Warren v. President of Jacksonville

15 Ill. 236
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 15 Ill. 236 (Warren v. President of Jacksonville) 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
Warren v. President of Jacksonville, 15 Ill. 236 (Ill. 1853).

Opinion

Scates, J.

Warren brought ejectment for a piece of land lying in west half N. E. quarter, sec. 20, T. 15, N., R. 10 west, and described and bounded as follows, “ beginning on the north line of the public road, called the State road, and running east and west across said tract of land, and at a point where said public road passes the east line of said tract of land, and running from thence west, one hundred feet, more or less, to the east side of a lot of" land whereon stands a small church, now called the Universalist church, and from that line thus described, said land extends north to the north boundary of said tract of land of which it is a part, retaining the same width as the south front, of one hundred feet.” Title is traced and admitted from the United States through the patentee and Dr. Chandler to Joseph Duncan, to the premises. And that in June, 1841, the United States recovered judgment against Duncan, and .that the premises were levied upon, and sold to Warren, on the 5th day of October, 1847, and conveyed by the United States marshal for the district of Illinois. It was also in proof, that on the 29th of October, 1835, Joseph Duncan and wife conveyed one undivided fourth of a piece of land to Thomas T. January, embracing so much of the above premises as lies between the line of Court street on the south, and North street on the north, (and called Railroad square,) —and that in said conveyance was this agreement, “ and it is agreed that all of said streets, and another street to be called Railroad street, are to ran through, and be kept open, through said square ; but it is agreed that if a sale of any privilege can be effected to the railroad company, for the erection of buildings on said square, it shall in no case obstruct a street; the proceeds are to be divided, one fourth to said January, and three fourths to said Duncan, and for all other purposes, it is agreed the said square shall be kept open for public use.”

It was further proven, that on the 26th of September, 1836, Thomas T. January and wife conveyed to Joseph Duncan, lots 8, 9, and 10, in Johnson’s addition to Jacksonville, and “ also all the interest which the said January holds in the Railroad square,” (the lands described in the foregoing deed,) “ laid off by said Duncan on the lands bought of Dr. E. Chandler, one half of which was deeded by said Duncan to said January, but in reconveying his interests in said square to said Duncan, it is understood that the said Duncan is to open Church street, as far north as lot number twenty-one in said Johnson’s addition, or to North street, and has full power to close the said square, or to sell or dispose of it, as he, the said Duncan, may think proper.” It was in proof that Warren had seen this deed before his purchase. That Duncan had a private unrecorded plat of these lands among others, upon which the premises were marked “ Duncan’s.” That part of the premises had always laid open, and part had been used and travelled by the public for three years before Duncan’s death, and hitherto, for more than seven years, and was as much in the use and possession of the public, as streets by working on the same, and claiming it as such. In 1835, a church was built on the lot on the west, and the lot on the east side was inclosed.

The plaintiff excepted to the modification by the court of his seventh instruction, which was as follows: “ The question to be determined by this jury is, whether Warren or any of the former owners of this land, has given and dedicated said land, to the public, as a public street of the town of Jacksonville; ” and to enable the jury to find that said gift or dedication has been made, it must be proved to their satisfaction, that some act has been done by some one of said owners, “ or such an acquiescence in the use of the land by some of them,” clearly indicating the intention to make said land a public street; and the bare fact that said land was left open, and the people travelled over it, is not of itself sufficient to establish such gift or dedication.

The court refused the following instructions, which was excepted to : 2d. Private property cannot be taken for public use without due compensation first made to the owner of the same; and this land having belonged to Chandler and Duncan, and now to Warren, cannot be taken, and could not heretofore have been taken by the incorporation, or the people of the town of Jacksonville, and converted into a public street, without the consent of said owners, or without first paying for said land.

3d. The deed from January and wife to Duncan, of certain lots of land in McHenry Johnson’s addition to the town of Jacksonville, wherein January recites that Duncan is to open Church street as far north as North street in Jacksonville, and without saying how far south said street is to be opened from North street, is not sufficient evidence to prove that Duncan did give and dedicate said land to the public, as a public street, commencing on the south at State street, and running north to said North street. Said deed is not evidence of any thing whatever, unless it is proven that Duncan received said deed from. January, and that said recital in said deed was known to Duncan when he received the deed, and that the same was the result of, and in pursuance of the contract and agreement made by Duncan with January, as a part of the consideration of said deed, and as a part of said contract in the purchase of said lots of land.

4th. The incorporation of Jacksonville or the people, being desirous to open a public street through the private property of any citizen, may do so by laying out said street, and having the value of the right of way over the land appraised by disinterested persons, and said value paid for, before said street is opened; but they cannot, because said land is left open by the owner, enter upon the land, and without the express consent of the owner, convert said land into a public street, without paying for the land: and length of time, however long said land may be travelled over and used without the consent of the owner, is not sufficient to establish said land as a public street.

The plaintiff also excepted to the following instruction for the defendant: If January and wife made to Duncan the deed offered in evidence by the defendants, and that at the date of that deed Church street was opened from State street to North street, and has so continued from that time up to the time of the institution of this suit, and hath, during all that time, been used by the public as a street, without let, hindrance, or objection of the owners of the land in controversy in this case, that from these circumstances the jury may infer a dedication of the land in controversy to the public, to be used as a street; and the jury may, if they see fit, find a verdict for the defendants, notwithstanding the plaintiff may have established his fee-simple title to the land in controversy.

The jury found a verdict for the defendants, and a second new trial was refused.

We shall decide this case upon the question of dedication by January and Duncan, and to which Warren is a privy by deriving title through them, and of which he had both actual and constructive notice.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ill. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-president-of-jacksonville-ill-1853.