Court Opinion

ID: 8867662
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 18:10:58.977261+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:06:03.556163
License: Public Domain

JENKINS, Circuit Judge,
after tbe foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The question which first confronts us has respect to the right of the complainant below to maintain his bill. Originally, the jurisdiction in equity to entertain suits to quiet title was, as stated by Mr. Pomeroy (Eq. Jur. p. 2142) r
“The equity jurisprudence to quiet title, independent of statute, was only invoked by a plaintiff in possession holding the legal title, when successive actions at law, all of which had failed, were brought against him by a single person out of possession, or when many persons asserted equitable titles against the plaintiff in possession holding the legal or an equitable title.”
This limited jurisdiction has been much enlarged in many of the states of this country, and the federal courts sitting respectively within the respective states will exercise the enlarged jurisdiction which the statute of the particular state has tacked upon the ancient jurisdiction. Such legislation, as Mr. Pomeroy observes, may be divided into two classes, — the one requiring the complainant to be in actual possession; the other permitting such suit by one claiming title irrespective of possession. The statute of Illinois (1 Starr & 0. Ann. Ill. St. 1896, p. 604, c. 22, § 50) falls within the former class, except that the suit is also allowed where the land is unimproved and unoccupied. This statute has received construction by the supreme court of Illinois in Gage v. Abbott, 99 Ill. 366, where this language is used:
“Under tbe old chancery practice, to maintain a bill to remove a cloud from a title it was essential that the complainant should be in, and the party against whom the bill was filed out of, possession. * * * But this is changed by the act of 1809, which allows such a bill to be filed ‘whether the lands in controversy are improved or occupied, or unimproved or unoccupied.’ Since that enactment we have held that there are only two cases under our law in which a party may file a bill to quiet title or to remove a cloud from the title to real property: First, where he is in possession of the lands; and, second, where he claims to be the owner, and the lands in controversy are unimproved and unoccupied. ⅜ * * In cases, therefore, where the lands are improved, and occupied by the adverse party, this remedy does not apply. In such a case the remedy would be by ejectment.”
It was, therefore, obviously necessary for the complainant below to show to the court by his bill and proofs either that he was in *771ihe actual possession of the premises claimed, or that they were unoccupied. This was essential to entitle him to invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the court, and so it is charged in the bill that, ever since receiving the deed from Darling, — April 21, 1891, — the complainant “has been, and is now, in the actual possession thereof.” What shall constitute possession depends largely upon the character of the land claimed to be occupied, and the use to which it may be devoted, and the circumstances are as varying as are the different natures of property. The possession, however, must be actual and hona fide. It must evidence the exercise, of dominion over the property, clearly referable to him who asserts the dominion, and which declares to the world the act and fact of dominion and the claimant of that dominion. It must not be pretentious or sham; it must be real, exhibiting a purpose to possess and to hold possession. Does the occupancy asserted by the complainant below fill the measure of these requirements? At the time of the deed from Darling, he knew of the tax deed to Lincoln, and that the appellant, Jackson, claimed title thereunder adversely to him. lie also knew that both Lincoln and Jackson claimed that actual possession had been taken of the premises by Lincoln under color of title founded on the tax deed, and after payment by him of taxes for seven consecutive years. This is evidenced by the stipulation of the complainant below of even date with the deed of Darling, by which he agrees to bring suit against Jackson within (50 days to test the question of the claimed possession by Lincoln and Jackson. In March, 1891, intermediate the deed from Butters and the deed from Darling, and when he fully understood the claims of Jackson as to title and possession, he caused a structure to be placed upon the easterly portion of this laud, and upon the part subject to be overflowed by the wafers of the lake. The act was unique, as well with respect to the character of the structure as to the utter absence of use to which it could be devoted. The structure was made by men who were not carpenters. Tt was made of rough boards and scant-ling, and was 8 or 10 feet square, and presumably of the same height, with a flat roof of light material. The record does not inform us whether the building liad a floor. The scantling were laid upon small stones at the four corners resting upon the sand of the beach. The structure had no window and no chimney, nor provision for any. It had a door, but, with Arcadian simplicity and unbounded confidence in the honesty of the good people of Waukegan, no means of fastening it was supplied. The structure was neither lathed nor plastered. For what use this structure was designed we are not informed by the record. The complainant could not or would not tell, but with charming naive té he, perhaps rashly, conceded that it was not intended for human habitation, it could not have been intended as a refuge for stock, or the door would not have been provided; and the complainant was the land commissioner of a railway company, and not a stock raiser, or the owner, so far as the record discloses, of the small number of animals that could be accommodated