The property in controversy in this suit is a certain strip of land, sixty feet wide, in the incorporated town of El Dorado, in this State, and is claimed by that town as a street. On the 13th day of April, 1892, C. W. Smith, T. J. Moore and his wife, S. E. Moore, being the owners thereof, donated it to the incorporated town of El Dorado for street purposes. A condition of this donation was as follows: “This property was dedicated to the town on condition solely that it was to be surveyed, laid out as streets, opened and put in good condition, as streets, and kept up and worked as such; and when the town failed or refused to keep them up as such streets, they are to revert to the present owners and donors or their assigns or successors.” The town failing to survey, lay out or open it as a street for about two years, C. W. Smith, T. J. Moore, and Mrs. S. E. Moore conveyed it and other lands, on the 8th day of March, 1894, to R. A. Faulkner, who on the 17th day of February, 1893, conveyed one-half of it to W. M. Green, who and Faulkner, on the 4th day of May, 1903, conveyed to W. W. Brown and John C. Ritchie, who in 1903 conveyed it to Ritchie Grocery Company. The last grantee and those under whom it holds have held actual, open, continuous, hostile, exclusive, adverse possession of it for more than seven years, building and constructing lasting, permanent and valuable improvements on the same. By this means it acquired title to the property.
The town of El Dorado insists that it is entitled to hold the property under Little Rock v. Wright,
In Ft. Smith v. McKibbin,
“The distinction between a vendor and a stranger in such a case relates to the character of evidence necessary to show that the possession was adverse. If the parties are strangers in title, possession and the exercise of acts of ownership are, in themselves, in the absence of explanatory evidence, proof that the holding is adverse; whereas, if the vendor,'after having executed deed, continues to remain in possession, the natural and reasonable inference, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, would be that he holds in recognition of the rights of the person to whom he has conveyed; it not being supposed, from mere acts of possession and ownership not inconsistent with the rights of the vendee, that the vendor intends to deny the title he has conveyed.”
In this case the possession was held by strangers.
Decree affirmed.
