Court Opinion

ID: 3650612
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:05:24.342325+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:15:42.450671
License: Public Domain

(584)    The defendants claim under color of title and seven years possession. They showed a mortgage from one Hayes to J. M. Bean, 20 January, 1894, and a conveyance from Bean to defendants, *Page 431 
25 August, 1900.  This action began 6 September, 1905.  The defendants' witnesses testified that the defendants had been in possession since some time in 1900; that they took over possession from Jesse Coffey, who had gone into possession late in the fall of 1898 as lessee of Beau, and that Coffey immediately succeeded Robbins, who had been in possession two or three years under a verbal bargain and sale from Bean.
The plaintiff contends:
1. That a mortgage is not color of title.  But in this State it conveys the legal title, and the mortgagee in possession necessarily has color of title at least.
2. The plaintiffs further contend that the defendants cannot show seven years possession under color of title, since Robbins' possession was under a mere verbal bargain and sale from Beau.  That would be true if the defendants were claiming under Robbins; but they are claiming under Bean, and the possession of Robbins was under Bean as a tenant at will.
His Honor charged the jury that "they would consider the mortgage from Hayes to Bean as color of title; also deed of Bean to defendant as tending to ripen defendant's title by virtue of seven years possession under known and visible lines and boundaries."  He also charged the jury: "You will consider the evidence tending to show the possession of Robbins as being that of Bean and inuring to the benefit of the defendants for the purpose of ripening their title by virtue of seven years possession under known and visible lines and boundaries.
The plaintiffs excepted to each of these instructions, but there was
No error.
(585)