63 P. 285 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff in error sued defendants in error to recover the possession of a certain tract of land, alleging title in fee and right of possession. The answer was a general denial and plea of the statute of limitations. On the second trial to the court and jury there was a verdict and judgment for the defendants. Plaintiff appeals. The tract, of land in controversy was accretion caused by the change of channel of the Missouri river. The parties to the cause were owners of different tracts of land surveyed by the government and originally bounded in part by the meander line of the river, and the controversy was as to whose land the tract in controversy was an accretion.
The first error assigned is that the court permitted' the defendants to give oral testimony in regard to an
The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth assignments of error are based upon this same contention, namely, that it was not competent to prove this transaction and introduce the deeds in evidence, notwithstanding the description therein was probably insufficient to convey the land as agreed upon.
The eleventh and twelfth assignments of error are based upon the refusal of the court to give an instruction that the second clause of the answer was not sufficient to present an issue of the bar of the statute of limitations. The answer was, in effect, that the cause of action of the plaintiff, if he had any, had not accrued to him within fifteen years. This is a sufficient plea of the statute of limitations.
The thirteenth assignment of error is that the court
The fourteenth assignment of error is that the court refused to instruct the jury that the agreement of compromise under which the defendants conceded twenty rods of the land to the plaintiff and deeded the same to him, taking the plaintiff’s quitclaim for the remainder of the land in controversy, was such a break in the continuity of the possession of the defendants as precluded them from taking advantage of the fifteen-year statute. The court gave this instruction in substance, though not in the same form, in the thirteenth paragraph of its instructions to the jury.
The fifteenth assignment of error is that the court refused to instruct the jury that the deed made March 13, 1895, pursuant to the compromise heretofore spoken of, did not convey any lands to the defendants, and that they could not hold any land, or any part thereof, under the deed.
The sixteenth and seventeenth instructions are the same in substance. If that deed had been the only evidence of the right of possession relied upon by the defendants, the instruction would have been applicable. But it was not a question as to whether the defendants were entitled to the possession of the land under the deed, but under all the facts and circumstances shown in connection therewith. It was not competent to single out one item of evidence and say the defendants could not recover on that alone.
The eighteenth assignment of error is that the court refused to instruct the jury that the defendants could not successfully resist the claim of the plaintiff under
The nineteenth assignment of error is that the court refused to instruct the jury that a payment of taxes on the tracts of lands owned by the plaintiff, and to which he claimed the accretion had been made, was a payment of the taxes on the accretions per se, and that if the plaintiff paid them during the fifteen years’ possession of the defendants, that possession was not exclusive. The evidence in the record does not authorize the instruction, because the proof of payment of taxes was confined to an assessment of the original acres of land and not of any accretions. Nor would the proposition be tenable even if the evidence justified it.
The twentieth assignment of error is that the court refused to give several instructions at the request of the plaintiff. The instructions were given by the court in its charge.
The twenty-first assignment of error is that the court refused to give an instruction requested by the plaintiff. The instruction is not set out in the brief.
The refusal to give the instruction, the basis of the twenty-third assignment of error, is without merit, as the court gave it to the jury in its own charge. The same is true of the twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh assignments of error.
The twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth assignments of error-are that the court misdirected the jury, first, in telling them that to constitute adverse possession of land, so as to bar an action for its recovery, the possession must be actual, open, continuous, and exclusive. The plaintiff had requested the court to give this instruction in three different forms, and now ob
The other instruction complained of was to the effect that the plaintiff could not rescind this agreement without putting the defendants in statu quo, claiming that the same was induced by the fraudulent representations of the defendant. This was not error.
The thirtieth assignment of error is that the court denied the plaintiff’s motion for judgment upon the special findings of fact. This is based upon the contentions heretofore noticed, and they having failed this must likewise fail.
The remaining contention is that the court denied the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. In this, plaintiff relies upon his preceding assignments of error. There having been no prejudicial error committed by the court that would warrant it in granting the plaintiff a new trial, the motion was properly overruled, and the judgment must be affirmed.