Citation Numbers: 181 Ill. 154, 54 N.E. 905
Judges: Carter
Filed Date: 10/13/1899
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the opinion of the court:
In October, 1897, appellee brought ejectment against Casey and Others to recover the south half of the north half of the north-west quarter of the north-west quarter of. section 22, township 9, north,—a ten-acre tract of land in Peoria county. Later, by amendments, the parties defendant were changed, except as to Casey, and after the evidence was heard on the last trial, the plaintiff dismissed as to James M. Morse, who had been made a defendant, and the court then instructed the jury to find the defendants, Casey and Oglesby, guilty, etc. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, and said last named defendants appealed.
It seems that the last amended declaration named only Morse as defendant, but the cause was tried and defended by appellants, and, their names having been omitted from the declaration by mistake, the court, during the hearing of the motion in arrest of judgment, permitted the plaintiff to amend his declaration so as to include them of record as defendants. There was no error in allowing this amendment.
But it is contended that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s title was derived by mesne conveyances from Moses Stringer, who settled upon the quarter section containing the ten acres in controversy in 1838, but owing to a defect in the proof the plaintiff was unable to connect him with the patent title. The evidence showed, however, that he lived upon and improved a part of the quarter section for many 37'ears, and tended to prove that he claimed to own it, but there was no evidence, specifically applicable to the tract in controversy, that Stringer improved it, claimed to own it or exercised any acts of ownership over it, except that it was á part of the quarter section the south half of which he improved, and that he sold and conveyed it, having made the first conveyance in 1851, in the chain of title which ended in the plaintiff in 1890. Being unable to trace his title beyond Stringer, the plaintiff, to make a prima facie case, sought to prove, first, that when said Stringer conveyed this tract he was in possession claiming to own it; second, that other intermediate grantors,when they conveyed, were in possession claiming to own it; and finally, that he entered into possession of the same property under his deed in 1890, and held possession of the same until appellants intruded and took possession, in 1895. If the plaintiff succeeded in proving either of the propositions mentioned he thereby established a prima facie, case and was entitled to judgment, unless the presumption thus raised in his favor was overcome by the defendants. (Anderson v. McCormick, 129 Ill. 308; Barger v. Hobbs, 67 id. 592; Herbert v. Herbert, Breese, 354; Mason v. Park, 3 Scam. 532; Keith v. Keith, 104 Ill. 397; DeWitt v. Bradbury, 94 id. 446; Bowman v. Wettig, 39 id. 416; Metropolitan Bank v. Godfrey, 23 id. 579; Coombs v. Hertig, 162 id. 171; Harland v. Eastman, 119 id. 22.) Appellants had no title whatever, but claimed that the land was vacant and unoccupied, had been abandoned, and that they were entitled to hold it against the plaintiff,—first, because he had failed to prove title in himself; and second, because they had proved title in fee in a third person. They did not claim under nor connect themselves with the title of such third person in any way. Being mere trespassers and without title appellants could not set up an outstanding title in another. Anderson v. Gray, 134 Ill. 550.
Without considering whether or not the possession of Moses Stringer was sufficiently proved, we are of the opinion that the evidence showed that Lowell Harrison, a subsequent grantor in appellee’s chain of title, was, at the time he conveyed, in possession and claiming to own the land; also, that after appellee purchased, in 1890, he leased it to one Schwartz for a period of five years ending- January, 1896; that Schwartz took possession as appellee’s tenant and cultivated a part of the ground, and then, with the consent of appellee, assigned the lease to one Gilbert, who laid out the tract into lots, with streets running through it, and put up signs showing the names of the streets, and that appellee’s possession was thus established. There were remnants of an old fence on the land. In July, 1895, Morse, with a force of men, went upon the premises and built a wire fence, and soon after Gasey took possession and leased to Oglesby,—whether by the connivance of Morse does not appear, but, in any event, without any right whatever, so far as the evidence disclosed. We are of the opinion that under this state of the proof appellee was entitled to a verdict in his favor, and that any other verdict would necessarily have been set aside.
The instruction to find for the plaintiff was properly given, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed,.