194 Ill. 492 | Ill. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a proceeding by bill for an injunction, brought by appellant to restrain appellee in the enjoyment of a passageway across the north-west corner of appellant’s land, and to prevent appellee from tearing down fences and structures put across such passageway by appellant. Upon the matters that are material in this case there is little, if any, conflict in the evidence. It shows that in 1892 appellee was the owner of a large farm near Clare, in DeKalb county. His farm was so situated that he could pass from one tract of it to the other, and comprised nearly five hundred acres. His residence and buildings were at the south-west corner of section 24, township 41, north, range 3, east, and he owned the north-west quarter of section 25, lying immediately south of his residence. William Quinn owned the south half of the south-east quarter of section 24, which lay just a half mile east of appellee’s house and cornered with his north-west quarter of section 25. James Quinn, the father of William, owned the north-east quarter of section 25, lying south of and adjoining William’s eighty. William was in debt. His land was mortgaged and his father was security for him on certain outstanding notes. They were both anxious to sell William’s land to enable William to get out of debt and the father to get off of his notes, and they sought appellee and endeavored to get him to buy William’s land. After some overtures in regard to it and the price was stated, appellee informed William and his father that he would not purchase the land at all unless he could get a right of way sixteen feet wide across the north-west corner of the north-east quarter of section 25, then owned by James, the father. After some parleying and dickering a bargain was struck by which appellee was to buy William’s land and was to have a passageway across the corner of his father’s land, so that he could pass from the north-west quarter of section 25, already owned by him, to the land he was to buy from William. This was important to appellee, as otherwise, if he should buy William’s land, he would be obliged to go south a half mile, then east a mile and then north a half mile before he could reach the tract that he was to buy from William. By arrangement, appellee, William and James Quinn all met at Clare, in a lawyer’s office, on the 28th day of November, 1892, where William and his wife made a deed to appellee to the land he was to purchase and James Quinn made and delivered the writing set forth in the statement .in this case, by which he granted to appellee “a right of way or easement over and upon and across a strip of land sixteen feet wide, across the north-west corner of land now owned by undersigned in township of South Grove, Illinois, and said right of way leading from the land now owned and occupied by Robert Willis to connect with the land this day purchased of William H. Quinn by the said Robert Willis, the said road to be used only as a private road to connect his, Robert Willis’, homestead with the farm purchased this day.” Upon the delivery of this writing by James Quinn to appellee, and in further consideration therefor, appellee paid James Quinn five dollars. The land covered by this right of way would be two hundred and fifty-six square feet, and at the rate paid for it would amount to between $700 and $800 an acre. The farm was sold for $65 an acre. Immediately upon getting the deed from William and this contract from James Quinn, appellee, with the knowledge and consent of James Quinn, measured off the sixteen feet right of way across the corner of the James Quinn tract and moved his fence back so as to form a triangle and make an opening, and thereby fenced the land that he bought from William, and this strip or right of way, and the north-west quarter of section 25, all in one enclosure, and so occupied it until about the time of the filing of this bill. He used it to drive his wagons through and for the passage of agricultural implements, and for his live stock when he desired to pasture them on stalks, and such other ways as related to his farm, from that time on. On the 2d day of May, 1900, appellant bought of James Quinn, through which this right of way passed, the north-east quarter of section 25, and received from him the statutory warranty deed, in which nothing was said about this right of way. He immediately placed his deed of record and took an assignment of certain leases held by James Quinn, whose tenants were in possession of the land. Shortly after purchasing it he met the servants of appellee in the act of passing through this strip and sought to prevent them from doing so. He then attempted to build a fence across this right of way on up to the corner of the section and set some posts for that purpose, and appellee came and cut them down. He then learned that appellee claimed to have some writing concerning this right of wajq and went to DeKalb and found that appellee, after appellant had bought the land from James Quinn and had had his deed recorded, had placed this contract of record. Treating this contract from James Quinn as a mere license, appellant served appellee with a written notice that he had canceled his right, title and interest in the north-east quarter of section 25, which he claimed by virtue of the writing from James Quinn, (referring to the book and page where such writing was recorded, and sufficiently describing it to identify it,) and proceeded to construct his fence on up to the corner and close the right of way, which appellee again cut out. The evidence further shows that at this corner where this right of way was used the ground was originally low and wet, and that appellee and his servants had for a number of years been building and preparing a sort of dike or roadway higher than the general surface of the land, to protect it from water and make it passable in bad weather. There is some evidence tending to show that appellant had actual notice that appellee was using this right of way before he purchased, but we could hardly say that the evidence establishes that fact.
