Stalford v. Goldring

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the close of appellee’s evidence appellants offered. an instruction and requested the court to direct a verdict in favor of appellants, which was refused. At the request of appellants the court, by appellants’ fourteenth instruction, told the jury that if plaintiffs (appellants) fenced or caused to be fenced the land mentioned in the declaration to be fenced, by building a fence around the same, then such act of fencing was actually taking possession of the land. At the request of appellee, and by instruction 8 in her behalf, the court told the jury that “the fact that the plaintiffs built a fence around the entire tract of land will not of itself be conclusive evidence of an actual possession by the plaintiffs, but the jury have a right to take into consideration the length of time the said fence existed, and the acts done by either plaintiffs or defendant after the destruction of said fence, * * * and all the circumstances surrounding the case, in arriving at your verdict as to whether such an act on the part of the plaintiffs was an actual taking- possession by them.” The refusal to give the peremptory instruction directing a verdict for the plaintiffs, and the contention that instructions 14 and 8 above mentioned are irreconcilable and for that reason reversible error, and that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence, are the principal grounds relied upon by appellants in this case.

Appellee insists that the deed dated July 20,1836, and recorded March 1, 1837, in the recorder’s office in Cook county, Illinois, from Charles McNeil to John C. Phillips, the grantor of Charles Hollenback, was fatally defective, for the reason that the same was acknowledged in LaSalle county and was without a certificate of magistracy; and the deed from John C. Phillips to Clark Hollenback, conveying the same premises, dated September 15,1836, and recorded March 1, 1837, made and acknowledged before a justice of the peace of LaSalle county, was also without a certificate of magistracy. An affidavit in proper form was made at the trial by appellants that this deed was not in the possession of plaintiffs or of either of their attorneys; that the same is destroyed and not within the power of plaintiffs or their attorneys to produce it, and that the recorder’s record of said deed was destroyed by fire on October 8 and 9, 1871. Thereupon appellants introduced in evidence the abstract books of Jones & Sellers, containing extracts or minutes from such destroyed records of said deed. Jones & Sellers, at the time the entries therein were made, were engaged in the business of making abstracts of title for others for hire. Such abstract book, after duly showing the material parts of the deed, contains this memorandum: “Certif. of ackgt. of Jus. Peace, LaSalle county, Illinois; has no certif. of magistracy annexed.” We regard the objection of appellee without merit. At the time of the trial the deed had been a matter of record for fifty-nine years, and was therefore an ancient deed, and there being no evidence of fraud or suspicious circumstances connected therewith, it was not necessary to show proof of execution. (Quinn v. Eagleston, 108 Ill. 248; Reuter v. Stuckart, 181 id. 529.) Nor was it necessary for plaintiffs to trace title anterior to the deed to Hollenback, as plaintiffs, upon the trial, filed an affidavit that they and defendant claimed title through a common source, viz., through Clark Hollenback, the grantee of Phillips, and no counter-affidavit was filed thereto. Smith v. Laatsch, 114 Ill. 271.

In addition to the above, and settling this matter beyond question, our attention is called to the fact that by an act entitled “An act to amend chapter 24 of the Revised Statutes, entitled conveyances,” approved February 15, 1851, (Laws of 1851, p. 122,) it is provided, among other things, that “all deeds, mortgages and other instruments in writing relating to or affecting any lands, tenements or hereditaments situate within this State, which have been executed and acknowledged before any justice of the peace of any county in this State other than the one in which such lands, tenements or hereditaments lie, and which have been recorded in the county where such lands, tenements or hereditaments do actually lie, shall be adjudged and treated by all courts as legally executed and recorded, notwithstanding there is no certificate attached to said mortgage or other instrument by the proper officer that the justice of the peace before whom said deed, mortgage or other instrument was acknowledged was at the time of said acknowledgment an acting justice of the peace of the county in which said deed, mortgage or other instrument purports to have been acknowledged.” By said act it is further provided that the record of such deed shall be good and effectual, in law, to charge any purchaser with the existence of such deed so filed for record in the proper office. (1 Adams & Durham’s Real Estate Statutes and Decisions, p. 178.) Both of the deeds in question were actually recorded in Cook county in 1837 and were all recorded when the above act was passed, and whatever defect, in the regard complained of, then existed was cured by that act. Appel - lee’s deed was made in 1868, long after this curative act was passed, and she was bound to take notice of its effect upon the deed of appellants.

