21 Conn. 413 | Conn. | 1851
As this case has been submitted to us without argument, and no brief has been presented on one side, we are not aware on what ground the plaintiff would vindicate the first claim made by him, on the trial, that, although the defendant, while he occupied the demanded premises, claimed title thereto in himself, yet, that, as he so occupied by virtue of a parol gift only from the owner, (who was his father and the plaintiff’s testator,) such possession was not adverse to the owner, but was to be deemed in law subordinate to his title. If indeed nothing had appeared in the case, excepting merely that the defendant had been in the possession of the land, his possession would be deemed constructively to have been in subordination to the legal title, and therefore under, and not adverse to, the true owner; but when to the fact of his possession is superadded the fact, that it was exercised by him under a claim of title in himself, the latter fact rebuts the presumption that he occupied under the owner, or any other person, and shews therefore, that the possession was adverse. Indeed, it is the claim of title with which a possession is accompanied, which shews that the pos
The question in Sumner v. Stearns, 6 Metc. 337, was precisely like the present; and the views which were then taken by the court, are such as we have expressed. The charge below on this point, which was in accordance with them, was therefore unexceptionable.
The remaining point respects the correctness of the rule laid down to the jury, in the charge below, in regard to the declarations of Simon Comins, the father of the defendant, and the owner of the demanded premises.
The question between the parties was, whether the defendant had been in the adverse possession of the land. This involved two enquiries: first, whether the acts of the defendant on the land, were such as properly to constitute a possession by him; and secondly, if they were, whether such
A new trial is not advised.
New trial denied.