The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 61 U. S. 2
MR. JUSTICE GRIER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, who was also plaintiff below, brought
his ejectment for certain lots in the Town of Peoria. On the trial,
he gave in evidence a patent from the United States to John L.
Bogardus, dated 5th of January, 1838; the will of Bogardus, proved
7th of July, 1838, in which he authorizes his executrix to sell his
lands; a deed from the executrix, dated September 25, 1845, to Seth
L. Cole; also, a deed from Cole to Frink, and from Frink to
plaintiff. The defendants claimed under Isaac Underhill, to whom
Bogardus had conveyed by deed, dated 5 August, 1834, purporting,
for the consideration of $1,050, "to grant, sell, and convey," to
Underhill, all Bogardus' "right and interest" to the land in
dispute, "to have and to hold the same, unto the said Underhill,
his heirs and assigns, forever."
The defendants, moreover, proved that Underhill paid the
purchase money for the land and took out the patent in the name of
Bogardus, in whose name the entry had been made.
The plaintiff's counsel then moved the court to exclude from the
jury all the evidence given by the defendants. This motion was
overruled, and the court instructed the jury that the plaintiff had
no title to the premises claimed in the declaration. To this
instruction plaintiff's counsel excepted, and now alleges it as
error.
It was contended that the deed from Bogardus to Underhill was
but an ordinary quitclaim deed, conveying only such interest as the
releasor had in the premises at the time of its execution, and
being without any direct covenants of warranty, or that implied in
the terms "grant, bargain, and sell," Bogardus was not estopped
from evicting Underhill, under his legal title afterwards vested in
him by the patent. The defendants contended that however this might
be at common law, the title acquired by Bogardus inured to the
benefit of his grantee by virtue of the 7th section of the statute
of Illinois, passed in 1833, concerning conveyances of real
property, which is as follows:
"If any person shall sell or convey to another, by deed or
conveyance purporting to convey an estate in fee simple absolute in
any tract of land or real estate, lying and being in this state,
not then being possessed of the legal title or interest therein at
the time of the sale of conveyance, but after such sale and
conveyance the vendor shall become possessed of and confirmed in
the legal estate to the land or real estate so sold and conveyed,
it shall be taken and held in trust, and for the use of the grantee
or vendee, and the conveyance aforesaid shall be held and taken,
and shall be
Page 61 U. S. 3
as valid as if the grantor or vendor had the legal estate or
interest at the time of sale or conveyance."
Now this case was tried in the court below on the 8th of June,
1849, and this section of the act of 1833 had been construed by the
Supreme Court of Illinois, as to its application to the conveyance
in question, in the case of
Frisby v. Ballance, decided in
that court in 1845 and reported in 2 Gilman 141. It was held in
that case that the fee in the premises inured under the statute to
Underhill and his assigns. This construction of the statute was
therefore a settled rule of property at the time of the decision of
this case in the court below, which that court was bound to follow,
and having so decided, there was certainly no error in the decision
at the time it was made.
But it is argued that though the decision of the circuit court
was in accordance with the established construction of the statutes
of Illinois and the rules of property as then declared by her
highest tribunal, yet that it has become erroneous because of a
change of the law since that time by a decision of the supreme
court of the state in 1853 in the case of
Frank v. Durst,
14 Ill. 305, by which the case of
Frisby v. Ballance was
overruled and reversed. It is true that the same conveyance and the
same statute were in question in the last case, and have received a
contrary construction to that which had governed such conveyances
as a rule of property for more than eight years.
If the judgment of the circuit court in this case had been given
since the last decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois, this
Court might have been compelled to decide whether they considered
themselves bound to follow the last decision of that court, or at
liberty to choose between them. But however the latter decision may
have a retroactive effect upon the titles held under the deed in
question, it cannot have that effect upon the decisions of the
circuit court and make that erroneous which was not so when the
judgment of that court was given. It is therefore
Affirmed with costs.