Dredge v. Forsyth
Supreme Court of the United States | 1862-12-15
2 Black 563,17 L. Ed. 253,67 U.S. 563,1862 U.S. LEXIS 269
This was an action of eject me at, . and the case comes ..before the Court upon a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois; Suit w'as brought in the Court below by the present defendant against John Dredge, John A. Keys and Jesse Hester, to recover possession of a certain parcel of land described in the declaration as part of claims forty-five and sixty-nine, and part of claims sixty-two and sixty three, in the village of Peoria, in the State of Illinois, and also by metes and bounds. Plaintiff alleged that on the first day of July, 1855,- he was possessed of the described tract, and that the defendants on the following day entered into the premises, and have ever since that time unlawfully withheld the same. Defendants appeared and pleaded the general issue and by coisent of parties their landlord, Charlea *565 Ball anee, was, on the twenty-third day of July, 1856, made a eo-defendant in the suit. Issue being joined, the parties went to trial, and the jury returned their verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment was subsequently entered on the verdict; but upon’motion of the defendants, and satisfactory proof exhibited by them that, they had paid all the taxable costs, the judgment was vacated and set aside by the order of the Court, and a new trial was granted. No further proceedings were ,had in the cause until the July Term, 1857, when the parties again went to trial upon the general issue. Title was claimed by the plain tiff under a patent from the United States to the legal representatives of one Antoine Lapance, who was an inhabitant or settler within the purview of the Act of the third of March, 1823, entitled “An Act to confirm certain claims to lots in the village of Peoria, in the State of Illinois.- He accordingly introduced the patent, and deraigned his title from the patentees therein described. Recurring to the patent, it will be seen that it bears date the first day of February, 1847, and was issued for a certain lot,' of land surveyed and designated, as covered by claims sixty-two and sixty-three, in the southwest fractional quarter of fractional section nine, in township eight north, of range eight east, of the fourth principal meridian, in the State of Illinois. Survey on which the patent is founded was approved on the first day of September, 1840 and it is not controverted that the ancestor of the patentees was one of the inhabitants or settlers described in the Act of Congress under-which the patent was^ granted. Two plats were also introduced by the plaintiff, which-were objected to by the defendants, upon the ground that they were certified by the Surveyor of Public Lands, and not by the Secretary of the Treasury. One was a plat of the village of Peoria,, and the other was a plat of claim or lot sixty-three ; but the Court overruled the objections of the defendants, and the plats vere admitted in evidence. Certain portions of Edward Cole’s report, made to the Secretary of the Treasury, on the tenth day of November, 1820, were also offered by the plaintiff to be read in evidence, as appears in the third volume of American State Papers, relative to the public lands, ’Objection *566 to the admissibility of the volume was duly made by the defendants, on the ground that it was not properly authenticated, but the Court overruled the objection, and so much of the report as relates to the claim in controversy was read to the jury. Various deéds also from the heirs of Antoine Lapance to the plaintiff, or to those under whom he claims, were given in evidence by the plaintiff, and he also introduced a duly certified copy of a certain Chancery proceeding for partition, which resulted in a decree of sale of the interests of several of the parties under whom the' plaintiff, derived his 'title as a purchaser. Those proceedings were introduced to show that the interests of parties owning one-third of the premises in common with the plaintiff were duly sold by a Commissioner of the Court in which the proceedings took place, and that the same became vested^ in the. plaintiff as a purchaser at a legal sale,. Such was the substance of the evidence offered by the plaintiff, as more fully set forth in the transcript. On the other hand, the defendants claimed title under a patent dated the twenty-fourth day of January, 1838, as-issued to Charles Ballance, granting to him the southwest fractional quarter of section nine, in township eight north, of range eight east, in the district of lands subject to sale at Quincy, Illinois, “subject, however, to the rights of any and all persons claiming under the Act of Congress of the third of March, 1823,” to which reference has already been made. They accordingly ■gave the patent in evidence, together with a duplicate of the receipt given by the Receiver of the Land Office, and the certificate of the Register, on which the patent is founded. Relying on these evidences of title, the defendants also offered evidence tending to show that Charles Ballance, or those claiming under him, had been in possession of the premises, claiming title to the same, from 1842 to the commencement of this suit. Much testi mony was taken as to the possession of the premises, but inasmuch as the plaintiff now concedes that the defendants occupied the same from 1842 to the commencement of the suit, the testimony will not be very fully reproduced.
On this state of the case the defendants requested-the Court to instruct the jury: 1. That the title exhibited by them wax *567 superior in point of law to that exhibited by the plaintiff. 2. That the title of the defendants was a regular chain of title, deducible of record from the United States, and if they believed from the evidence that the defendants, and those under whom they received the possession, had been in actual possession, by residence, of the premises more than seven years immediately preceding the commencement of the suit, and were still in pos session when the suit was brought, then the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in this action. Other prayers for instruction were also presented by the defendants; but in the view we have taken of the case it will not be necessary to refer to any other at the present time. Both of these requests were refused, by the Court, and the jury, among other things, were told: 1. That the defendant, Ballance, acquired no absolute title to the lot in question under his patent from the United States; but that the other title, under the Act of 1823; was the paramount title. 2. That in order to be protected under the law of 1835, he, or those claiming under him, must have had possession by actual residence on the land in controversy for seven years next preceding the commencement of this suit. Under these instructions, and others which need .not be noticed, the jury found that the defendants were guilty' of unlawfully withholding from the possession of the plaintiff so much of claim sixty-three as is covered by the southwesterly half of lot numbered one, in block forty-seven, in Ballance’s addition to the town of Peoria.
*569
When the patent under which the defendants claim was issued, no survey of any lots granted to the inhabitants or settlers in the village of Peoria had been made. Those persons therefore held but an inchoate right, which must first be surveyed and designated before the right granted to them would supercede the title acquired under the defendant’s patent. They might never make any claim, and in that event the other tide would be valid. Consequently, this Court held in Bryan et al. vs. Forsyth, 19 How., 338, that, subject to that contingency, the patentee under whom the defendants claim took a title in fee till 1840. when the dtle to the village lots was by the survey and *570 designation then made, ripened into a better title; but the Court also held at the same time that the patentee was a fee. simple title on its face, and as such was sufficient to afford protection to one claiming title under it, if accompanied by proof of such possession for seven years, as is required by the Illinois statute of limitation.
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