Appellants contend for reversal that, they having taken possession under the paramount- title before appellee or her husband, William J. H. Goldring, took possession, the title of appellants must be protected as against appellee. The law is well settled that section 7 of the present Limitation act will not become operative and available against the holder of the true title of vacant and unoccupied lands until the payment of taxes thereon for seven successive years has been united with the actual possession of the holder of such color of title. Indeed, this proposition is not denied by appellee, but she insists that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support a finding that Goldring took actual possession of the land claimed by her under his color of title after the payment of taxes for seven successive years and before the entry of appellants. We have carefully examined the record in this case and failed to find any evidence legally tending to prove the taking of possession by Goldring of the premises claimed by him, prior to the time the entire tract was fenced by appellants. There is absolutely no evidence tending to show possession was taken by Goldring prior to April, 1894, except that he drove out to the property on an average of twice a year and in 1876 plucked a flower, but whether from the part claimed by him or from another part of the sixty acres the record does not disclose. These are not such acts of ownership as amount to possession adverse to the true owner. While it is not necessary to constitute possession of wild lands to enclose them with a fence or to erect a house thereon or to reduce such lands to cultivation, yet there must be some act that will apprise persons residing in the neighborhood that some one is in the exclusive control and management of the land, and such acts that will “notify the public that the owner has asserted dominion over the property.” (Hubbard v. Kiddo, 87 Ill. 578; Eddy v. Gage, 147 id. 162.) But the doing of some useless thing,—the mere picking of a flower,—would not amount to actual possession of the land. (Brooks v. Bruyn, 24 Ill. 373; Scott v. Bassett, 186 id. 98.) To constitute possession in the holder of the color of title there must be such an appropriation of the land by him as to indicate to the neighborhood that it is appropriated to his exclusive use. (Traverse v. McElvain, 181 Ill. 382.) In the case last cited, on page 387 we said: “The possession should be of such open and visible character as to apprise the world that the property has been appropriated and is occupied. It must also be of such a character as to indicate who the occupant is. * * * The occupancy must be exclusive. If the possession is only used and enjoyed in common with others or the public in general, it cannot be regarded as hostile to other persons claiming title. Its character must be such as to arrest attention and put other persons claiming title upon inquiry. Such possession can not be made out by inference, but only by clear and positive proof.” On page 390: “The cutting of timber on unenclosed wild lands, without anything to define the extent of the alleged claim, is not alone such evidence of ownership as to amount to possession adverse to the true owner.”

Eddy v. Gage, supra, is cited and relied upon by appellee as authority to sustain her position, and counsel for appellee say: “The facts in our case are so nearly similar to this case that we take it that it will rule in the decision of this case, both upon the facts and the law.” While that case properly announced the rules of law applicable to possession, there is no similarity in the facts between that case and the case now under consideration. In that case it appears that the north, east and west lines of the land in controversy were fenced, and that a railroad passed through the south-east corner of the land in a south-westerly direction; that the purchaser, immediately after becoming the owner, had it surveyed and the lines and corners established; that each and every year for twenty-one years he cut the grass thereon and made hay, a part of the time himself and the balance of the time by others to whom he leased the land for that purpose; that one season he cultivated four acfes of the land in potatoes; that he drove out to the land, from Chicago, constantly, taking other persons with him, and that his visits to the land, acts of ownership over it and claim of title were notorious in the neighborhood, and in summing up the evidence this court said (p. 168): “Here was a period of over twenty-one years, from February, 1865, to March, 1886, that plaintiff was controlling and using the land, claiming to be the absolute owner under his deed, and from his acts and conduct in relation to the land he was the recognized owner by all in the neighborhood where the land was located.” Quoting from McLean v. Farden, 61 Ill. 106, we said (p. 170): “It is not necessary that a party should have his land all enclosed with a fence before he can be said to be in actual possession. Any class of improvements or acts of dominion that indicate to ptersons residing in the immediate neighborhood ivho has the ¡exclusive control of the land will be deemed to constitute possession.” And on page 169: “Possession of land may be had in different modes,—by enclosure, by cultivation, by the erection of buildings or other improvements, or, in fact, any use that clearly indicates an appropriation to the use of the person claiming to hold the property.” In the case at bar, so far as the records show, Goldring was never recognized or thought of by the people in the neighborhood as the owner of the land claimed by appellants. The evidence is clear that the land claimed by appellee had never been enclosed or reduced to cultivation by Goldring, nor had improvements of any kind been placed thereon by him, nor was there any use made by him of this land as clearly indicated, or by any stretch of the imagination might be deemed to indicate, an exclusive appropriation by him prior to the fencing of the tract by appellants in March, 1894.

