Court Opinion

ID: 3248077
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:19:47.089611+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:48.551440
License: Public Domain

The statement of the case will contain a sufficient outline for a proper understanding of the question here presented.
Appellant, Dew, defended this bill for sale for division upon the theory that he was not a tenant in common with the other parties to the cause, but owned the land in severalty, and had acquired a perfect title thereto by adverse possession under color of title. The mortgage from Celeste Childress, one of the heirs of Pollard Childress, and Robert Cox executed in 1901 to this appellant, purported to convey the entire interest and fee-simple title in and to the land. They were in possession, and the evidence was without dispute they claimed to own the same. The mortgage was duly foreclosed, and the deeds evidencing the transaction were recorded in 1906, and since the date of the execution of these deeds the evidence is without dispute that appellant has been in the continuous, open, adverse possession of the land, claiming the same as his own, and without any recognition of the rights of any one else thereto.
The principle of law controlling the case under these circumstances is found stated in Riggs v. Fuller, 54 Ala. 141, where the court, speaking to an analogous situation, said:
"The grantor was one of the heirs to whom the lands had descended. A sale and conveyance by him of the entire fee to a stranger, who takes possession claiming the exclusive title, operates a disseisin of the other heirs, and converts the possession, of the stranger into an adverse possession which, if continued the length of time prescribed by the statute of limitations, will bar the entry of the other heirs."
The holding of this court in the Riggs Case, supra, is supported by the overwhelming weight of authority. Mr. Freeman in his note to the case of Joyce v. Dyer, 109 Am. St. Rep. 603, says:
"There is little, if any, dissent from the proposition that where a cotenant conveys to a stranger to the title by a conveyance appropriate in form to transfer an estate in severalty, and the grantee enters into exclusive possession of the property thereunder as a claimant in severalty, this in an ouster of the other cotenants, of which they must take notice, and which, if sufficiently long continued, bars them of all right to the property."
The author's note then cites numerous decisions, among them Fielder v. Childs, 73 Ala. 567. See, also, 2 Corpus Juris, 185.
The court below evidently proceeded upon the theory that appellant by the execution of the mortgage and foreclosure deeds had become a tenant in common with the cotenants of Celeste Childress, and that the evidence was insufficient to show an ouster of his joint owners. Miller v. Vizzard Inv. Co.,195 Ala. 467, 70 So. 639. But this is an erroneous view. The appellant did not become, nor did he enter into possession as a tenant in common with the joint owners of Celeste Childress, but entered as a stranger under a deed purporting to convey the entire interest in the property, and claimed the same exclusively as his own. This itself operated a disseisin of the parties to this suit, and the possession continued for such length of time as to perfect his title. This is very clearly stated in Joyce v. Dyer, supra, 189 Mass. 64, 75 N.E. 81, 109 Am. St. Rep. 603, a case of similar character to that here involved, wherein the court said:
"In considering this question we must bear in mind the familiar principle that when one enters upon land he is presumed to enter under the title which his deed purports upon its face to convey, both as respects the extent of the land and the nature of his interest. The deed to Samuel Dyer purported to convey the fee in the whole. Under that deed he entered, and in the absence of anything shown to the contrary, he is presumed to have entered under a claim of right to the fee in the whole. It is not a case where a tenant in common, being or entering into possession as such, afterwards attempts to claim that his occupation was adverse to his cotenant. Dyer did not enter as a tenant in common. From the very first he is presumed to have claimed under his deed, and there is nothing to show that he or his successors ever acknowledged or ever supposed that the interest thereby conveyed was anything other than as it appeared upon the face of the deed."
The conveyances relied upon by appellant were duly recorded, and his possession was open and notorious (see note to Joyce v. Dyer, supra, p. 614), and that constituted color of title so as to extend the possession to the entire tract.
While in this case the testimony was taken orally before the court, yet, under the situation here presented, the rule concerning the effect of the finding of the court upon the facts on appeal is without application. The evidence is practically without dispute, and it is evident that the decree rendered was based upon an erroneous view of the law as applied to the facts before the court. When such is the case, the rule is of course without application. Murphree v. Hanson, 197 Ala. 246,72 So. 437.
Having reached the conclusion there is error in the decree of the court below, it will *Page 355 
be reversed, and a decree will be here rendered, dismissing the bill.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.