delivered the opinion of the Court:
The original bill in this case was for the partition of land, between tenants in common, and for the cancellation of a contract for the sale of the land, executed in the name of one of the co-tenants to the appellee, Elmira Stearns. It was filed on November 27, 1882, by Storm A. Becker, as one of the tenants in common, against the other tenants in common, and against said Stearns, and the appellee John Carne Jr. The only allegation in said bill having any reference to Carne is, that he “claims to have some interest in said land, which said ' interest, if any he has, is by way of purchase of said land at sale thereof for taxes and special assessments, and from any such interest your orator claims the right in behalf of himself and his co-tenants to redeem according to law. ” There was nothing in the prayer of the bill in relation to the interest of Carne as purchaser at a tax sale. The prayer was simply for partition, and that the contract of Stearns be cancelled. Carne was never served with process under the original bill, and never appeared or answered it. While it was pending, and on January 31, 1883, he obtained a tax-deed conveying to him lot 10, one of the lots in controversy.
The only defendant to the original bill, who was served, was Elmira Stearns. Nothing seems to have been done in the cause for about five years, except that, on June 19, 1884, it was stricken from the docket for want of prosecution, was reinstated on June 25, 1885; and a motion made on June 19, 1886, to rescind the order reinstating it was overruled on June 20, 1887. On the latter date the present appellant,Lizzie Hughes, came into court and suggested the death of the complainant, Becker, and asked to be substituted as complainant in his stead, and obtained leave to file an amended and supplemental bill.
Accordingly the appellant, Hughes, on July 6, 1887, filed her amended and supplemental bill, alleging that she had purchased the undivided one half interest of the said Becker in the two lots, 10 and 11, sought to be partitioned; that, in his lifetime and on August 21, 1884, Becker had, at her request and for her benefit, executed a deed of said undivided half to one Mary H. Bates, which deed was filed for record September 9, 1884; that Mary H. Bates conveyed the said half to appellant on April 22, 1886; that she, the said Hughes, was the owner seized in fee of one undivided half of said lots, and that George L. Weed and Henry E. Weed, as the devisees and only children of their deceased father, William H. Weed, owned the other undivided half, subject to the dower of their mother, M. Louisa Weed. The amended and supplemental bill makes one Jacob C. Magill and Stearns, Carne and the Weeds defendants thereto; it sets up the contract with Stearns and states the grounds upon which it is claimed that said contract ought to be cancelled; it also sets up the execution of the tax deed on January 31, 1883, to Carne, and states the reasons why said deed is claimed to be invalid and void; it prays for partition and the cancellation of the contract as was done by Becker in the original bill, and also prays for the removal of the tax-deed as a cloud upon the title. Said defendants answered the amended and supplemental bill, and the Weeds- and Stearns filed cross-bills.
The controversy before us, as the case is now presented, is-not between the appellant and the Weeds, but between appellant and Carne as to the validity of the tax-deed and the right-of appellant to ask for its removal as a cloud, and between-appellant and. Stearns as to the validity of the contract and. the right of the appellee, Stearns, to enforce it.
First, as to the tax-deed. Many reasons are urged against-its validity. We think that one of these is sufficient to set it aside without stopping to consider the rest. It appears, from the affidavits filed with the county clerk to procure the issuance of the deed, that the lot was taxed in the name of Bees, Pierce & Co. Section 216 of the Bevenue law provides, that the notice therein specified shall be served upon “the person in whose name the same was taxed or specially assessed, if upon-diligent inquiry he or she can be found in the county.” One of the affidavits states, that the affiant “could not find any of the owners or parties interested in said lot, in said county, except Bees, Pierce & Go.” They, therefore, were found. The only proof of service upon them is the affidavit of one Cross, who swore that, as the agent of Carne, he served the notice “on Bees, Pierce & Co. by handing same to and leaving it with L. H. Pierce.”
There is no allegation in any of the affidavits, that L. H. Pierce was a member of the firm of Bees, Pierce & Co. But if there had been such allegation, proof of service upon one ■ member would not have been evidence of service upon the other member or members. Where property was assessed in the name of Beid & Sherwin, service on Sherwin was held not to be “good service as to Beid.” (Gage et al. v. Reid et al. 118 Ill. 35.)
