136 Ala. 631 | Ala. | 1902
Adverse possession of land against the title is always wrongful until its long continuance has ripened title in the disseizor. But it by no means follows that every wrongful possession is adverse to the true owner. Whether a wrongful or unauthorized possession is adverse depends, among other considerations, upon the character of the claim under which it is held. It must he hostile to the whole world. It must be a claim of right against all persons. It must not be in subserviency to or in recognition of the title of' the true owner. If there is recognition of the true title, the possession is not adverse to that title, however wrongful or unauthorized it may be in every other aspect. Thus if A takes possession of the land of B, and holds it, as and assuming to be the agent of B when he is not B’s agent, or, being the agent of B but without authority as such to enter upon and hold his principal’s land, his possession, though wrongful and unauthorized, is no more adverse to B than if he were in fact the latter’s agent and duly authorized to take and hold possession for him. So’ where the administrator of an estate assumes that he has power and authority in that
Moreover, the case was tried below on the theory that the defendant’s devisor, Mrs. O. T. Ashford, the wife of the defendant, A. E. Ashford, had acquired title to the land in controversy by adverse possession against these plaintiffs. It was shown that whatever possession she originally acquired was taken under Dr. E. C. Ashford. I-Ie was an heir of Thomas Ashford, deceased, the ancestor of the plaintiffs and of A. E. Ashford. As such heir he had title to an undivided one-fourth interest in this land. A. E. Ashford had title to the same interest, and the plaintiffs’ immediate ancestors' had title severally to the other two one-fourth interests. A. E. Ashford’s one-fourth interest was sold under execution, and purchased by Dr. E. 0. Ashford — nominally at least. The latter then had two undivided one-fourth interests. He then' undertook to convey whatever interest he acquired at execution sale to Mrs. C. T. Ashford, the wife of the defendant in execution. It was then that she entered upon whatever possession she ever acquired from Dr. Ashford and A. E. Ashford, and the other defendants undertake to testify broadly and roundly that Dr. Ashford then put Mrs. C. T. Ashford in possession of the whole property and that thereafter until her death in 1897 she held the possession of the whole adversely to all the world. W,e suppose that it was intended by these witnesses to depose that she then took possession of this tract of land in its entirety- — all interests in it — and so held it to her death. But there is, to say the least, abundant evidence in the ca.se to authorize the jury to conclude that even if she did take and hold possession of the whole tract, it was only in her capacity as a tenant in common claiming title only to the one-fourth undivided interest originally owned by A. E. Ashford, sold on execution against him about 1874, purchased by Dr. Ashford and by the latter undertaken to be 'conveyed to Mrs. C. T. Ashford in 1875. And, indeed, 'when Mrs. O'. T. Ashford more than twenty years after approached her end, she
The court erred in allowing the witness A. E. Ashford to testify that “Fred Ashford knew that Carrie T. Ash-ford was in possession of the land sued for, claiming it as her own.” This was a palpable conclusion of fact. The witness could not have absolutely known the fact he thus assumed to depose to at all. His conclusion that it existed was necessarily arrived at by inference from other facts; and it was for the jury, and not for him, to draw whatever deductions in this regard such other facts Avarranted.
That part of the court’s general charge which was in this language: “If when Mrs. Carrie T. Ashford went into possession under the deed from Dr. E. 0. Ashford, if she claimed the AAliole interest in the land sued for, her claim to the Avhole lauds c-onld ripen into a title of ad-vers possession,” is faulty in assuming that Dr. Ashford executed a deed to Mrs. Ashford. It also has a tendency to mislead the jury to the conclusion that the possession of one tenant in common may be adverse to the title of another without an actual ouster of the other and without á knoAvledge of an adverse claim of ownership on the part of the tenant in common in possession being brought home to the tenant out of possession. The law is well settled that the possession of one tenant in common is prima facie presumed to be the possession of all, and that it does not become adverse to the co-tenants unless they are actually ousted, or, short of this, unless the adverse character of the possession of one is actually known to the others, or the possession of the one is so open and notorious in its hostility, and exclusiveness as to put the other tenants on notice of its adverse character.
The folloAving are the assignments of error having reference to the action of the court on request for instructions : “The court erred in refusing to give the charges
Beversed and remanded.