town (now city) of Joliet was laid out by James B. Campbell, wdio was then the owner of the land, (1834,) and the surveys and plat thereof were made by one Woolsey in the same year, and the plat duly acknowledged and recorded; upon that plat is marked and numbered lot 3, in block 27, a portion of which is now in controversy. In 1873 the above mentioned lot 3 was subdivided into several smaller or sub-lots, and numbered from 1 to 6, inclusive, by one Matliieson, as surveyor, who made a map and plat of such subdivision in due form of law, which was also recorded. In this subdivision of lot 3 the north twenty-two feet thereof is identical with sub-lot 6 of that subdivision, and sub-lot 5 of said lot 3 is the twenty-two feet next south of the north twenty-two feet of lot 3.

Prior to 1885 the appellants were the owners of these two twenty-two foot lots; sub-lot 5 being then built upon, and sub-lot 6 being vacant.

In 1885 appellants conveyed sub-lot 5 to one James Warnock by deed with full covenants of seizin and warranty, who thenceforth occupied the same and the buildings thereon as a bakery. In March, 1887, appellants conveyed to the appellee by deed with full covenants sub-lot 6, etc., describing it as the north twenty-two feet of lot 3, etc. Soon after such purchase appellee, being desirous of building upon the lot so purchased by her, caused a survey to be made of said land so purchased, and thereupon learned that the building of Warnock used as a bakery stood upon a portion of the twenty-two feet so purchased by her of the appellants. Surveys were caused to be made by the several parties in interest, and it was determined that Warnock’s building stood fourteen inches on sub-lot 6.

Warnock consulted an attorney, and being advised that he could hold the land so occupied by him, refused to remove his building therefrom, and the appellants, neglecting and refusing to make reparation or aid appellee in obtaining possession of that part of that lot (though fully informed of the fact), the appellee brought suit in ejectment in the Circuit Court of Will County against Warnock to recover this fourteen inches of land. In that suit a trial was had which resulted .in a verdict for Warnock. Appellee then took a new trial, under the statute, and then served notice upon the appellants of the pendency of the action in ejectment, etc., in due form. Appellants gave no heed thereto, and neglected and refused to assist or aid in the prosecution of the suit, and the cause was tried at the January term of the said Circuit Court, resulting in a judgment against appellee for costs; the principal defense to the action being the adverse possessions by Warnock and his grantors, barring a right of recovery thereto by either appellee or his grantor; and upon appellant’s neglect and refusal to make restitution this suit was brought upon the covenants of appellant’s deed, the declaration averring breaches of each and all the covenants, etc., with the expenses incurred in the action of ejectment, etc., to which the appellants pleaded performance, etc., and the cause was tried by the court, a jury being waived, resulting in a judgment in favor of the appellee for the sum of $169.60 and costs, from which judgment an appeal was taken to this court. This judgment was for the costs and attorney’s fees paid by appellee on the second trial of the ejectment suit.

Ho propositions of law were submitted in the trial court, and no j-points seem to have been tiled upon the motion for a new trial in the court below.

Appellant in his contention before us presents three propositions or reasons for the reversal of the judgment, viz.:

First. That appellee is not entitled to recover, because the deed to appellee only calls for a strip or lot of land twenty-two feet in width and to that extent only the covenants in the deed run, and that this lot in fact extended fourteen inches into the alley north of and adjoining this lot, and that therefore the Warnock building (bakery) was not upon any part of this twenty-two feet conveyed, or on any part of sub-lot 6.

Second. If the appellee was entitled to recover in the court below she was limited in that recovery to the land actually occupied by Warnock and his grantors, covered by the bakery building, which strip was at most fourteen inches in width and extending back thirty feet in depth.

Third. In no event could appellee recover costs and attorney’s fees expended in prosecuting the second trial by the ejectment suit in the Circuit Court, as was allowed to her in the court below.

1st. It might be a sufficient answer to the first proposition, to state that the same rule is applicable to the finding of facts upon a trial by the court, as applies to the findings by a jury, and if upon a conflict of testimony the finding in either ease is not clearly and manifestly against the weight of the evidence the judgment will not be disturbed. Wood v. Price, 46 Ill. 436; Ambs v. Honore, 24 Ill. 122; French v. Lowry, 19 Ill. 158; Eastman v. Brown, 32 Ill. 57; Thomas v. Rutledge, 67 Ill. 213; Field v. Chicago & R. I. Ry. Co., 71 Ill. 461, and the cases therein cited. It is most emphatically stated in the above cited cases “that the same force and effect should be given to the findings of a judge, upon questions of fact submitted for trial before him, as to the verdict of a jury.”

But the evidence in this case upon the point now under consideration scarcely rises to the dignity of a conflict; the fact that this bakery building of Warnock’s stands upon the south fourteen inches of sub-lot 6, is almost absolutely demonstrated by Mathieson, the surveyor called by appellee, and by surveyor Brown, who was employed by those hostile in interest to the appellee. It is true that Cazwin, Stapleton and some other witnesses stated that the north boundaries of lot 6 in their opinion was different from that established and fixed by the actual measurements and surveys of these acknowledged competent and skilled surveyors. But these witnesses also testi" tied that they knew nothing about the corners of lot 6, or the boundaries thereof. Their whole judgment and expressed opinions were based upon the asserted fact that the alley on the north of lot 6 was twenty-inches wider than the calls for that alley on the plat, but even if that were true it might be that the lots on the other side of this alley might be short and require this overplus to fill the calls therefor on the plat. At all events the trial court was fully justified in their finding upon this point by the evidence.

2d. As to the second point in this contention regarding the land actually covered by the Warnock bakery building, the only testimony we find upon that point in the record before us is that of Warnock, the owner, and he testifies:

“ I never measured it, but a mark was made on the front of the bakery building, and was said to be fourteen inches, and “it” (the building) runs back seventy-five feet.”

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 146, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-dunn-illappct-1889.