88 P. 696 | Utah | 1907
This is an action instituted by plaintiff (hereinafter called respondent) against defendant (hereinafter designated appellant) for the possession of a strip of ground in the complaint alleged to be 2 feet 4 inches wide and. 10 rods long, and as being part of lot 4, in block 14, of Salt Lake City survey. The appellant answered by a general denial and by setting up two equitable defenses: (1) An agreed boundary line; and (2) by pleading estoppel arising out of the mailing of improvements by him on the strip of ground, .with the knowledge and consent of respondent, to remove which would cause appellant irreparable injury and damage. Upon substantially the foregoing issues a trial was had to the court. The court, in substance, found that the respondent since the 21st day of October, 1898, was the owner and entitled to the possession of a certain parcel of ground (describing it) which included the strip in question; that on or about the 1st day of January, 1902, appellant wrongfully entered upon a strip of ground along the south side of respondent’s land above described, 2.19 feet wide on the west end and .1.4 feet wide on the east end, and that appellant has ever since said date deprived the respondent of the possession thereof; that on April 23, 1902, the respondent and appellant were each the owner in severalty and in possession of two contiguous parcels of land, and that the strip of
At the trial the respondent, in support of his complaint, introduced in evidence a deed describing the parcel of land claimed by him, a plat of the survey made by a competent engineer identifying the property described in the deed and proved possession generally in himself under the deed, together with the fact that respondent had, in 1900, erected a fence on what he supposed to he the south boundary between his and appellant’s land. From the plat and survey and the description in the deed, when taken in connection with the survey, it appeared that the fence was 2.19 feet north of the true south line on the west end and 1.4 feet south of said line on the east end of respondent’s tract of land. After submitting this evidence respondent rested and appellant moved for a nonsuit upon the grounds (1) that it had not been shown that appellant was in possession of the strip in question; (2) that the title to the land in question had not been proved by respondent. The motion was overruled, and'
The appellant now urges that the court erred in overruling the motion for a nonsuit. Appellant, however, argues only the second ground of his motion. Waiving, for the purposes of this case, the question whether or not a party may obtain a reversal of a judgment against him upon the sole ground that the court erred in overruling the motion for a nonsuit, when it is made to appear from the proceedings had subsequent to the motion for nonsuit that the judgment is right, we will proceed to the determination of whether the court erred in overruling the motion in view of the state of the evidence in this case at the time the motion was made. We have indicated above what this state of the evidence was. We think the court did not err in overruling the motion. It is quite true that generally in ejectment .or actions for the possession of real property the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of that of his adversary. It may also be conceded that in order to prove a perfect or complete paper title the plaintiff must connect his title with the original source of title, unless both he and his adversary claim from a common source, in which event it is sufficient to trace his title back to the common source. But the question here presented is whether the respondent was required to show a perfect chain of paper title in order to successfully resist the motion for nonsuit. This seems to be the contention of counsel for appellant. We think that all that was required of respondent was to show a pñma facie title as against appellant. This, we think, respondent did when he produced his deed and in connection therewith a survey clearly identifying the premises and showing possession under or pursuant to the deed. The deed and survey established the extent and boundaries of respondent’s premises, and his possession under the deed certainly was some evidence of title to all the land included within the boundaries. In view of
This is, we think, clearly tbe logic of tbe cases cited by counsel for appellant. In Stevens v. Hauser, 39 N. Y., at page 304, Woodruff, J., speaking for tbe court, says:
“Where a party is under the necessity of proving title, it is not enough to simply produce a deed. He must show possession in the grantor or possession accompanying the deed. Without this, he proves no title. But when, as matter of law and fact, it is found or conceded that a party named has title, that is sufficient — his possession is presumed — and the occupation by any other. person is presumed to he in subordination of the legal title, unless it appear that the premises have been held adversely to such .legal title for twenty years before suit brought.” (Italics ours.)
In our state this adverse title would, of course, only be required to be the statutoay time. Of course-, where one proves a perfect chain of paper title from its original source, no proof of actual possession at all is required. In such event tbe presumption would be all sufficient and tbe title would be a complete and perfect title. But, when this is not done, a title prima facie is shown by a grant from some one who held possession, or by such grant and possession under it by tbe grantee. As against a mere technical objection by any one who, at tbe time tbe objection is made, appears to- be a mere stranger to tbe title, such a prima facie title would seem quite sufficient. To require more against such an objector would require every one to prove a perfect chain of title as against every stranger making any kind of a claim. This the law does not require. If tbe objector has a better
In the case of Slauson v. Goodrich Transp. Co. (Wis.), 74 N. W. 574, 40 L. R. A. 825, also cited bj counsel for appellant, the same doctrine as announced by the New York case is adopted by Justice Bardeen of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin. At page 575 of 74 N. W., page 828 of 40 L. R. A., it is said:
“Still further, there is no evidence that the appellant or her grantors had ever been in possession of the disputed premises, so as to give rise to any presumptions which such possession might give.”
