"It may be laid down as a general proposition that where a party assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, and succeeds in maintaining that position, he may not, thereafter, simply because his interests have changed, assume a contrary position, especially if it be to the prejudice of the party who has acquiesced in the position formerly taken by him. * It is contrary to the first principles of justice that a man should obtain an advantage over his adversary by asserting and relying upon the validity of a judgment against himself, and, in a subsequent proceeding upon such judgment, claim that it was rendered without personal service upon him. Davis may possibly have been mistaken in his conclusion that the judgment was valid, but he is conclusively presumed to know the law, and cannot thus speculate upon his possible ignorance of it." This decision is controlling, and renders any discussion of the question now before us superfluous. The appellant attempts to parry the force of the decision by urging that the case then before the court differed from the present case, inasmuch as the estoppel was based upon the defendant's false assertion of fact in the bankruptcy proceeding that the judgment was in full force. The court, however, did not consider the case upon the rules applicable to the common estoppel which springs from the misrepresentation of fact, but put its conclusions upon the salutary doctrine of estoppel, which prohibits parties from playing fast and loose with courts of justice. Indeed, all the statements in the petition which was the basis of the order in the bankruptcy proceedings were matters of legal conclusion; and the court was of the opinion that although the defendant, in making them, was under a mistaken view of the law, that circumstance could not shield him from the effect of an estoppel. The plaintiff, as well as the defendant, was bound to know the law, and, by conclusive presumption, could not have been misled by the defendant's statement that the judgment was in full force, when in fact it was a nullity, because of want of jurisdiction of the court which rendered it. He was prejudiced, not by any false statement of the defendant, but by the conduct of the defendant in procuring a disposition of his legal rights by a judicial tribunal to his disadvantage, and for the benefit of the defendant; and if he chose to acquiesce the defendant ought not to be permitted now, with the fruits of his conduct in his hands, to assert that what he then maintained was a delusion, and that the disposition made was wrong. The assignments of error impugn the rulings of the trial judge in admitting in evidence the arguments made by counsel in the bankruptcy proceeding upon the application for the order canceling the plaintiff's proof of debt and dismissing the specifications. It may be that the statements made on that occasion by the counsel for the defendant ought not to be imputed to and used as the representations of the defendant to the court. However this may be, the arguments were admissible for the purpose of showing what question was before the court; and in any event the admission of the evidence was innocuous, because, as we have shown, it was obvious from the petition itself that the order proceeded upon the ground that the plaintiff's judgment could not be affected by a discharge of the defendant in bankruptcy, and the trial judge would have been justified in so ruling without looking further. We conclude that there was no error in the rulings of the trial judge, and that the judgment should be affirmed. WHEELER v. CITY OF CHICAGO. (Circuit Court, N. D. Illinois. May 28, 1895.) 1. PUBLIC LANDS — GRANT IN AID OF ILLINOIS & MICHIGAN CANAL CONDI TIONS. In 1822 congress passed an act granting certain public lands to the state of Illinois for the purpose of a canal, and providing that a survey should be made in 3 years, and the canal opened in 12 years. In 1827 congress passed another act granting certain other public lands in aid of the canal, and extending the time for commencing the canal to 5 years, and for completing it to 20 years, after 1827. In 1834 one W. made an entry of part of the granted land, and received a patent therefor. Held, that the grants to the state contained in the acts of 1822 and 1827 vested in the state of Illinois at once, the conditions as to filing maps and beginning and completing the canal being conditions subsequent; and W., being bound to take notice of such grants, acquired no title by his entry and patent. 2. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-SUIT AGAINST STATE. The state took possession of the granted land, and constructed the canal. In 1881 a joint resolution of the general assembly permitted the city of C. to erect pumping works on a part of the land, to supply water to the upper level of the canal, and such city erected and operated the pumping works accordingly. An action of ejectment was brought against the city by one claiming under the patent to W. Held, that the interest of the state in the land did not make the action one against the state, so as to defeat the jurisdiction of the federal court. This was an action of ejectment by Hiram E. Wheeler against the city of Chicago. The defendant pleaded the general issue and a special plea denying possession. The case was heard by the court without a jury. He The plaintiff sued the city of Chicago, in an action of ejectment, to recover from the city, in fee simple, a piece of ground on section 30, in Canalport, Cook county, Ill., traversed by the bed of the Illinois & Michigan Canal, and including a portion of strips 90 feet in width on each side of the canal. showed a connected patent title in himself under a cash entry made by one Welsh, in 1834, of a portion of section 30, including the premises demanded. It was shown in defense that the land in question was a part of the Illinois & Michigan