Appellee, Carne, sought to show by oral testimony on the trial, that the firm of Eees, Pierce & Co. had been composed of James H. Bees and L. H. Pierce and no other persons, and that Bees was dead at the time of the service of the notice. 'This was not allowable. The affidavit, presented upon the .application for the deed, must show upon its face all that is necessary to entitle the applicant to have the deed executed. 'The affidavit must state particularly the facts relied upon as a compliance with the law. (Sec. 217, chap. 120, Rev. Stat; Gage v. Hervey, 111 Ill. 305; Davis v. Gossnell, 113 id. 121; Price v. England, 109 id. 394.) We have held in Gage v. Mayer, 117 Ill. 632, that parol evidence cannot be introduced to supply defects or omissions in the affidavit, and that, if the .affidavit does not contain the facts necessary to show compli.ance, “the deed is unauthorized and nugatory, regardless of •what the real facts may be, or what may be proved. ” So far :as is shown upon the face of the affidavits in the present case, there was no service upon the persons in whose name the property was taxed, but upon another and entirely different person. ,L. H. Pierce was not Eees, Pierce & Co.
But it is claimed on the part of the appellee, Carne, that "the appellant, the complainant in the amended and supplemental bill, was in no position to ask for the removal of the tax deed as a cloud, upon the alleged ground that she did not -show herself to be the owner of the lot. The amended and •supplemental bill alleges that the complainant Hughes was in possession of the property; and the proof shows that she took possession thereof in September and October, 1884, for the .benefit of herself and her co-tenants, and fenced the same and built green-houses thereon at a cost of about $5000.00. Where the complainant in a bill to remove a cloud, shows that he is in the actual possession of the property claiming to own it in fee at the time of beginning his suit, such possession and • claim will be received as a substitute.for actual proof of ownership. (Gage v. Hervey, supra; Barger v. Hobbs, 67 Ill. 592; Keith v. Keith, 104 id. 397; McLean v. Farden, 61 id. 106).
It is claimed, however, that, inasmuch as appellant acquired her title and possession after the filing of the original bill by Becker, she cannot set up such possession as a ground of recovery in her supplemental bill. It is “a general rule that, where an original bill shows no ground of relief, it cannot be aided by a supplemental bill setting up matters that have arisen since the filing of the original bill. ” (Fahs v. Roberts, 54 Ill. 192). But this rule has no application to the present case, for the reason that the amended and supplemental bill here is an original bill so far as its allegations and prayer have reference to the invalidity of the tax deed and the removal thereof as a cloud. The tax deed itself was not issued until after the filing of the original bill. In the latter, no tax-deed was referred to, or alleged to be invalid, or charged to be a cloud, nor was the removal of a tax-deed as a cloud asked for, nor was any relief sought as against Carne. All these matters were set up for the first time in the amended and supplemental bill.
It is conceded, that, if the lots had been vacant when the original bill ■ was filed, and Becker had therein stated the grounds upon which the tax deed was alleged to be invalid, and had asked for its removal as a cloud, his grantee could not thereafter acquire a possession that could be set up by her in a supplemental bill as an aid to the title obtained from Becker, or as a substitute for proof of ownership. But the original bill merely set up such a title going back to a common source, as was necessary to secure a partition and a cancellation of the Stearns contract. The amended and supplemental bill did not attempt to aid that title by new matters, but it introduced a new cause of action and asked for new relief, and its allegations as to title were in support of such new cause of action and such new relief, and not in aid of the old matters alleged in the original bill.
The partition Act permits clouds to be removed in bills for partition. It thus allows two kinds of relief in relation to two different subjects to be sought in the same proceeding. Such a proceeding stands upon a different footing from one in which the only ground for relief is a single cause of action. One of the reasons for the rule contended for is, that it compels the defendant to adopt a new line of defense. It has been said, that it is inequitable to compel a defendant, who has been contending against the claim set up in the original bill, to suffer defeat by reason of a supplemental bill “based upon grounds having no connection with the original cause of action and lending it no support.” (Fahs v. Roberts, supra). But here the defendant, Carne, was never served with process until July 6, 1887, the day on which the amended and supplemental bill was filed. The cause of action set up in the latter bill was the only cause of action in the case, which he had ever been called upon to defend; and the Hughes bill was an original one so far as he was concerned. (Hallorn v. Trum, 125 Ill. 247.)