In that case the nonsuit was properly granted. Such is not the condition of the case at bar. When the nonsuit was moved, it appeared from the evidence that respondent in 1898 had purchased 3x10 rods-, for which he obtained a deed, and that in 1899 he erected a dwelling house thereon and thenceforth occupied the premises. In 1900 he, under mistake, erected a fence on what he supposed to be the south line of his three rods. The mere fact, however, of erroneously placing this fence, would not destroy his presumptive right to possession of the strip south of the fence. The fact that appellant claimed it, however, gave rise to conflicting claims which it was proper to settle in court. The respondent has thus shown prima facie title to three rods of ground — that this three rods extended south of the fence — and by the survey the true line was fixed. It thus appeared that prima facie, at least, the title was in respondent, and thus carried with it the presumptive right to possession which appellant disputed. The rule we invoke is well stated in L'Engle v. Reed, 27 Fla., at page 359, 9 South., at page 213, in the following language:
“A familiar rule in ejectment is that the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of his adversary’s title. It must be observed, however, that this rule does not require, a plaintiff to exhibit a perfect chain of title from the original*69 source as against one wrongfully in possession. If it lid, one without a shadow of title or right might take possession of and successfully hold the estate of his neighbor, whose title has a defective link in it. The application of this principle is not to be understood as requiring that a plaintiff in making out his title shall be compelled in the first instance to trace the claim back to the first grantor, but only that he shall exhibit so much as will put the defendant to the support of his possession by a title superior to one of mere naked possession.”
A plaintiff may know in advance just wbat the claim and proof of bis adversary will be in respect to tbe title. He may know tbat the title of both, in fact, comes from a common source, or that the title ultimately will not be an issue at all. He thus need not prepare nor prove more than to make a prima facie case. This is just what respondent did in this case, and the law requires no more. (Hartley v. Ferrell, 9 Fla. 375; McFarlane v. Ray, 14 Mich. 465-469; Hall v. Kellogg, 16 Mich. 135.) Prom the foregoing authorities we deduce the law to be that, in case title or ownership is denied in actions for possession, the title cannot be proved by merely prodpcing a deed, but, when such a deed is produced from a grantor who was in possession, or where possession is taken and held under or pursuant to such deed and the premises described in the deed are clearly identified, then a prima facie title is shown sufficient to withstand a motion for nonsuit. In another class of cases mere possession under color or claim of title is sufficient. This class is illustrated by the case of Kunhel v. Lumber Co., 29 Utah 13-22, 81 Pac. 897. The court, therefore, did not err in overruling the motion for nonsuit and this assignment must be overruled.
Proceeding now to the merits of the ease, we find that appellant assigns error upon the finding of the court wherein it is found that there was nó agreement between appellant and respondent respecting the boundary line between their respective tracts or parcels of land. Hpon this point we have carefully examined all the evidence, and we think the finding is not only sustained by the evidence, but any other finding would have been erroneous. There is no' evidence in the record upon which a finding that an agreement
The only other assignment that is deemed necessary to notice is the one wherein appellant asserts error upon the ground that the court found that respondent was not estopped from claiming the true boundary line to be south of the
The Supreme Court of California in the case of Maye v. Yappen, 23 Cal., at pages 308 and 309, lays down the rules relating to the doctrine of estoppel as follows:
“(1) That the party making the admission by his declarations or conduct was apprised of the true state of his own title; (2) that he made the admission with express intention to deceive, or with such careless or culpable negligence as to amount to constructve fraud; (3) that the other party was not only destitute of all knowledge, but of the means of acquiring such knowledge; and (4) that he relied directly upon such admission, and will be injured by allowing its truth to be disproved.”
This court has substantially adopted the foregoing rules in the case of Trust Co. v. Wagener, 12 Utah 1, 40 Pac. 764, and Mining Co. v. Juab County, 22 Utah 395, 62 Pac. 1024. The following cases are, all bound ary-line cases involving the
The judgment is clearly right, and therefore ought to be, and accordingly is, affirmed, with costs.