This was an action to quiet title to a quarter section of land in Turner county, a one-half interest in which was-claimed hy the plaintiff. Findings and judgment being in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant Thomas McCarty has appealed to this court from the judgment alone. The only questions before us, therefore, are as to whether or not the court’s conclusions of law are supported by the findings of fact.
The court’s findings may be thus summarized: Prior to the month of February, 1872, one Sarah McCarty filed upon the quarter section of land in controversy and made final proofs, and in that month she married Dominick Dillon, and was-thereafter, and until' the time of her death in February, 1873, his wife, and resided with-him in Turner county. She died intestate, leaving as her heirs Dominick- Dillon (bpr husband), her mother, three brothers, and two-sisters, four of whom are made parties defendant in this action. On October 7, 1879, a treasurer’s deed for the taxes of 1875 upon said' land was issued to Dennis McCarty, one of the heirs of Sarah Mc~
It will be seen that in 1872 Sarah McCarty, the sister of the appellant, entered the land in controversy; that she afterwards married Dominick Dillon, and died in 1873, leaving the said Dominick Dillon, her husband, and the other defendants named in the action, as her heirs at law. As Sarah McCarty Dillon left no children, under the laws of this state Dominick Dillon succeeded as one. of her heirs to one-half of her real property, and the other half became the property of her mother and brothers and sisters. Dominick Dillon, therefore, held one-half of the property as co-tenant with the brothers and sisters. The land in controversy at that time was unfenced and unoccupied prairie land, and so remained until 1884 or 1885, except a few acres which had been plowed or cultivated prior to the latter named date. In 1879 Dennis McCarty, one of the co-tenants, obtained a tax deed for the property, and thereafter and until the time of his death paid the taxes thereon, and since his death in 1891 the appellant has paid the taxes on the said property.
It is contended by the appellant that Dennis McCarty by virtue
While it is conceded by the "respondent that a tenant in common may oust his co-tenants and acquire the title to the whole property by an adverse possession, the ouster must be of such a character as to notify-his co-tenants that he denies their right to the property and holds the same adversely to them. Yet the mere taking of a tax deed to unimproved, wild land, without any exclusive residence upon and occupation of the same, does not constitute an ouster — such ouster as will set the statute of limitations hi. motion.
These facts lead to an affirmance of the judgment, and the same is affirmed.
