58 Wis. 202 | Wis. | 1883
This is an action of ejectment. The appellant sets up adverse possession for more than twenty years previous to the commencement of the action as a defense. Upon the trial in the circuit court the judge instructed the jury to render a verdict for the plaintiff. To this instruction the appellant excepted. The only material question raised upon this appeal is, Was there any evidence given on the trial which tended to prove the defense of adverse possession set up by the appellant? If there was, then it was error to direct a verdict for the plaintiff.
The evidence upon the trial showed that the respondent, Isaac B. Allen, was the patentee of the United States, and that he had made no conveyance thereof. Lydia C. Allen was the widow of Abram Allen, deceased, the father of the respondent, and claimed title to the land as devisee under the will of said Abram Allen. The will of Abram Allen was dated December, 1877, and was probated in 1878. The land was patented to the respondent by the United States in 1849. It was probably entered by the father a year or two before the patent was issued. In 1849, when the patent was issued, the respondent was a child about five years old, and lived with Abram Allen, his father, and continued to live with him from that time until he became of age, and for some years after. Shortly after the land was entered, and before the patent was issued to the son, the father, Abram Allen, took possession of the land, and occupied it contin
The Revised Statutes of 1878, sec. 4210, provide that “ in -every action to recover real property or the possession thereof, the person establishing a legal title to the premises shall be presumed to have been possessed thereof within the time required by law, and the occupation of such premises by another person shall be deemed to have been under and in subordination to the legal title, unless it appear that suc.h ■premises have been held and possessed adversely to such legal title for ten years, under the provisions of the next section, or twenty years under the provisions of section -4213, before the commencement of such action.” Sec. 4213 reads as follows: “ When there has been an actual continued •occupation of any premises under a claim of title exclusive of any other right, but not founded upon any written instrument, or any judgment or decree, the premises so actually occupied, and no other, shall be deemed to be held ad-wersely.” Sec. 4207, R. S., is as follows: “No action for the
On the part of the learned counsel for the appellant it is insisted that the mere proof of occupation or possession of the. premises by the defendant, or of those under whom she claims, for more than twenty years, is of itself evidence that such occupation is “ under a claim of title exclusive of any other right,” within the meaning of said sec. 4213, without any further proof. For the purposes of this case, it may be admitted that from proof of .occupation and use by the defendant, or those under whom she claims, for more than twenty years, where such occupation and -use are consistent with the
In the case of Link v. Doerfer the proof showed that Doerfer had been in possession of the land for sixteen years, working and improving the same, but there was no proof that he made any claim of ownership except what might be inferred from the fact that he worked and improved the same, rendering no account to the real owner. The learned chief justice says “ that after continuous occupation under claim of title for twenty years, the entry shall be deemed to have been adverse. But such presumption would only shift the on-us prdbancli, and does not disturb the rule that the entry controls the claim of title under it. Pepper v. O'Dowd, 39 Wis., 538. But the presumption is founded on continued possession under claim of title for twenty years, and does .not arise until the statute has run upon it. . It does not sooner arise upon claim of title, and does not arise at all without claim of title. Upon the possession of Hilbert, as
The learned judge who delivered the opinion in the case of Davis v. Bowmar, 55 Miss., 742-766, says: “It is certain that appellant took possession, under some sort of right in himself, of a wilderness, felled the forest, cleared the jungle, erected fences and buildings, made the place his home, cultivated it, protected it by levees, had it assessed as his own, paid taxes on it, and enjoyed exclusive possession and control of it as his own from 1836 to 1863; and in the uncertainty, if any, from the imperfect knowledge we have, as to how the possession began, appellant is entitled to the benefit of the just presumption that he was holding as owner from having acted so long and from the beginning as owners do, and so inconsistently with the idea of title in any other than- himself.” This view of the effect to be given to evidence of long-continued occupation and use of real estate by a person in the actual possession thereof, and
But the difficulty with the defense of adverse possession under the statute in this case is that the undisputed evidence .shows that Abram Allen, under whom the defendant claims, did not enter into the possession of the premises under any claim of title hostile to the plaintiff’s title. On the contrary, it shows beyond dispute that he entered, claiming the right to enter, under the title of his son, the plaintiff. He admits that he purposely entered the land in the name of his son, and it must be presumed that the patent was also issued to the son under his direction and with his assent. The evidence, also, shows conclusively that he recognized the son’s title for many years after he took actual possession thereof. This evidence completely destroys the presumption that his entry into the possession was hostile to the plaintiff’s title.
There is another fact in this case which makes strongly against the claim of the defendant that Abram Allen’s possession and occupancy of the land were adverse and hostile to the title of the plaintiff. It is the fact that Abram Allen was the father of the plaintiff, who was.at the time a mere child living with his father, and so doing until long after he came of age. In such case mere possession and use of the premises by the father, and the payment of taxes thereon, would not have the same force in proving an adverse entry
We are unable to see how the plaintiff is prejudiced by the order of the county court distributing the estate of the deceased. His right to the land in question is in no way dependent upon the will of his father. He neither claims it as heir or devisee of his father, but by grant from the United States. The fact that his father undertook by his will to devise this land of the son to the wife of the deceased, and in the same will devised to the son other real estate to which the father held the title, does not prevent the son from claiming such last-named real estate under the will, without abandoning his claim to the lands described in such will, and which are owned by him by a title paramount to that of the testator.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.