43 Kan. 83 | Kan. | 1890
Opinion by
On the 4th day of August, 1886, the plaintiff in error, by proceedings duly had; appropriated to its use as a right-of-way, “ so much of out-lot No. twenty-four, in the city of "Wathena, as lies within fifty feet on each side of the center line of said railway as now located.” A stream called Peter’s creek runs through this out-lot, and on the creek there is a small mill for making meal and feed, run
Ordinarily in actions of this character the question of title is not in issue, the only controverted question being the amount of compensation to be allowed. (Comp. Laws of 1885, p. 225, § 86.) In the case of Gulf Rld. Co. v. Owen, 8 Kas. 409, it is said:
“In the proceedings to procure condemnation, the corporation is the actor. It applies to the county commissioners to lay off the route as desired by the corporation, and to fix the value of the land which the corporation desires to appropriate, and assess the damages arising from the appropriation. The corporation is the moving cause, and the proceedings by the commissioners are all at its instance, and in its interest, and for its benefit. The object is to compel an unwilling landowner to part with his property for a just compensation. The corporation is to give written notice to all actual occupants of the land over which the route of the road is designated, where the land has not been purchased by or donated to the company; (§ 49, p. 203, Gen. Stat.) Before the board acts, notice is to be published in a newspaper; (§86, p.'213;) and it is also made the duty of the board to appraise and value and assess*85 the damages of each owner separately, when there appear to be different interests in the land; (§82, p. 212.) In all the proceedings up to the filing of the report, the steps are at the peril of the company. While, from the fact that the occupant is entitled to notice, and all others interested are notified by the publication required, it is apparent that those interested in the land may appear if they choose before the commissioners to protect their interests, they are under no obligations to do so, and nothing like a default can be taken against them. If •in the discharge of their duties the commissioners err as to the ownership of the land, can it be supposed that the company, by following the error, and paying the wrong person, relieves itself from the obligation to pay the real owner of the land ? Land-owners are not compelled to stand by with their title-papers in their hands. The company does not act under any different rules than those that govern any land-buyer. If he buys from the wrong person, he does so at his peril. It is the duty of the railroad company to ascertain who are the owners of the land it desires to appropriate, and it is at the risk of the company that it pays for the land. Such being the state of the case, and the obligation of the company, where no appeal is taken, what change is wrought by the appeal ? The law is, that ‘an appeal shall be had from the determination of the commissioners as to the value of the land so appropriated;’ (§86, p. 213, Gen. Stat.) This is the main issue to be tried. It is probably true that by appropriate pleadings the company would be authorized to show that the appellant did not own the entire land, but that a separate interest is in another, or that some one else owned all the land. But unless such an issue is made by the pleadings, the position of the appellant as to the question of title is not different from what it was before the appeal was taken. The appellant is placed by the law, and by his own action in taking the appeal, in the position of saying: ‘The appraisement of my land and the assessment of damages made by the commissioners are too small; I desire a retrial of that issue in the district court.’ Is he bound to show a perfect legal title, such as would entitle him to recover in ejectment ? We think not. He was not attempting to recover money of the company. He proved that he was in the occupancy of the land, claiming absolute title. This is 'prima facie evidence of title to land everywhere, as well-as to personal property; (2 Greenl. Ev., § 555; Ward’s Heirs v. McIntosh, 12 Ohio St. 231.) It is enough to sustain trespass and to resist a recovery in ejectment until a perfect*86 legal title is shown. That is, an actual possession under a claim of absolute title, is prima faoie evidence of seisin in fee simple, and sufficient till the contrary appears.”
On the trial this state of facts was developed as to the title to the out-lot: A patent from the United States to Milton E. Bryant as president of the incorporated town of Wathena, Doniphan county, Kansas, of the quarter-section of land in which the out-lot is situate, of date July 1, 1861; a deed from M. E. Bryant and wife to John H. Cox for out-lot No. twenty-four, of record May 22, 1867; (this deed is not made by Bryant in his official capacity as president of the incorporated town of Wathena, but is made as a personal conveyance;) a deed signed personally by Elizabeth Cox, but reciting in the deed and acknowledgment that she is the administratrix of John H. Cox, deceased, to Charles Wright; (this deed was executed on the 30th day of April, 1867;) a deed from J. W. Cook, administrator of the estate of Charles Wright, deceased,
During the time the title was vested in Jeremiah Johnson he was a resident of the state of Iowa, and was absent from this state. Assuming as an undisputed fact that Cox was in the actual possession of the out-lot as early as 1863, the sale to Johnson was made in 1871, eight years after the actual possession by Cox. The deed from Johnson and wife to the defendant in error Cook was made on the 14th day of January, 1882, and these proceedings were instituted in June, 1886, a little more than four years after Cook acquired title. These two periods cover something over twelve and less than thirteen years.