within the precincts of the hut. The complainant never saw it during or after its construction, and upon his examination *772could only say that it cost under $100; wMcb sum manifestly would be an extravagant price. We can conceive of no use to which this structure could be devoted, unless possibly a fanciful benevolent use. It may be that, touched by the inspired flights of poetic genius, the complainant erected the structure that a sight of it might revive the drooping heart of Mr. Longfellow’s “forlorn and shipwrecked brother.” Whatever its purpose, he builded not wisely or well. Like the foolish man in the Scriptures, he builded his house upon the sand, “and the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house, and it fell; and great was the fall of it.” The structure remained until the early days of the autumn following its erection, a lonely hut upon a dreary waste. It was then lost to view, and the place that once knew it shall know it no more forever. Either the autumn storms and the angry waves of Lake Michigan carried it out to sea, where it floats a hopeless derelict, or the fierce blasts of winter beat upon it, broke it down, and scattered the fragments to the four winds of heaven, without a scant-ling left to tell the tale. We cannot regard the construction of this hut, under the circumstances, as evidence of actual occupation. It never was occupied. It manifestly was not intended to be occupied. It was abandoned so soon as completed. The real intention clearly was at trifling cost to place upon this beach something that a court of equity might receive as sufficient evidence of actual possession to sustain a bill to quiet the title. But equity deals with the real, not the fanciful; with actual rights in property, not with pretensions to right. It looks through form to find the substance. It penetrates disguise to discover the real intention. ⅛ does not protect long-abandoned claims to property upon late, sham, and pretentious acts asserted as evidence of ownership, and made solely in anticipation and for the purpose of litigation. Equity is here invoked to exercise its jurisdiction in protection of the title asserted by the complainant, and upon the ground of actual possession of the premises by Mm. There was no such actual possession by him, nor was any intended. There was no public assertion of ownership. The act done was false and sham, and with knowledge of the prior possession claimed by Lincoln and Jackson. The building of the structure was a mere device upon which it was hoped the jurisdiction of a court of equity could be upheld. No real or actual occupancy was contemplated, and equity will not assume jurisdiction in the absence of actual possession evidencing designed and present dominion of the land. We are supported in our conclusion by a somewhat similar case decided in the supreme court of California, which meets with our hearty approval. De Frieze v. Quint, 94 Cal. 653, 664, 30 Pac. 3. There the court, speaking of a like act of occupancy, observes:
“The little shed, sufficient ‘to afford shelter to three valuable domestic animals,’ ten feet square and seven feet high, is the only thing relied upon to indicate to defendant that plaintiff or Miller was in possession of the land; and no doubt it was intended to be used as evidence of such possession, and for no other purpose. So important was it considered by the complainant that the only visit that he made to the land during the term of the lease was for the purpose of ascertaining whether Miller had built it according to the cove-*773mute in the lease. Why was this sheet required to be sufficient to shelter only three valuable animals? Why is there no evidence that it was ever used for any purpose? It was obviously a mere sham, which should be allowed no effect whatever as evidence of possession.”
Nor can the complainant below, Ms actual occupancy failing, be heard to say that his bill can be sustained within the statute upon the ground that the premises were “vacant and unoccupied.” Having asserted, by his bill, actual occupancy b-v himself, he must sustain that allegation, or fail in his suit. He cannot now shift his position. Glos v. Bouton, 170 Ill. 249, 48 N. E. 949. We are the less inclined to give weight to the supposed act of occupancy from consideration of the circumstances under which the complainant below appeals to a, court of equity. The owners of the land for a period of 22 years paid no heed or attention to the property, and discharged none of the duties which they owed to the government which protected them and their rights in the property. They knew — as all men lenow — that an annual tax is laid upon all property for the support of the government. They allowed strangers to the title to pay the taxes during 22 consecutive years, and to acquire a tax title to (ho premises. They doubtless deemed the property worthless, — as probably it was, — except for purposes of a fishery, until about the year 1891, when, within common knowledge, a considerable demand arose for sand, and property along- the beach of the lake sprang into value. Then the complainant acquired from former owners the title to these 70 acres of land, placed this structure upon the premises, and forthwith filed his bill to avoid the tax deed under color of title of which Lincoln and Jackson claimed to have taken, possession. Tin facts, although not conclusive, are somewhat strong to show an aban donment by the complainant’s grantors of their rights in the prop erty. Holtzman v. Douglas, 168 U. S. 278, 284, 18 Sup. Ct. 65, 42 L. Ed. 466. And we are not inclined to dispense with the actual occupancy which the law requires in favor of those who for so long a period of time have lost sight of their duty to the government which protects them in their rights of property. We conclude, therefore, upon this branch of the ca,se, that no actual occupancy by the complainant was shown, and that Ms bill should have been dismissed.
