Court Opinion

ID: 8006248
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:53:36.779879+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:53.822290
License: Public Domain

Norton, J.
This is a suit by ejectment to recover possession of the west half of the northeast quarter of section 22, township 43, range 2, in Eranklin county. The answer admits possession by defendant; denies that plaintiffs have title, avers title in defendant and pleads the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs obtained judgment,from which defendant has appealed. We will consider the exceptions taken to the action of the trial court in the order they are presented in the motion for a new trial.

*605
x evidence- copy of patent.

*604Plaintiffs, who were shown to be the heirs-of John W. *605Avery, deceased, and who claimed title through him, were permitted to offer in evidence an exemplified copy of a patent issued to said Avery in September, 1835, on an entry made in 1832, to the land in question, to which defendant objected on the ground that the original had not been accounted for. This objection was properly overruled. .It was held in the case of Barton v. Murrain, 27 Mo. 235, that an exemplification of a patent certified by the commissioner of the general land office was properly received in evidence without proof of the loss of the original.

2. evidence of custom : possession of patent,

It is also objected that the court erred in refusing to allow defendant to show that it was the custom in the early days of the State, and was usual for parties * . 1 to assign duplicate certificates of land entries by writing on the back of the duplicate, and that such assignment was usually recognized as a deed or sufficient conveyance. We cannot see upon what principle this evidence could have been- received. Under the law of Congress an assignment of the certificate of entry would-have authorized the issuance of the patent in the name of the assignee, and if defendant intended to rely upon such assignment, the evidence offered was not competent to establish it. Nor was it admissible for the purpose of explaining Witliington’s possession of the .patent, which could avail nothing to those claiming under Withington, unless it was also shown that he became the possessor of it by virtue of an assignment of the certificate or in some other way recognized by law as sufficient to pass a right to it.

3. statute of dimiTA.TIONS: possessionwithoutcoior of title: color of title without posjudged.

It is also insisted that error was committed by the court in excluding, on plaintiffs’ motion, the deeds and records offered by defendant to prove his . . ^ A title.* It is very clear that the evidence thus J excluded (which is hereinafter referred to) did not establish, nor tend to establish, that defendant was the owner of the legal title. The evidence wholly failed to show that John Withington, from whom *606defendant claimed the title through these deeds and records, ever had any title to the land in dispute.
It is, however, claimed that although the deeds did not establish title, as the other evidence tended to show actual adverse occupancy thereunder of part of the tract, with a claim of ownership and acts of ownership exercised over the whole tract, it was error to exclucle them from the consideration of the jury. The proposition thus assumed is undoubtedly correct provided there was evidence of such adverse possession for a sufficient length of time to bar the action of plaintiffs. We do not think that the evidence shows such possession. All the evidence touching that subject, as well as the written evideuce found in the deeds and records offered by defendant, was, in substance, as follows : John Withington claimed the land as early as 1833 ; the patent therefor was issued September 9th, 1835, to John W. Avery. On January 1st, 1841, Withington mortgaged the land to William North to secure a note for $790.98, which was duly recorded the same year. On the 22nd day of June, 1842, John Withington sold the same land to William North, and Hamilton, sheriff', conveyed the interest of Withington and Potts in the same land to William North, by deed, dated the 11th day of April, 1846. William North died in 1865. ’ On the 22nd day of June, 1872, in partition among the heirs of William North, in St. Louis circuit court, this land was allotted to Joseph W. and Nannie M. North, who, in April, 1873, conveyed it to appellant. ' It was assessed to John Withington from 1832 to 1843, inclusive, and to North from 1843 till his death, and from then to his estate until sold to appellant, and after that to appellant. John Withington owned a tract of land adjoining the land in dispute, and, from at least 1837 till his death, cultivated and rented out a field of about twenty acres, about five acres of which field in fact was on the land in dispute, and the rest of the field was on Withing-ton’s adjoining tract. There is no evidence that any part of this field was ever known to be on the land in dispute *607until the fact was ascertained by a survey in 1857. When Withington sold to North, in 1843, he was in .possession of this field, and did not transfer his possession to North, but continued to hold and use the whole field as before, and from his death in 1853 to 1864, his widow, Sarah Withing-ton, kept possession of the whole field; some years cultivating it and some years renting it out. James M. Ming was attending to Mr. North’s business in 1857, and sug- . gested to him to have the woodland tract surveyed in order to ascertain the line between the land in dispute in this action and the Withington tract adjoining it; and, as agent of Mr. North, had the land surveyed to ascertain where the line was, and four or five acres of the cleared land was found to be on the eighty in dispute, and Ming reported the fact to North, and he did nothing about .Mrs. Withing-ton’s possession, and from that time Ming had the property assessed and paid the taxes; North did not turn Mrs. Withington out of possession, or in any way interfere with it;' from 1861 or 1862 till 1872, rails'were made on said land two or three times, numbering in all 1,000. In 1869, 1870, 1871, trespassers cut railroad ties upon it, and were driven off .by North. The land was known in the neighborhood as North’s, who had a farm adjoining it. Besides , the Withington field there was no improvement on the land till 1874, when defendant built, a house or cabin on it. There was no evidence tending to show that the land was not suitable for farming purposes nor susceptible of cultivation. There was no evidence that North, or those claiming under him, previous to 1874, were in the actual possession of the five acres of the land in dispute and included in the twenty acre Withington field. On the contrary, Withington remained in possession of the whole field after he conveyed to North in 1843, the same as before the conveyance, till his death in 1852 or 1853, after which time his widow remained in possession by herself and tenant till 1864, when the fence was washed away, and the land was not afterwards occupied or cultivated till about *6081874, when defendant went upon it. It also appears that it was not known that any part of the land in dispute was included in Withington’s held till 1857, when the lines were run between the land in controversy and the Withington tract, and the fact ascertained, and that after its ascertainment Mrs. Withington remained in possession as before. There is nothing in the evidence to show that either Withington, in his life-time, or Mrs, Withington, after his death, held as tenant of North. The Withington possession was possession without color of title, and North’s color of title was unaccompanied by possession. We áre, therefore, of the opinion that the .court was justified in excluding the deeds offered in evidence and also in refusing the instructions asked by defendant upon the subject of adverse possession.
It is also insisted that the verdict, as shown by the transcript, was for “the plaintiffj” and not for “plaintiffs,” and there being more than one plaintiff, therefore the judgment should be reversed. The recital of the verdict contained in the judgment, is as follows: “ We, the jury, find for plaintiffs * * ” If this was a mis-recital of the verdict defendant should have called the attention of the court to it in his motion to set aside the judgment. This was not done, and as the judgment follows the verdict as recited therein, we shall not, on account of the alleged discrepancy, disturb the judgment. Judgment affirmed.
All concur.
Aeeirmed.