102 Ill. 25 | Ill. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in equity, brought by Lizzie W. R. Allen, in the circuit court of Cook county, against John Y. LeMoyne, George Shiras, Jr., and others. The bill contains numerous allegations, but the main purpose of the bill seems to be to obtain a decree - vesting -the title to a large tract of land in Cook county, .claimed by LeMoyne, in the complainant. The bill prays that certain deeds executed - by complainant and Polly H. Ricketson be set aside; that a certain contract, known as the Tiernan contract, be declared void; that a certain decree of the United States court, in favor of one Quimby, be declared void and no lien on the land; that LeMoyne, Shiras, and Wilkins, be required to convey the premises; that a conveyance made by Wilkins to LeMoyne be declared void; that a deed made by Merrick be declared void; that the Canal Commissioners he decreed to convey the legal title of the land to complainant. Answers were put in to the bill, and the defendant LeMoyne filed a cross-bill, in which he made the complainant in the bill and the Canal Commissioners parties defendant, and in which he prayed that the deeds made by the complainant may be established, and declared by the court a sufficient bar to any claim by said complainant on, or interest in, said lands, and that the Canal Commissioners may be decreed to convey an undivided half of the lands named in the bill to orator, etc. An answer was filed to the cross-bill, a hearing had on the testimony, and upon the hearing the court rendered a decree dismissing the bill, and requiring the Canal Commissioners to convey, as prayed for in the cross-bill. To reverse the decree, the complainant in the original bill has sued out this writ of error.
We have been favored with an elaborate oral and printed argument on behalf of plaintiff in error, in which it is argued that the decree of the circuit court is not warranted by the evidence; but upon an examination of the record we find that the decree was rendered upon testimony which had been taken in the cause, and oral .evidence taken in open court, and that the oral evidence has not been preserved by certificate of evidence, and incorporated into the record. The transcript of the record contains the depositions which had been taken in the ease, but no part of the oral evidence heard in open court. The court, in its decree, however, from the evidence heard on the trial, found certain facts, a portion' of which are as follows: “That in making said purchase of said Smith and McCaffrey, said Bicketson bought two-thirds of said lands for himself, and one-third as trustee or agent of the defendant H. Brady Wilkins, who furnished to said Bicketson the money therefor; that after said purchase, about the 13th day of September, A. D. 1864, said Bicketson sold to the defendant Silas Merrick the one undivided sixth of all of said land; that said Bicketson died about the 27th day of September, A. D. 1866, at Pittsburg, Pa., seized of an undivided one-half of said lands, which were then subject to one payment to said, canal trustees; that said complainant in the original bill, and her mother, Polly H. Bicketson, were, by the will of said Charles W. Bicketson, his sole devisees; that said Polly H. Bicketson and complainant, afterwards, for a valuable consideration, conveyed all their interest in said premises to said John V. LeMoyne, by deed dated January 22, A. D. 1870; that said H. Brady Wilkins and Silas Merrick, each, for a valuable consideration, sold and conveyed all his interest in said lands to said John Y. LeMoyne, and the court finds that all the payments due to said canal trustees have been paid, and the defendants Joseph 0. Glover, Benjamin F. Shaw and Martin Kingsman, as the successors of said canal trustees, hold the naked legal title to said premises; that said John Y. LeMoyne, as the grantee of said H. Brady Wilkins and Silas Merrick, is the owner of, and entitled to, the equitable title to the one undivided half of all of said lands; that the other half he holds subject to the debts of said Charles W. Bicketson; and the court finds that the said complainant in said original bill, Lizzie W. B. Allen, has no interest in any of said lands. ”
Can the court disregard the finding of facts recited in the decree, when all the evidence had on the trial has not been preserved and incorporated into the record ? If we can not, the decree must be affirmed, as the recited facts found by the court show clearly that complainant can not recover. Since the adoption of the act allowing oral testimony to be heard on the trial of a cause in equity, it has been the constant practice to preserve the evidence by recitals in the decree, and in Cooley v. Scarlett, 38 Ill. 316, it was held that the statements of the evidence in the decree can no more be questioned by the appellate court, than can those of a bill of exceptions in a common law case. Where the facts are found by the court, and recited in the decree, the finding can not be reversed unless all the evidence heard on the trial is preserved in the record, and thus brought before the court. Where the evidence is not all preserved, it will be presumed that the evidence heard and not preserved was sufficient to authorize the finding. Rhoades v. Rhoades, 88 Ill. 139; Corbus v. Teed, 69 id. 208; Morgan v. Corlies, 81 id. 75.
In the decree the court found that the complainant, in 1870, conveyed by deed, for a valuable consideration, to LeMoyne, all her interest in the premises; that Wilkins and Merrick, for a like consideration, sold and conveyed all their interest in the lands to LeMoyne. The court also found that the complainant had no interest in any of the lands. If complainant has no interest in the lands, upon what theory can she maintain a bill in equity? If she has parted with all the title she had, for a valuable consideration, that ends the controversy, so far as she is concerned, and she has no right to interfere.
It is, however, said, the finding that the complainant- had no interest in any of the lands, is not a finding of fact, but an inference from a great variety of facts. It is not necessary that the evidence should be set out in the decree,—the facts established by the evidence is all that can be required. A similar question arose in Walker v. Carey, 53 Ill. 470, where it was held that where a decree recites that upon the hearing certain facts were proven by the evidence introduced, and the court so finds,—that no facts were stated in the decree, but simply a conclusion from the other facts,—it was held that such a recital was sufficient. We do not, however, base the decision on this finding in the decree,—it is not necessary to place it upon that ground. The court, after hearing all the evidence in the case, found that complainant in the original bill, and Polly H. Eicketson, for a valuable consideration, conveyed all their interest in said premises to said John V. LeMoyne, by deed dated January 22, A. D. 1870. This finding, incorporated in the decree, must be presumed to be correct, and sustained by the proof, and can not be inquired into here in the absence of any of the evidence heard on the trial, which plaintiff in error has failed to bring before us. If the complainant on a certain day sold and conveyed by deed, for a valuable consideration, all her interest in the premises, she could have no standing in a court of equity. She had no interest to protect after the conveyance. She was á stranger to the lands, and had no more right to file a bill than a person who never had any interest in the premises.
The decree will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.