Canal, as occupied and used by the canal authorities of the state of Illinois, and that it had been in such actual use since the completion of the canal. It further appeared that the premises in question are a part of the original channel of the canal; that in 1881, under the joint resolution of the general assembly of the state, the city of Chicago was permitted by the canal authorities to erect the pumping works now standing upon the premises, which, ever since their erection, have been in operation, and have caused a flow of water from the south branch of the Chicago river into the canal, thereby supplying the water for the first or summit level of the canal. These pumping works were erected by the city at its own expense, and city employés have since operated them under the provisions of the joint resolution. The city filed a special plea denying possession. The attorney general of Illinois, relying upon the grants to the state mentioned above, and the occupancy of the canal by the state, filed a suggestion for the dismissal of the suit for lack of jurisdiction. The point was made that the suit was practically an action of ejectment against the state to deprive it of a portion of the Illinois & Michigan Canal, and therefore within the prohibition of the eleventh amendment to the constitution of the United States. Robert B. Kendall, for plaintiff. Duncan & Gilbert and George L. Paddock, for defendant, and M. T. Moloney, the Attorney General of Illinois. ALLEN, District Judge. In the common-law case of Wheeler against the city of Chicago, which was tried a couple of weeks ago, I have reached a conclusion,-not having been able to write anything like an opinion in the matter, and I thought I had better announce it this morning, it being uncertain how long I may be able to remain here, so the parties to the suit could take such action as they thought proper. The first matter that my attention was directed to was whether I should take jurisdiction of the case, because of the state being substantially a party, and I heard arguments with pleasure upon that branch of the subject. I am inclined to think that that point ought not to be sustained; that the court ought not to refuse jurisdiction because of the interest that the state has, or the attitude of the state to the case. I reach that conclusion largely upon authorities cited by the defendant in the argument, and from the very nature of the question, and will pass over that view by saying that the court has overruled the jurisdictional point made. The action is ejectment. There were the general issue and two special pleas. To one of the special pleas a demurrer was sustained. The other, which was held good, was a plea denying possession by the defendant, city of Chicago. It seems, from the proof in the case, that on March 30, 1822, congress passed an act to the effect "that the state of Illinois be and is hereby authorized to survey and mark through the public lands of the United States, the route of the canal connecting the Illinois river with the southern bend of Lake Michigan, and ninety feet of land on each side of said canal shall be forever reserved from any sale to be made by the United States, except in cases hereinafter provided for; and the use thereof forever shall be and the same is hereby vested in the said state for a canal and for no other purposes whatever." There was a provision in the subsequent sections of that act of 1822 that a survey should be made in 3 years, and that the canal should be opened within 12 years thereafter. Again, March 2, 1827, congress passed another act on the subject, providing that there should be granted to the state of Illinois, "for the purpose of aiding said state in opening a canal to unite the waters of the Mississippi with those of Lake Michigan, a quantity of land equal to onehalf of five sections of width on each side of said canal, and reserving each alternate section to the United States," with a proviso that the canal should be commenced within 5 years, and completed within 20 years. Under my view of the case, these grants-that of 1822, authorizing the state to survey through the public lands a route for the canal, connecting the Illinois river with the southern bend of Lake Michigan, granting 90 feet on each side of the canal to the state, and the grant of 1827 to the state, of a quantity of land equal to one-half of five sections in width on each side of said canal, to aid said state in opening a canal to unite the waters of the Illinois river with those of Lake Michigan-must be taken together; those two acts containing these two grants of right of way or strips of land, and land to aid in the construction of this canal to unite the waters of the Illinois river with Lake Michigan. The last act was a clear recognition by congress of the continuing force of the first one, and extended the time for the commencement of the work on the canal for 5 years from March, 1827, and its completion for 20 years from that time. In the view I have taken of the entire case, the question of possession on the part of the state and its agents-a continuing possession for 20 years-will not be considered at the present time. That presents, or would present, for consideration, an important question, if the title of the plaintiff were different, or if it had been affected less by an outstanding title. The plaintiff, of course, must recover, if at all, on the strength of his own title. Assuming, for argument's sake, he has made a prima facie case by tracing back title to a sale made by the government of the land in question in October, 1834, to Welsh, the question of outstanding title must then be considered; that is, if a prima facie case has been made. Under the congressional grant of 1822 the strip of land in dispute became vested in the state of Illinois at once. A legislative grant operates as a law as well as for the transfer of the property, and