“There remains the other question, that arising on the statute of limitations. The deed was of record more than five years prior to the commencement of the action, but the defendant had not been present in the state for that length of time. Upon this counsel contends that the question of pres*88 ence in or absence from, the state has no effect upon the operation of the statute, so far as it is based upon the record of a deed. We cannot concur in this view. The arrangement of the sections of the statute forbids any such construction. The various sections prescribing periods of limitation in actions real and personal, and including in the former cases in which the record of a deed is material, are grouped together, and then follow exceptions to those general clauses of limitation. To hold that those exceptions do not apply to all the clauses of limitation to which they are in their nature applicable, is to engraft upon the statute something not placed there by the legislature. One of those exceptions relates to the disability of the plaintiff. By what authority shall the courts say that this applies to ordinary actions for the recovery of real estate, but not to those brought by a judgment debtor against one holding under a recorded sheriff’s deed ? There is nothing in the language or in the arrangement to indicate any intention in the legislature to make the exception applicable in one case and not in the other. It certainly can apply in both cases. It would be legislating, for us to distinguish. Just so where there is a disability on the part of the defendant. If his situation is such that he may not invoke the protection of the statute in the one case, it is for the legislature alone to say that when similarly situated he may invoke it in any other case. That the defendant was absent from the state, his own testimony shows; that in an ordinary action to recover the possession of real estate, such absence would prevent the running of the statute, is conceded, and we see no reason to doubt its efficacy in the present case. We see no force in the argument that because the cause of the action accrues from the taking of possession, and not from the recording of the deed, therefore there is no exception to the running of the statute after the record. The truth is, the record of the deed shortens the general statute, and the fact that that is shortened in certain cases is no reason why there should be no exception in those cases.”
The case of Beebe v. Doster, 36 Kas. 666, is one in which it was held that a limitation in the tax law must be construed without reference to the general limitations contained in the code. The twenty-second instruction given by the trial court is as follows:
“And in determining the question of fifteen years’ posses*89 sion by the plaintiff and his grantor, you will also deduct the time that the said Jeremiah Johnson was absent, if at all, from the state of Kansas, and was not in possession of the land himself or by tenant.”
The concluding words of this instruction are in direct conflict with the case of Morrell v. Ingle. The attorneys of the defendant below requested the court to instruct the jury that the statute of limitations would not run during the time that Jeremiah Johnson held the title and was a non-resident of and absent from the state. The court refused to so instruct, but held the law as given in the twenty-second instruction, as above recited. In the eleventh instruction given by the court, the jury are told:
“The deed of Elizabeth Cox to Charles Wright, of date April 30, 1867, can only be regarded as conveying to said Wright the one-half interest in the land therein described. The children of said John H. Cox, deceased, would then own the other one-half interest in said land.”
This is in effect saying that the conveyance was the personal deed of Elizabeth Cox, and not her conveyance as administratrix of the estate of John H. Cox, deceased. This takes away all consideration of the five-years limitation, as provided in the second subdivision of §16 of the code, as applicable to the heirs of John H. Cox.
As another trial is to be anticipated, we might say in view of it, that as the statute makes it obligatory on the part of a railroad company that constructs its road across, along or upon any stream of water, watercourse, etc., to restore the stream, watercourse, etc., thus crossed, intersected, or touched, to such state as to not necessarily impair its usefulness, the trial court should allow the railroad company to show what was done in that direction, and also all offers or efforts to rebuild the dam, and to prove what it would cost to restore to the property the dam and the water power to the extent it was enjoyed and could be used before the construction of the road. It may also be said that it seems as if it is stretching a liberal rule beyond a reasonable limit,' to allow witnesses who make no pretense to a knowledge of mills, or the milling business, to testify to the value of such property, and base their estimate of valuation upon the earning capacity of the machinery, or what they had seen it do.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial.
By the Court: It is so ordered.