By the Court,
This action was brought under section 569, of the code of civil procedure [Comp. L., 224.] for the purpose of quieting the .title of plaintiff to lot No. 208, Kansas avenue, in the city of Topeka.
The plaintiff alleges in his petition that he has the title to, and is in the peaceable possession of said lot and
The defendant denies the title and possession of plaintiff and sets up title and possession in himself.
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff' shows a deed from George M. McKown and wife to plaintiff for the lot, bearing date October 26, 1859, and further testimony showing that the lot was vacant and unoccupied and had been for several years.
The defendant introduced a tax deed for the lot, and proved the payment of taxes thereon for several years; and also, that he had built a sidewalk fronting on said lot. There was much evidence as to the validity of the proceedings, supporting the tax title, which is not necessary to be inserted here, as it is not considered necessary to examine and pass upon the merits of any of the various questions raised thereon — for we do not think they necessarily enter into the case.
The section under which the action is brought is as follows: “ An action may be brought by any person in possession, by himself or tenant, of real property, against any person who claims an estate or interest therein adverse to him for the purpose of determining such adverse estate or interest.” Before a person can sustain an action under this section he must bring himself within the conditions it prescribes. It is not any person who may bring a party into court for the purpose of determining the validity of his title. The plaintiff must show some right in himself and some injury to that right by another before he can subject him to the costs and vexations of a lawsuit.
Rkai. Actions : If his possession be disturbed by unlawful intrusion the remedy is simply to recover the
It has long been an established principle of the courts of chancery to give relief to the holders of the legal title to real estate where some adverse claim existed, calculated to cast doubt or suspicion upon the title, or seriously embarrass the owner, either in the maintaining his rights or in disposing of his property, whether such adverse claim was quietly held or openly asserted. The section of our code, quoted above, goes further, and authorizes the interposition of the courts in cases where any person is “ in possession by himself or tenant ” to quiet his possession as against any imperfect or insufficient claim of title. The language of the section, as well as the objects to be accomplished by it, seem alike to impel the mind to the conclusion that the possession must be an actual and not a mere constructive possession. Constructively the owner of land is as much in possession where it is occupied by his tenant as when by himself, and if the possession mentioned in the section was a mere constructive one then the words “ or tenant” have no significance; but, by giving to the word possession its primary legal meaning of an actual possession the words “or tenant” become of importance by extending the right to claim the interposition of the court one step beyond actual possession to that of a tenant of the person. The section is not intended to give the right to bring an action to quiet title, for that existed previously, but to authorize an additional remedy to quiet the posses
In Ohio, under a section of their laws that authorized suits to be brought by the holder of the legal title in possession to settle and determine adverse claims, it was held that the possession must be an actual one, [see 8 Ohio R., 382,] and this construction is adhered to in that State under the same section of the code. [See 17 Ohio S., 72.] So it has been held in Missouri under a similar statute, [31 Mo., 333;] and in New York, [16 N. Y., 519.] In this case the plaintiff had not the legal title nor was he in actual possession, consequently did not bring himself within the conditions necessary to institute an action, either to quiet title under the ancient well settled principles of equity, or to quiet possession under the section of our code. He alleges in his petition that he is the holder of the legal title and in peaceable possession of the lot. In his proof he shows neither, and the court below very properly refused to grant him the relief prayed for. It might be properly mentioned that it does not appear that the grantor of the plaintiff ever had possession of the lot, or had the shadow of a title to it, or that the plaintiff himself, by any act, or in anyway, ever took possession under the deed, or in any way exercised acts of ownership over the property, but allowed another to pay taxes and build sidewalk without making his interest in the estate known. It would be a great stretch of the law, to hold that under such circumstances the plaintiff could claim to be in constructive possession of the lot in controversy.
The judgment is affirmed.