There is, however, one striking similarity in the Eddy case with the one under consideration, which has been overlooked by counsel for appellee. On page 166 it is said: “Up to this time [February 27, I860,] those holding the title which plaintiff acquired had not, so far as the evidence shows, been in the possession of the land. DeWolf, [the predecessor in title to Eddy,] who obtained a deed in 1851 and held title some ten years, testified that during this time he never heard of any person claiming title to the land but himself. He visited the land two or three times a year. It was then open prairie, and, as he remembers, he paid all the taxes on the property.” Mrs. Goldring, the appellee, relies upon no other acts of Mr. Goldring to show possession than an average-of two visits a year by him to the premises, which, as indicated in the Eddy case, is not sufficient to constitute possession.

Appellee not having united possession with color of title, a mere payment of taxes before the holder of the paramount title took possession, the bar of the statute never became complete, and after appellants fenced the property and took possession thereof the entry of Gold-ring thereafter was unauthorized and conferrfed no rights upon him. Possession must be acquired in a lawful way. (Gage v. Hampton, 127 Ill. 87.) When Goldring “saw that the property had been reduced to possession by another, by enclosing it with a fence, he had no right to interfere, in any manner whatever, with the possession of the property. His entry was that of a wrongdoer; hé was á trespasser.” (Gage v. Hampton, supra.) Appellee not having shown a taking of possession of the land^claimed by her while the same was unoccupied, section 7 of the Limitation act constituted no bar to appellants’ right of recovery. Gage v. Hampton, supra; Gage v. Smith, 142 Ill. 191; McCagg v. Heacock, 42 id. 153; Paullin v. Hale, 40 id. 274; McCauley v. Mahon, 174 id. 384; Traverse v. McElvain, supra.

As to the effect of instructions 8 and 14, it will be necessary to review the evidence as it appears by the record. The evidence shows that this sixty acres of land was a wild, prairie, swampy tract; that at times, many years before, small portions, none of which include the portion claimed by appellee, were for a short time enclosed, but in the main the whole tract lay open from the' earliest recollection of anybody who testified, to March, 1894, when appellants had the whole sixty acres enclosed by a post-and-wire fence; that the police officers tore some of this fence down and other unauthorized persons tore other portions of it down, and as it was torn down appellants would have it re-built; that this occurred some three or four times, and that finally the entire fence was torn down; that while this tearing-down and building-up process was going on, appellee’s donor, after the police officers had torn out a portion of the fence, went into the tract he claimed, which is now claimed by appellee, and built a house upon it. There is no evidence even tending to show that appellants were asserting anything less than a right to the possession to the entire tract and attempting to maintain a fence upon it. The giving, therefore, of appellee’s eighth instruction was without anything to support it, and the question of fact as to whether appellants had, by building their fence upon the tract, taken possession, could not have depended upon the length of time their fence stood there, when all the evidence showed that it was removed by unauthorized persons who were acting in hostility to appellants’ rights. It may be that there could be circumstances under which the taking of possession of land by merely building a fence around it would not be conclusive evidence of taking possession,—that is, it might appear that the person who built the fence did so at the direction of some stranger to the lawsuit, or for some other purpose than the purpose of evidencing his possession; but there is no evidence in this record at all to warrant any such inference, and the court should not have given the jury an instruction that permitted it to speculate upon possibilities not arising from the evidence.

The plaintiffs (appellants) laid in their declaration possession and ownership in fee of the west sixty acres of the east half of the south-west quarter of section 4, town 37, range 14, east of the third principal meridian. Defendant (appellee) filed a plea of the general issue and no other plea. Upon the trial, and under the evidence, appellee claimed the fee to lots 43, 44, 45, 46, 47 and 48, in block 4, in Flagg & McBride’s subdivision of the east half of the west sixty acres of the east half of the southwest quarter of said section 4. Under the pleadings and the evidence appellee admitted that she was in possession of the entire sixty acres, as she filed no special plea denying possession of any part of the premises or limiting her claim of ownership to any part thereof, as is provided by section 21 of chapter 45 of Hurd’s Statutes of 1899. Appellee offered uo evidence, except her deed, that the sixty acres in controversy had ever been platted or subdivided by any one. It would seem, under this state of the record, that before appellee could sustain her defense and carve out of this sixty acres of land six lots forming a tract' 125 by 150 feet, it would be necessary for her to show that there was such subdivision made by somebody, so that the land claimed by appellee could be separated from the main tract and identified by and as the description given in appellee’s deeds, to which her supposed color of title could attach. This defendant wholly failed to do. The fact that the deed to appellee’s donor purports, in terms, to convey the property by lot and block numbers, without further proof, could amount to no more than a mere recital or declaration of the maker that the land, or a portion of it, had been subdivided. As between the maker of that deed and those in privity to the title it purported to convey, such recital would operate as an estoppel; but not so as to appellants, who were strangers to that deed and were claiming by a title hostile to it. 20 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, (1st ed.) 464; Miller v. Miller, 63 Iowa, 387.

For the errors indicated, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

Beversed and remanded.