43 F. 31 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1890
(orally charging jury.) This is an action of ejectment to recover possession of block 111 in the original subdivision known as “Canalport,” an addition to the city of Chicago. The plaintiff has offered proof showing that this Canalport subdivision was made upon a portion of section 30, in township 39, range 14 10., lying in Cook county; that this portion of section 30 was patented by the United States to one Welch; that Welch conveyed it to Hamilton and Pearsons; that Pear-sons conveyed his interest in it to Hamilton; that Hamilton, in 1853, convoyed to Samuel J. Walker; that Samuel J. Walker conveyed block 111 to one II. H. Walker; that IT. IT. Walker made a conveyance by mortgage to one Prather; that Prather obtained title by foreclosure of his mortgage, and conveyed to Matthews, and Matthews to Cooper, Cooper to Pierce, Pierce to Bridge, and Bridge to the plaintiff, — thereby showing an undisputed chain of title from the United States to the plaintiff in this case, which entitles the plaintiff to recover unless the defendant has made out a defense. The defendant does not claim to have ever had any paper title to this property; the only title which the de-, fendant sets up is a title by possession. It is an undisputed fact in this case — that is, the testimony on the part of the defendant tends to establish it, and there is no testimony contradicting it — that the defendant’s husband in May, 1861, entered upon these premises, and built a house or shanty; that the defendant’s husband continued to reside on the premises with his family until he died, in September, 1882.
It is urged, and much talk is had here about the defendant Mrs. Collins having rights here aside from her husband. I say to yon, as a matter of law, that by mere possession, as long as her husband was living and the head of the family, she could gain nothing by her posses
The law provides, in substance, that unchallenged, uninterrupted possession of lands, under an assertion or claim of title, or an interest in them for the term of 20 years, protects that title; but it must be continuous, complete, and unbroken for the entire 20 years. Now, there is no doubt but what the Collins family went in there, as I said, in 1861, and that they have remained upon the premises ever since that time. If they entered upon those premises as mere squatters, without asserting any title whatever, just merely by the sufferance of the owner, they could only acquire, in the extremest point of view, a title as against that owner, by asserting that they entered there by some right of their own, and continuing that possession and that assertion of right until the expiration of 20 years. Now, is that state of facts established in behalf of this defendant, admitting that she succeeds to the rights -which began to inure under her husband? The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tends to show that, in the early part of the year 1871, Mr. Henry Jones was on these premises in company with Mr. Samuel J. Walker, who was then the owner of the patent or paper title; that Mr. Walker'and Mr. Jones went to the house where the Collins'family resided; .that they saw Collins there. Mr. Walker asked Collins what right he claimed there, or why he was there. Collins said, in substance, that he was a mere squatter; he did not claim any right. Walker then said to him: “You can stay here until I want it, or until I give you notice to leave.” This is the substance of Jones’ testimony as to what took place, as I remember it, and it tends to show what did take place in 1871.
The testimony further shows, without doubt, — because there is no testimonj^ contradicting it, and the testimony is all one way on the subject, —that in May, 1877, after Walker had sold, and after the paper title had become vested in Cooper, — Cooper being represented here by the firm of Rees, Pierce & Co., — Pierce, one of the members of the firm, went upon the premises, and found Collins and his family in possession; that he, Collins, claimed possession to a much larger tract than this block, but he finally agreed to give up the surrounding blocks if he could have a lease
Uiow, if a person entering upon possession of premises without title, and as a mere squatter, acknowledges the ownership of any other person in the property, that breaks the effect of the statute at once. The moment that the person in possession of the premises acknowledges that he is not the owner, the running of the statute, in common language, is broken, and the 20 years, or whatever time has run, counts for nothing. So if the testimony is credible to your satisfaction that Collins, in 1871, acknowledged to Walker in the presence of Jones! that he was a mere squatter, then he gained nothing by the possession which had continued from the time lie entered in 18(11.
Then, again, if he took a written lease in 1877 from the then owner, Cooper, he has estopped himself, in the language of the law; that is, he has prevented himself from sotting up any title as against Cooper, or any person claiming under Cooper. He has admitted Cooper’s title. He cannot dispute his landlord’s title. If either of you, being the owner of land, makes a lease of it, your tenant cannot deny your title. He has acknowledged the supremacy of your title to the premises, and he cannot set up any title in his own favor, and he cannot even acquire an outstanding title as against you while he holds a lease under you.
Ho, if you believe that this man, Collins, executed this lease at the time that is slated, that is the end of all claim to any title on the'part of the present defendant here, the widow of this man Collins. She can take nothing except what she takes from the acts of her husband, and 51'the statute would not protect him if living, it would not protect her, he being dead. The mere fact that this woman was in a certain and common sense the leader of the family, the person upon whom they depended for their support, was the energetic and industrious and faithful and intelligent head of the family in a certain sense, does not count for anything in her favor; that is to her credit as a wife and as a mother, but not in obtaining title to this property.
Then, again, if, being in possession of this property, having acknowledged no other ownership to it, she allowed it to be sold for taxes before her 20 years’ title had accrued, that breaks the running of her right of
Then, the only question I can conceive of in this case, as a question of fact that is to be passed upon by you, is, was this man competent to make a contract at the time he made the lease in 1877? As against the present plaintiff, who was a stranger to him, the mental condition of this man Collins at that time cuts no figure. He had executed a paper which, upon its face, purported to be a complete acknowledgment of Cooper’s superiority of title. He had made himself Cooper’s tenant, and if there was any reason existing in his want of mental capacity for setting aside that lease, asserting that it was obtained when he was drunk, or not competent to make a lease, that should have been done in a court of equity in apt time after they' became aware that there was such a paper. Now, the proof shows that this man Collins lived until December, 1882,— over five years after the lease -was executed; and the proof also tends to show that he admitted himself in possession under the lease some two years after he had taken it. He died in December, 1882, as the proof shows; yet he takes no steps to attack this lease which he had made, and the wife has taken no steps.to attack it since. They could have gone into a court of equity, if they had any foundation for doing it, but they cannot set up the defense that Collins was incompetent to make a lease in a court of law. So, gentlemen of the jury, upon the admitted facts in this case,- I charge you that the plaintiff is entitled to recover; and you may render a verdict for the plaintiff without leaving your seats.