Under this state of facts the question arises as to what interest, if any, appellee had in the strip of land in question. Appellant insists that, inasmuch as the writing from James Quinn was not under seal, it was a mere license, and could not be deemed, in law, to be the granting of an easement or an interest in the land, and that, being a license only, it was revocable at the pleasure of James Quinn, and likewise of appellant, as the grantee of James Quinn of the lands over which it passed. Appellant further contends that as this writing was not recorded prior to the recording of his deed he was a purchaser without notice and was not affected by it, and further insists that the mere sale of the land by James Quinn was a revocation of the license.
As we view this case, the contention of appellant and the matters above mentioned are not controlling. While it may be that an interest in land cannot, at law, be conveyed or granted by an instrument not under seal, and that an easement is such an interest in land as requires a compliance with that requirement to make the grant valid, we do not understand that the same rule that obtains in a common law court, where the legal title must prevail, can be invoked in this court in a chancery proceeding, where equitable relief is sought. When appellant, by his bill, appealed to the chancellor to grant the extraordinary writ of injunction to prevent what is confessedly no more than a mere trespass to land by one whom the record shows was amply solvent, he thereby subjected himself to all the rules of equity that are applicable to the parties and the property as disclosed by the circumstances of the case. While at law, in order to constitute a valid conveyance of real estate or any interest in land, it must be by deed having a seal and attended with certain formalities, yet in equity a good and indefeasible title may be conveyed without any writing whatever. The rights of the parties depend upon the character and extent of performance and the effect upon the donee by allowing repudiation. Practically all the writers on equity jurisprudence are agreed that contracts not under seal, and even contracts not in writing affecting or concerning an interest in land, are recognized in equity, if they have been so far performed that to permit a party to repudiate them would of itself be a fraud, — and this court is committed to that doctrine. (Martin v. Martin, 170 Ill. 639; Morrison v. Herrick, 130 id. 631; Fitzsimmons v. Allen's Admr. 39 id. 440; Ramsey v. Liston, 25 id. 114.) Derived from the above authorities, the rule seems to be, that where the contract is fully performed and a valuable consideration paid and possession taken under it, the purchaser or grantee may, in equity, rely upon his title for a defense or enforce specific performance of the contract. Before the Statute of Frauds, by livery of seizin, lands were sold and conveyed without deeds. Afterwards the system of making conveyances in writing was inaugurated and the delivery of the deed took the place of livery of seizin. The Statute of Frauds was designed to avoid the tendency to irregular conveyances and to prevent perjury concerning the titles to lands, but it was never intended to enable anybody to perpetrate a fraud upon another. As has been aptly said by expounders of the law: “But equity will not allow a statute designed to prevent frauds to be made an instrument for committing them, and it will give relief where a wrongful advantage has been obtained by means of the statute.”
It is always admissible, in determining the effect of an instrument or considering its meaning, to look to all the facts and circumstances surrounding the making of it. Taking the circumstances of the making of the writing from James Quinn to appellee into consideration, and the text of the instrument itself, and there is no room for doubt in the mind of the reader as to the intention of the parties. Appellee was about to buy a valuable piece of land that was so related to his other lands that it could not be reached without a long and circuitous route. The elder Quinn was interested in having his son sell his land and was urging upon appellee the purchase of it. Appellee raised the objection to buying land thus related to his farm, and stated that he would not become a purchaser unless that objection was overcome, which could be done by the granting to him of an easement over the corner of the land now owned by appellant. Appellee knew that without the grant of this easement this land must remain, for all practical purposes, separated from his other land in such a manner that two miles travel must be made to reach it, and that he could not, under the statute, by condemnation, secure a private road merely from one tract of land to another. (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, chap. 121, sec. 54.) To overcome appellee’s objection and to perfect and insure that sale, James Quinn, for that consideration and the further consideration of five dollars in money, and as a part of the transaction between his son William and appellee, made the writing'in question. In that it is expressly stated that “a right of way or easement over and upon and across a strip of land,” etc., is granted, and with such particularity are the terms and purposes of the grant described that it is certain from the instrument itself that what James Quinn and appellee had in their minds was the granting of an easement over this land, and not a mere license that was revocable at the pleasure of James Quinn or anybody else. If this writing had had a seal, no one will pretend but that appellee had a good and perfect grant of an easement across this strip. In the further light of the facts concerning it, the conclusion is inevitable that this easement was designed to be appurtenant to the north-west quarter of section 25, already owned by appellee, and the tract then being purchased of William Quinn. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Co. v. Koelle, 104 Ill. 455.
