| Ill. | May 12, 1896

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant brought this suit February 5, 1892, in ejectment, against appellee, for the possession of a tract of land described as follows: “The south-east fraction (south of the Indian boundary line) of section 1, township 33; north, range 10, east of the third principal meridian.” Appellee pleaded not guilty, and the further plea that he was not in the possession of the premises.

The tract of land is triangular, and there is a highway running through it. Appellant was in possession of that part of the tract south and west of this highway, and appellee occupied that part north and east of the highway, containing 1.89 acres. The controversy at the trial was confined to the latter tract, and appellee obtained a verdict upon which judgment was entered.

Plaintiff showed title in himself by a patent from the United States to Grant Goodrich for the tract of land containing 3.76 acres, the will of Goodrich, and a deed from the trustees under said will.to plaintiff. The patent described the tract as above, but it is claimed that the deed to the plaintiff did not establish title in him, because the patent described the land as “of section 1” while the deed gave it as “in section 1.” The tract is a peculiar one, on account of two surveys by the government. The evidence shows that in 1821 or 1822 the land north of the Indian boundary line was surveyed and the survey was closed on that line. In 1834 there was. a survey south of the line, when the surveyors ran north and closed their work on the line, paying no attention to the previous survey. The surveyors made a full section, numbered 12, and then had some eight chains and fifty or sixty links left to the boundary line, and called that section 1. The land was properly described in the deed, and it was the same as that described in the patent.

The defenses interposed were twenty years’ adverse possession under the Statute of Limitations, and an estoppel of plaintiff to dispute the title of defendant on account of the purchase of a tax title by defendant from one John T. Donahoe.

So far as the Statute of Limitations is concerned, the evidence showed that the defendant owned the farm adjoining the tract in dispute on the north and east, and that he had this tract enclosed with his lands for about sixteen years before the. commencement of this suit. He purchased the land east of the tract October 16, 1875, from John Shoop, and claimed that Shoop had some possession which, when coupled with his, covered a period of twenty years. Some of the witnesses thought that Shoop’s fence extended on the tract, but defendant himself testified that it did not, and that he believed the land was not enclosed before he fenced it. Shoop sometimes herded cattle on the land and cut hay from it while it lay open and vacant, but it is very questionable whether any possession by him was of such a character as to show that he claimed 'the land as his own, or to notify the holders of the legal title of any assertion of ownership or appropriation on his part. Such possession must be actual, visible and exclusive, under a claim of title inconsistent with that of the true owner. Turney v. Chamberlain, 15 Ill. 271" date_filed="1853-12-15" court="Ill." case_name="Turney v. Chamberlain">15 Ill. 271; Ambrose v. Raley, 58 id. 506.

When it was attempted to prove the alleged defense of estoppel, plaintiff objected to the evidence, but the objection was overruled, and defendant was permitted to prove that he and plaintiff met at the office of John T. Donahoe, and at Donahoe’s suggestion they had each privately made figures as a bid for a tax title and had given them to Donahoe, when, defendant’s price being the greater, Donahoe made a conveyance to him. This tax title was invalid, and defendant acquired no title by it. It appears that the defendant had been told that Donahoe had a tax title on the land, and went to him to purchase it. Donahoe appointed another meeting, and in the meantime got the plaintiff there, and then got them to bid against each other for a deed from him. There was no agreement as to any division of the land, but plaintiff said he wanted all or none, and when defendant’s bid was higher than his he left the office. Neither party had any title to the land at the time, and plaintiff subsequently acquired his title from the Goodrich estate. The evidence was incompetent. In an action of ejectment legal titles alone are considered, and they can only be transferred by descent, devise or conveyance. The legal title to the premises in controversy could not be transferred to the defendant by an estoppel in pais, which cannot be made available in an action at law. Wales v. Bogue, 31 Ill. 464" date_filed="1863-04-15" court="Ill." case_name="Wales v. Bogue">31 Ill. 464; Mills v. Graves, 38 id. 455; Blake v. Fash, 44 id. 302.

By the twelfth instruction given at the instance of defendant the two defenses above mentioned were stated by the court, and the jury were instructed that if they found, from the evidence, that he had made out both or either one of said defenses by a preponderance of the evidence, they should find him not guilty. The fourteenth instruction stated that a party will be estopped from denying his own acts and admissions if„ they were expressly designed to influence the conduct of another, and if they did so influence it, and if such denial will operate to the injury of the person so acting. The fifteenth instruction stated the same doctrine, and that it was a matter of no importance whether such representations were made in direct language to the party, or whether they might be implied from the conduct of the party sought to be charged, provided such conduct was intended to influence the action of the other, and did so influence it to the latter’s prejudice. The sixteenth further stated that to constitute an estoppel it was not necessary that the party should design to mislead, but that it was enough if the act or declaration was calculated to, and did in fact, mislead another to his injury while acting in good faith and with reasonable diligence. The seventeenth instruction was as follows:

“The jury are instructed that it is competent for parties owning adjoining tracts of land to settle, by agreement, what disposition, as between themselves, shall be made of a piece of land adjoining their premises and claimed by each of them; and if the jury shall believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff and defendant owned adjoining tracts of land, or tracts of land between which is the piece of land in controversy in this suit, and a disagreement or dispute had arisen between them as to which one should have the piece of land in question, and that they agreed upon a settlement of the dispute in regard to such piece of land and acted upon such agreement, and that the defendant in good faith carried -out his part of it, and thereupon parted with his money in reliance upon said agreement, then both parties are bound by such agreement.”

These instructions were erroneous in applying the doctrine of estoppel in pais to the conveyance of permanent interests in real estate. It is suggested, however, that the seventh, eighth and ninth instructions given at the request of plaintiff related to the same thing, and that therefore he cannot complain of those given for the defendant. The plaintiff had objected to the introduction of the evidence, and his objection had been overruled. The instructions given at his request gave his construction of the evidence as it was introduced, and stated that such facts would not bar the plaintiff. The evidence having been admitted against his objection, all that he did was to endeavor to meet the effect of it by stating that it would not bar his action, and no rule of law was laid down, in any of the instructions so given, conflicting in any manner with what is now claimed.

The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.