It remains to consider the rights of the appellant under his cross bill. Undoubtedly, where a cross bill is filed for the purposes of a discovery, or to bring before the court matters of defense occurring since the commencement of the suit, — equivalent a,t law to a plea puis darrein continuance, — it is not essential to show equitable grounds for the interposition of the court. The cross bill in such case, being purely in aid of the defense asserted to the original bill, is dopehdent upon, and probably fails with the dismissal of the original bill. But a cross bill which seeks affirmative relief is in the nature of an original bill wherein the cross complainant is the actor. ¡Aich a cross bill is not dependent upon the original bill, is not subject to the control of the complainant in the original bill, and does not. fall with the dismissal of the original bill, whether that dismissal be the act of the complainant or the act of the court. Therefore the cross complainant appealing to a court of equity for equitable relief *774touching a subject germane to the matter of the original bill must present to the court the grounds for the affirmative relief with the same care and particularity as are required in an original bill, and must make a case by his bill of which the equitable jurisdiction will take cognizance. Thus it has been held that a cross complainant charging usury with respect to securities which are the subject-matter of the original bill, and seeking to have them delivered up and canceled, must, in order to bring himself within equitable cognizance, offer to pay what is legally due upon them. Mason v. Gardiner, 4 Brown, Ch. 437. See, also, Story, Eq. PI. (10th Ed.) § 308; 2 Barb. Oh. Prac. c. 9. Has the appellant (the cross complainant) presented by his cross bill a case for equitable cognizance? We have shown in the discussion of the complainant’s case that, under the enlarged jurisdiction which courts of equity will exercise since the passage of the statute by the state of Illinois, courts of equity will entertain jurisdiction to remove a cloud upon a title in two cases only, — where the complainant is in possession of the land, or where the premises are vacant and unoccupied, — and that one of these two conditions must obtain, and be shown by the bill, before the interference of equity can be successfully invoked. In this respect the cross bill stands upon the same footing, and is to be judged by the same considerations, which govern an original bill. The cross bill in this case charges that Lincoln obtained his tax deed in 1872, the land being then vacant and unoccupied; that for 18 consecutive years thereafter Lincoln paid'the taxes upon the land, and that, subsequent to the year 1879-, Lincoln, under color of title, "took possession of said premises, and was in possession of the same from said last-mentioned date to the time of his death, to wit, on the 2oth day of May, 1889, or thereabout; and that at the time of the talcing of the possession of the said premises by the said Oliver S. Lincoln, deceased, the same were vacant and unoccupied.” The bill may possibly be defective in the omission to state whether during the period from 1872 to the taking possession by Lincoln the lands were vacant and unoccupied, and in the omission to state with particularity the character of the possession taken. These defects, however, if they be defects, we pass by, because they do not go to the question of equitable cognizance. The bill, however, wholly fails to declare whether possession was continued after the death of Lincoln, and whether the lands at the time of the suit were possessed, and by whom, or were vacant and unoccupied; and wholly fails in any assertion that the appellant was in possession. Without apt allegations in this respect, equity will not, as we have shown above, entertain a suit to remove a cloud upon title. The cross complainant appealing for equitable interference must, by his cross bill, bring himself within the recognized principles upon which courts of equity act. Thus, in Calverley v. Williams, 1 Ves. Jr. 210, the complainant asserted that a certain parcel of copyhold land was included within a larger parcel of lands sold to him by the defendant, and the coxnnlainant had in some manner been let into the possession of the parcel in dispute, which it was claimed by the defendant was not included in the sale. Thereupon Calverley filed his bill to compel a conveyance to him by the defend*775ant oí the land in dispute. The defendant, having answered denying the sale, died his cross bill seeking to recover from Oalverley the possession of the land in question. The original bill at the hearing was dismissed upon the merits, and with reference to the cross bill Lord Thurlow observes: “As to the cross bill to be let into possession, I cannot decree; that it is merely a legal title, and the object of ejectment, therefore it must be dismissed, with costs.” The cross bill failed to show a case within the equitable jurisdiction of the high court of chancery of England, then obtaining. It was, therefore, dismissed, although its subject -was germane to the subject-matter of the original bill, and although the jurisdiction of a court of equity over the original bill was incontestable and undisputed. It is thus clear, to our thinking, that whoever appeals to a court of equity for affirmative relief — whether he be complainant or cross complainant — must, by his bill, exhibit a case that falls within recognized principles of equitable cognizance, and that as here the appellant does not show by his cross bill that at the time of the suit he was in possession of lite hmd, or that the land was at that time vacant and unoccupied, he has not, by his bill, exhibited a case upon which a court of equity can afford him affirmative relief. But, were this otherwise, the evidence is so loose and fragmentary with respect to the occupancy of the land covered by the tax deed that we should hesitate to decree tire relief demanded. It is claimed that east of the premises embraced within the tax deed there is a parcel of land described in the original bill as “a fraction lying east of the above-described premises.” The width of this fraction of land, if any such there be, is not given, and the ('astern boundary of the N. W. of the JSI. E. ] of the section is nowhere stated with precision. Although the premises would appear to have been surveyed upon several occasions, the parties seemed not to have deemed it necessary to call as witnesses those who made the survey, but to have coniented themselves with loose and disconnected statements which the surveyors are said to have made. It is, therefore, impossible for us to ascertain whether, assuming the occupancy of Gamash, the fisherman, under the license of Lincoln, to be such possession as the law required, it in fact extended westerly from the shore of the lake to and upon the land actually included within the N. W. ⅜ of the N. E. | of the section, or whether it was confined within the limits of the parcel described as the fraction lying easterly thereof. We should therefore hesitate to say that the possession by Lincoln was shown with that accuracy which we deem to be necessary.
Neither party having brought himself within equitable cognizance each must be remanded to his remedy at law. The decree will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to enter decrees dismissing both the original and the cross bills.