has such force as the intent of the legislature requires. I have no doubt that the title vested in the state at once; that these conditions with reference to commencing the work, and the completion of the work, were conditions subsequent, and not, as claimed by plaintiff's counsel, conditions precedent. They were subsequent conditions, as I think our supreme court has held in a number of cases, and the supreme court of the United States in quite a number. I think it may be regarded as the settled law of the country now that the conditions as to the filing of the map of the location, etc., of the canal, and the commencement of work and completion of the same, must be classified as conditions subsequent, to be taken advantage of only by the grantor, or some one under the grantor, and not to be complained of, or taken advantage of, by any one else. These conditions were conditions subsequent, to be taken advantage of only by the grantor, by judicial proceedings authorized by law, finding the fact of forfeiture, and adjudging the restoration of the estate, or there must at least be some legislative assertion of the ownership of the property by the government. Nothing of that character appears in the evidence. The act of 1827 clearly extended the time for the commencement of the work until 1832 (5 years),—that is my understanding,—and its completion until 1847 (20 years). In 1829 it is shown in the evidence that Gov. Edwards forwarded to the department at Washington a copy of the survey and location of the canal. That was within two years after this act of 1827 was passed, and, there never having been a forfeiture, the grants were in full force and effect; and the state had title certainly to this strip of land, for I understand this is a part of the 90 feet. If I am right, then in 1834, when Welsh purchased from the United States, he was compelled to take notice of the two public laws referred to and the grants thereunder to the state, and, of course, could get no title from the government to the 90 feet on either side of the canal, then and ever since in the possession of the state for canal purposes. I understand from the evidence that men are there now upon the premises sued for, who trace back their authority and claim to the state. The state having taken possession and built a canal, there was nothing for the government to grant. There has been no reversion and no forfeiture, but everything belonging to the government had passed out, so far as this particular 90 feet was concerned. The verdict will be, "Not Guilty." MERCANTILE CREDIT GUARANTEE CO. OF NEW YORK v. WOOD et al. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit. May 28, 1895.) CREDIT INSURANCE MEANING OF "Loss." A policy of credit insurance insured the holder, to an amount not exceeding $10,000, against "loss sustained by reason of the insolvency of debtors owing the insured for merchandise." It also contained, besides various provisions as to loss to be first borne by the insured, other insurance, limItation of loss on individual debtors, disposition between insurer and insured of debts on which settlements were made or offered, etc., a provision that "in adjusting losses, * * * before determining the percentage of loss to be borne by the company, there shall first be deducted all sums paid, offered, and accepted, settled or secured, and the value of any security or collateral ***." Held, that the "loss" insured against meant, not the whole amount due from an insolvent debtor at the time of his suspension, but the amount remaining due after deducting from such indebtedness any payments made by the debtor, and that a clause in the policy providing that when only a part of a loss was covered by it the proportionate part of everything realized should be credited to so much of the loss as the policy covered, did not change such meaning, but if said clause did not refer to the case of other insurance, and introduced an ambiguity, the doubt should be resolved against the insurance company, which prepared the policy. In Error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. This was an action by Charles F. Wood and others against the Mercantile Credit Guarantee Company of New York on a policy of insurance. In the circuit court, judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs. Defendant brings error. Affirmed. This is a writ of error by the defendant below to review a judgment in favor of the defendants in error (plaintiffs below) entered upon a verdict recovered upon a trial in the circuit court, Southern district of New York, on October 26, 1894. The action was brought to recover the sum of $5,627.65 and interest, claimed by the defendants in error, partners in business under the firm name of Charles F. Wood & Co., under a policy of insurance executed by plaintiff in error, which insured the plaintiffs against loss sustained by reason of the insolvency of debtors owing the insured for merchandise sold and delivered. There was, upon the trial, no dispute as to the facts. The only controversy in the case was one of amount,-the amount for which a verdict should be directed for the plaintiffs. The defendant asked that the verdict be for the sum of $1,109.92 only, which amount the defendant admitted to be due on the policy, which motion was denied by the court. The plaintiffs asked for a verdict for $5,108.09 and interest, which motion was granted, and verdict directed accordingly. The assignments of error are First, to the admission of certain evidence; second, to the court's refusal to direct verdict in accordance with defendant's request; third, to direction of the verdict for the amount asked by plaintiff. The first of these assignments has not been argued in this court. It has apparently been abandoned, and need not be considered. A. J. Dittenhoffer, for plaintiff in error. Albert Stickney and David Murray, for defendants in error. v.68F.no.5-34 |