delivered the opinion of the court:
First—It is well settled in the United States, that cemeteries are among the purposes, for which land may be dedicated; and it is held that, upon such dedication, the owner is precluded from exercising his former rights over the land. (5 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, —2d ed. — p. 784, and cases referred to"in notes).
It is also well settled, that a court of equity will enjoin the owner of land from defacing, or meddling with, graves on land, dedicated to the public for burial purposes, at the suit of any party, having deceased relatives or friends buried therein. (Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Pet. 585; Davidson v. Seed, 111 Ill. 167). In the case of Beatty v. Kurtz, supra, the Supreme Court of the United States, in speaking of property consecrated to cemetery purposes, held that the removal of the memorials, erected by piety or love to the memory "of the good, are such acts as can not be “redressed by the ordinary process of law. The remedy must be sought, if at all, in the protecting power of a court of chancery; operating by its injunction to preserve the repose of the ashes of the dead, and the religious sensibilities of the living.” In Davidson v. Reed, supra, two persons, residents, in the neighborhood of a public burying ground, having friends buried there, filed a bill to enjoin the party owning the tract of land, on which it was located, from defacing the graves, and to preserve the ground for the public use for burial purposes; and it was there held that they could maintain the bill in their names, for the benefit of themselves, as well as if all others directly interested had joined.
It is also well settled, that no particular form or ceremony is necessary to dedicate land for the purposes of a cemetery. All that need be shown to constitute such dedication is the assent of the owner, and the fact that the land is used for the public purposes, intended by the appropriation. Staking off ground as a cemetery and allowing burials therein amounts to a dedication. An express setting apart of land for such a purpose by thé owner may constitute a dedication of the land as a burial ground or cemetery. (5 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,— 2d ed.—p. 784; 9 id. p. 28; Hagaman v. Dittmar, 24 Kan. 42; Hayes v. Houke, 45 id. 466). It has been held that the notorious use of property for twenty years for burial purposes with the acquiescence of the owner affords presumptive evidence of its dedication for such purposes. (Boyce v. Kalbaugh, 47 Md. 334).
In Davidson v. Reed, supra, this court held that a dedication of land to the public for any public use may be shown by grant, b}r user, or by the acts and declarations of the owner, coupled with evidence of acceptance by the public; and that, where there was evidence of an intent to dedicate, no particular form or ceremony is necessary. In Davidson v. Reed, supra, it appeared that the owner of a quarter section of land as early as 1844 buried a child in a corner thereof, since which time the same had always been used by the people of the neighborhood as a public burying place, and the declarations of such owner showed an intent to devote the land to such use, ■ and the subsequent owners of the quarter section of land made no objection to such use, but recognized the same as a public burial place; and it was there held that these facts were sufficient to show a dedication of the land soused to the public for a place for the interment of the dead.
In Alden Coal Co. v. Challis, 200 Ill. 222, we have recently held that the Statute of Frauds does not apply to dedication of ground to the public, but that the same may be evidenced by acts and declarations without any writing, and that no particular form is necessary to the validity of the dedication, it being properly a question of intention, and that a dedication may be established by parol. (See also Cincinnati v. White, 6 Pet. 440). In Alden Coal Co. v. Challis, supra, we also held that the acceptance necessary to complete such dedication may be implied from acts and from user; and that, when the dedication is beneficial or greatly convenient or necessary to the public, an acceptance will be implied from slight circumstances.