It is to be noted that, in the affidavit of the defendant, Carne, and in the affidavits accompanying the same and made a part thereof, which he presented to the county clerk when he applied for his tax deed, he mentions Storm A. Becker as owner of the lot now in controversy. The law required him to serve a notice upon the owner, or to notify such owner by publication. He published a notice addressed to Becker as owner. He rests the validity of his tax deed upon the sufficiency of this notice and of these affidavits containing an admission of Becker’s ownership. Appellant has unquestionably acquired the ownership, which is thus admitted to have been in Becker when Carne made his affidavit. The latter is estopped from denying that Becker was owner at that time. The applicant for a tax-deed cannot swear to the ownership of a party in order to get his deed, and then deny his own sworn statement when the deed, is attacked.
We are of the opinion that the complainant made such proof [ of title as entitled her to maintain her hill to set aside the. tax deed, and that said tax deed should have been declared invalid. The decree of the Circuit Court dismissing the bills and cross-bills as to Carne' is, therefore, reversed.
Second, we think that the Circuit Court decided correctly as to all the other matters involved, and in holding that the appellee, Stearns, was not entitled to a performance of the contract for the purchase of lots 10 & 11, and in dismissing her cross-bill. In these respects its decree is affirmed.
The contract is dated January 26, 1880, and signed by Conger & Gorton, as agents for Storm A. Becker, and by Elmira Stearns. It recites the payment of $50.00 by Stearns on account of cash payment on the purchase of said lots, the amount of the purchase being $2000.00, payable $500.00 in cash, $500.00 on or before one year, $500.00 on or before two years, 0 and $500.00 on or before three years, etc. Elmira Stearns was the mother-in-law of Magill. The $.50.00 was paid by Magill, and the evidence tends to show that Magill was himself the purchaser in the name of Stearns. If he was not the purchaser, he acted as the agent of Stearns and in her interest in the negotiations. Neither of them ever paid anything more than the $50.00. It is alleged in the cross-bill of Stearns that Magill had been employed by Conger & Gorton to obtain a purchaser for said lots. It would thus appear, that he acted as agent for both sides, for both seller and purchaser. He wrote the contract and recorded it on January 31, 1880.
The contract is for the purchase of the whole of lots 10 and 11. Becker only owned an undivided one half of them, and George L. and Henry F. Weed owned the other undivided half. The Weeds declined to join in the sale. They never agreed in writing or orally to sell their half. They never authorized Conger & Gorton orally or in writing to make a contract for the sale of their interest. Magill knew, before the contract was made, that the Weeds owned one half. He had sold two other lots—26 and 27—for Becker and the Weeds. Conger & Gorton never saw Mrs. Stearns. Their dealings were with Magill. They told him that the sale was made upon condition that the Weed interest could be obtained. Upon failure to obtain it they tendered back to Magill his $50.00, but he refused to receive it. They once offered to deed him the one half interest owned by Becker, but he refused it saying that he was entitled to a deed for the whole. There is nothing in the conduct of Magill which commends it to the favorable consideration of a chancellor. The contract names Becker only, and not his heirs or assigns.
Under the second section of the Statute of Frauds Conger & Gorton had no authority to bind Becker by a contract for the sale of these lots unless they had been “thereunto by him lawfully authorized in writing.” He never gave them any authority in writing to make a contract for the sale of the whole of the lots or for the sale of his own one half thereof. Mr. Gorton swears that he never had any correspondence with Storm A. Becker. He had some correspondence with Becker’s son, but there is no evidence that the son had any authority in writing to sell the lots for his father, or to make a contract for their sale.
The decree herein requires the complainant below to pay to Mrs. Stearns the $50.00 paid upon the contract. In our opinion this is all which justice and equity require her to do.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed so far as it is here held to be erroneous, and the cause is remanded to that court with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Decree reversed in part and in part affirmed.