Under the whole evidence there can be no doubt, in our minds, but that the grant of this easement was the moving cause to the purchase of this land from William by appellee. He at once took possession of the strip of land covered by this easement and so enclosed it with his other lands, and so moved the fences of the lands of James Quinn, the grantor of the easement, that his intention to appropriate it absolutely to his own use and as a part of his enlarged farm was entirely manifest. With this use continued from 1892 to 1900, — the time when James Quinn sold to appellant, — we can come to no other rational conclusion than that the use he was making of it was not only justified by the writing, but was within the contemplation of James Quinn, the maker of that writing, and we think that under the rules of equity, whether that writing arose to the dignity of a deed or not, there was sufficient performance of the contract, and acquiescence in it by those who were parties to it, to take the transaction out of the Statute of Frauds in a court of equity. If this writing or grant had been of record when appellant purchased he would have been bound to take notice of it, and with appellee in such open and long continued possession, — the only possession that he or any other grantee of a similar right could have,— appellant was likewise bound to take notice. In other words, he had notice by implication of law. (Willoughby v. Lawrence, 116 Ill. 11; Boyer v. Chandler, 160 id. 394; Coari v. Olsen, 91 id. 273.) When appellant purchased, this strip of land was fenced in with a part of appellee’s farm, and appellant cannot, in equity, be allowed to say that he did not know that appellee had any rights or was in possession, until after his purchase. Whatever interest appellee did have in this strip of land by virtue of his contract with James Quinn, in view of the fact that he was in open possession of it at the time appellant purchased from James Quinn, he was as much entitled to assert against appellant as he would have been had James Quinn been the complainant in this bill. (Coari v. Olsen, 91 Ill. 273; Ingals v. Plamondon, 75 id. 118; Moore v. Flynn, 135 id. 74.) And this is so even though his interest had only been a license, if it should be inequitable to divest him of it. (Willoughby v. Lawrence, 116 Ill. 11.) We are, however, disposed to hold, as we have said above, that the interest appellee got in this land was an easement, and that it is permanent so long as he shall own the lands requiring the use of that easement.
There only remains the consideration of the question as to whether it would be equitable now to allow appellant to cancel or revoke the right of way of appellee. If this easement should be wrested from appellee it is evident that he would either be obliged to sell the William Quinn tract, or be put to such extraordinary trouble and unusual travel to reach it that there would be such, an injury resulting to him as from the peculiar circumstances of the case could scarcely be recompensed in damages. James Quinn received a double consideration for it. If he had only received the five dollars in cash it would have been far in excess of the actual value of the fee to this land covered by this easement; but the use to appellee of that strip, as related to his two tracts of land, which it connected, was the great value to him in the transaction, and it appears to us now to allow appellant to take that right from him would be to enable him to perpetrate upon appellee a legal fraud. Such is not the purpose of a court of equity, and we think the chancellor was fully warranted in entering a decree dismissing appellant’s bill.
It is suggested, however, that by dismissing appellee’s cross-bill the chancellor has decided that appellee had no right that he could assert in equity. That question is not before us, except in the argument. No errors were assigned upon that particular order, and we are not called upon to review the action of the court in that matter.
Finding* no error in the proceeding, in so far as it relates to appellant, the decree of the circuit court of DeKalb county dismissing appellant’s bill is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.