By comparing the allegations of the bill in the case at bar, as the same are set forth in the statement preceding this opinion, with the allegations of the bill, passed upon by this court in Davidson v. Seed, supra, it will be found that the two cases correspond in all essential particulars. It appears from the allegations of the bill in the present case that, during the lifetime of John H. Wormley, the original owner of the land dedicated for the purposes of the Wormley cemetery, he recognized the half acre of ground here in question as a cemetery for a period of about fifty-one years, to-wit, from 1839 to his death in 1890. During-that time he not only buried his own relatives upon this half acre, and permitted others to bury their dead there, but he indicated his intention to make such dedication, and to continue it, by positive and open acts. He, with others who buried their. dead upon the half acre, caused to be erected and maintained a suitable fence, enclosing such half acre. He permitted the persons, who buried their dead, there, to erect monuments over them, and to protect and preserve the identity of the remains buried there. The bill alleges that more than eighty persons have been buried in the cemetery, and that their graves have been cared for and kept up by their relatives. John H. Wormley died in 1890, and the defendant, John T. Wormley, his son, for more than ten years after that date, recognized the half acre as a cemetery, and did nothing to interfere with its use as such, until about the time the present bill was filed. The bill also alleges that he has committed acts of depredation upon the cemetery by tearing down the fence surrounding it, and by pasturing bis horses and cattle and swine therein; and also that he not only threatens to kill persons, who attempt to re-build the fence around the cemetery, or care for the monuments and graves therein, but also threatens to remove the monuments erected to commemorate the dead, and to plow and cultivate the land therein. The demurrer, filed by the defendant, admits all these allegations of the bill to be true. When the land descended to John T. Wormley from his father, he inherited it subject to the rights, which had been acquired in this half acre as a cemetery. The assent of his father to its use for such purposes is clearly averred in the bill, and it is also alleged therein, and shown, that it was accepted by the parties using- it for the purposes, for which it was dedicated by the owner.
Under the facts and under the authorities applicable thereto, we are of the opinion that the court below erred in'sustaining the demurrer to the bill, and that such demurrer should have been overruled.
Second—Some points of a technical character are insisted upon by the defendant in error, John T. Wormley, as justifying the action of the trial court.
When the order was entered on January 4, 1901, sustaining the demurrer to the bill, leave was granted to the complainants below to file an amendment to the bill by January 26, 1901. This order seems to have been entered by mistake in term No. 18 of the law side, instead of term No. 18 of the chancery side, of the docket of the October term, 1900, of the circuit court. The amendments were not filed within the time, allowed by the court, to-wit, by January 26,1901, and were not filed until April 1,1901. On April 3,1901, they were stricken from the files for non-compliance with the order, which required them to be filed by January 26, 1901.
Defendant in error insists that, by taking leave to amend their bill after the demurrer was sustained, the complainants confessed the demurrer, and waived all right to except to the ruling of the court in sustaining it. In support of this position counsel cite many cases, which apply, as a rule thus insisted upon, to common law pleadings. It is also said that the decision of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer was merely interlocutory, and that, if complainants were willing to rest their case upon the demurrer, they should have moved the court to dismiss the bill, and should have entered of record their election to abide by it. It is also said that, where a demurrer to a bill in chancery is sustained and no amendments are made within the time prescribed by the court, the court may dismiss the bill. We do not deem it necessary to pass upon the validity of these contentions as we do not regard them as being applicable to the present case.
The record does not show that the court dismissed the bill because the amendments, which the'complainants were given leave to file, were not filed within the time specified in the order. The court merely struck the amendments from the files because they were not filed within the time allowed. If, then, the case had been allowed to stand upon the order, sustaining the demurrer to the bill, a different question would be presented. The question would then arise whether it was not the duty of the complainants to dismiss their bill, in order to take an appeal to, or sue out a writ of error from a reviewing court. But the court itsfelf dismissed the bill, entering the following order, to-wit: “And the court thereupon orders and decrees that the bill of complaint filed herein be and the same is hereby dismissed for want of equity, and that the costs in this cause be, and the same are hereby taxed against the complainants, and that defendant have execution therefor.” The court, having sustained the demurrer, dismissed the bill of its .own motion for want of equity. The order, so dismissing the bill, was not an interlocutory order, like'the order sustaining the demurrer, but was a final order. We see no reason why the complainants had not the right to review this final order by writ of error. Independently of the question, whether the complainants, by taking leave to amend the bill, waived their right to complain of the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the bill, they have the right to show, if they can, that the court erred in dismissing the bill for want of equity upon its face.
