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ael F. Quinlan to pay to Glos, or to the clerk of the probate court for his use, the amount found due him, together with his costs, and that such payment be made at the date of the entry of the decree. This appeal is prosecuted from that decree by Jacob Glos.

The petition alleged, and the inventory of the property of Michael F. Quinlan, deceased, offered in evidence by the administratrix stated, the premises were vacant and unimproved. No proof upon this question was offered by the administratrix upon the hearing, and there was no proof that deceased or his grantors had ever been in possession of the property. To prove title in the deceased the administratrix offered in evidence a warranty deed from Katie A. O'Meara and John O'Meara, her husband, dated July 21, 1896, conveying to Quinlan the premises described in the petition. Appellant's contention is that the evidence was not sufficient to warrant the court in finding and decreeing that the property described in the petition was owned by Michael F. Quinlan during his lifetime, and that in the absence of such proof the probate court was not warranted in decreeing the removal of a cloud from the title. We think it must be conceded that it was incumbent upon the administratrix to prove title in her intestate in order to entitle her to ask for the removal of a cloud upon the title. The statute confers jurisdiction upon probate courts to remove clouds from the title to real estate sought to be sold for the payment of debts by an administrator, but this can only be done where the property belonged to the deceased. The administratrix was in no better position to ask for a removal of a cloud upon the title than the deceased would have been if he had sought its removal by a decree of a court during his lifetime. It would have been incumbent upon him, in such case, to have proved his ownership of the property, and it was just as indispensable for his administratrix to make the same proof. (Hutchinson v. Howe, 100 Ill. 11; Glos v. Kenealy, 220 id. 540; Mc

Gowan v. Glos, 258 id. 217.) In our opinion the evidence was not sufficient to establish title in Michael F. Quinlan. The evidence offered and relied upon by the administratrix for this purpose was the deed from the O'Mearas to Quinlan and the inventory of the property of Quinlan filed by the administratrix, which stated the deceased acquired the fee simple title to the premises by warranty deed from Katie A. O'Meara and husband, John O'Meara, July 21, 1896, which deed was duly recorded July 27, 1896. The inventory was admitted over the objection of appellant. If it be conceded the inventory was competent on the question of title, which we think it was not,-the proof offered was insufficient. It was incumbent upon the administratrix to prove possession by the grantors of Quinlan, or possession or acts of ownership by deceased under the deed from the O'Mearas. It has been decided that possession under a claim of ownership or a deed from a grantor in possession is sufficient prima facie proof of ownership to sustain a bill for the removal of a cloud from the title, but the mere production of a deed from a person who is not shown to have had possession of or title to the property, and without proof of possession taken or the exercise of acts of ownership over the property by the grantee, does not prove title. (Hewes v. Glos, 170 Ill. 436; Glos v. Huey, 181 id. 149; Glos v. Miller, 213 id. 22; McGowan v. Glos, supra.) There was no proof that the grantors of Quinlan had title to or possession of the property, or that Quinlan took possession of or exercised acts of ownership over the property under his deed.

The administratrix contends the testimony of Ellen F. Brogan shows Quinlan took possession of the property and occupied a little house on it for a while after acquiring his deed. We do not so understand the testimony of the witness. The property is described in the petition as lot 25 of the re-subdivision of block "S" of the re-subdivision of the Blue Island Land and Building Company of certain lots

and blocks in Morgan Park, Washington Heights, filed for record June 4, 1873, in book 4 of maps, page 98, and otherwise described as lot 25 in the re-subdivision of block "S" in Morgan Park, a subdivision of part of the south-west quarter of section 18 and of the west half of section 19, town 37, north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian, west of Prospect avenue, in Cook county, Illinois. Mrs. Brogan testified she knew the Quinlans when they lived in Morgan Park, on Remington avenue, in a little two-story house, having two rooms up-stairs and two rooms down-stairs; that they afterwards moved into the city and rented the house; that she thought they lived in the house about two years. This does not identify the property the Quinlans lived in on Remington avenue as the property described in the petition. Mrs. Quinlan testified that during the twenty-one years of their marriage they lived in several places in the city of Chicago or its suburbs, but she does not testify they at any time lived on or occupied the property described in the petition. It would seem probable that Mrs. Brogan's testimony did not refer to the property in controversy, because the inventory states, and the petition alleges, that it is unimproved, vacant property.

For the failure to prove prima facie title in Quinlan, which the law requires, we are compelled to reverse the decree of the probate court and remand the cause.

Reversed and remanded.

INDEX.

ACCOUNTING.

when defendant in partition is liable to account for rental
value of illegal structure..

PAGE.

116

when co-tenant is not entirely relieved from accounting
for rental value of pier though the pier was burned and
a loss incurred.....

116

when bill for discovery and accounting is permissible al-
though remedy at law exists...

433

ACTIONS AND DEFENSES.

general Injuries act, concerning recovery of damages for
death by wrongful act, applies to death of coal miner.. 441
fact that actions may be brought under two statutes does
not authorize a double recovery of damages....

ADMINISTRATION.

441

provisions of sections 204 and 78 of Administration act
for administering estates of persons presumed by ab-
sence to be dead are valid....

93

when letters of administration upon estate of absent per-
son are properly granted..

93

in granting letters of administration it has been the policy
in Illinois to give a preference to near relatives......
when a public administrator is not entitled to administer
under section 18 of Administration act.......

172

172

when relative of a deceased non-resident is entitled to
nominate administrator in Illinois......

173

when entire estate is subject to debts incurred by execu-
trix in carrying on testator's business....

596

when an irregularity in taking judgment by confession
should not defeat payment of debts..

596

ADVERSE POSSESSION.-See LIMITATIONS.

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