It is also said that the jurat attachéd to the bill was not in proper form, but we regard this as immaterial, for the reason that the insufficiency of the jurat, if it existed, went only to the temporary injunction, which was granted. It had no effect upon the bill as a whole. There was sufficient equity in the bill to justify its retention, so as to require the defendant to answer it, even if the defective verification was such as to authorize the court to dissolve the temporary injunction. A bill should not be dismissed for want of equity on general demurrer where it shows any ground for equitable relief. (Gooch v. Green, 102 Ill. 507; Wescott v. Wicks, 72 id. 524.) In the latter case of Wescott v. Wicks, it was held that “although a case is so defectively made by a bill in chancery that the court cannot fully comprehend it, and pronounce upon it with confidence, still, if the court can see from what is stated that there is equity in the bill, it is error to sustain a demurrer to the whole bill for want of equity.”
Third—It is further claimed by the defendants in error that the writ of error should be dismissed for misjoinder of parties. All of the defendants in error, except John T. Wormley, were co-complainants in the court below with the present plaintiff in error, George D. Wormley, and claimed the same rights; and it is said that they should have been joined here as plaintiffs in error with George D. Wormley. The general rule undoubtedly is, that all the plaintiffs or defendants, against whom a joint judgment is rendered, must be joined as plaintiffs in error where a writ of error is sued out by one or more of them. Section 70 of the Practice act provides that, in all cases where a judgment or decree shall be rendered against two or more persons, either one of them may remove ■ such suit to the Appellate Court by appeal or'writ of error, and for that purpose shall be permitted to use the names of all such persons, if necessary. (3 Starr & Curt. Ann. Stat.—2d ed.—p. 3099; McIntyre v. Sholty, 139 Ill. 171; Cooke v. Cooke, 194 id. 225). It is true that the present plaintiff in error, George D. Wormley, could have used the names of all his co-complainants in the court below, as co-plaintiffs in error with himself in suing out the present writ of error. As was said in McIntyre v. Sholty, supra, (p. 176): “All the plaintiffs or defendants in the original' suit who are alive must join in the writ of error, and it is competent for one to join the others without their consent. The reasons for this rule are, that the writ must agree with the record, and that, if one of a number of plaintiffs, or one of a number of defendants, who have not distinct and several interests, should be permitted to bring a writ of error, every one might do the same, and such a practice would tend to multiply suits. If the parties, whose names are thus used by a co-plaintiff, or co-defendant, choose to abide an erroneous judgment, and refuse to appear and assign errors, they must be summoned and severed, and then after the severance the writ may be prosecuted in the name of such co-plaintiff, or co-defendant.” If in the present case George D. Wormley had sued out the writ of error in his own name, and also in the names of the other co-complainants with him in the court below, and if they had refused, when their names were so used, to join in the prosecution of the writ, he could have summoned them into court, and obtained a judgment of severance against them, so that then he could have prosecuted the writ alone, and as sole plaintiff in error. (7 Ency. of PL & Pr. pp. 860-862). While this was not done in the present case, yet when George D. Wormley sued out the writ of error alone in his own name, he made all of his co-complainants below defendants in error with the defendant below, John T. Wormley. All of his co-complainants have been served as defendants in error or have entered their appearance as defendants in error. They are, therefore, before this court. They might have assigned cross-errors, or they might have asked to be joined with George D. Wormley as co-plaintiffs in error for the' purpose of prosecuting the writ of error. The;r have not taken any such steps. But being before the court as defendants in error by entry of appearance, the case stands in the same position as though there had been a summons and a severance. They are in court, and this would be the only effect, which could result from a summons. Where there are several defendants in an action, all may plead jointly one and the same defense, or each may plead a separate defense for himself, and in the latter case he is said to sever; and his doing so is termed severance in pleading. (25 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed. —p. 631). In the present case, there is an actual severance, because the plaintiff in error, George D. Wormley, is prosecuting this writ of error alone, and not jointly with the other complainants in the bill. Their action in declining or neglecting to assign cross-errors, of to unite with him in the prosecution of the writ of error while they are in court by their entry of appearance, operates to create a severance, and justifies him in prosecuting the writ of error alone. For these reasons the motion to dismiss the writ of error is overruled.
Accordingly, the decree of the circuit court, dismissing the bill for want of equity, is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded.