91 Mo. 628 | Mo. | 1887
This is an action of ejectment to recover the southwest quarter of section 22, township 56, range 21, in the county of Chariton, The petition, in the usual form, was filed January 31, 1882; the answer of defendants, David and Elizabeth Ballew, was a general denial. Defendant, Long, filed a separate answer, and, in addition to a general denial, alleged that the land sued for was “military bounty land,” and set up the two years statute of limitations, and for a further de-fence alleged “that he and those under whom he claims have been in the actual possession of the premises in question for many years before the commencement of this suit, and that said premises have not been
The errors assigned are: The refusal of the court to give plaintiffs’ declarations of law numbered three and five, and the giving of defendants’ declarations, numbered one, two, three, and four. It is conceded that the right of action of all the plaintiffs was not barred by the two years statute, and the finding of the court was upon the theory that plaintiffs’ recovery was barred by section 1 of the statute of February 27, 1874. Laws of 1874, p. 118 ; R. S., sec. 3225.
The point made, that no issue, under that statute, was raised by the pleadings, owing to the insufficiency of Long’s special plea, is not well taken, for, by the express terms of that act, in a case coming within its provisions, the claimant’s recovery is not only barred, but his right and title is ipso facto, vested in the possessor; and, even if it were not so provided, it is well-settled law, in this state, that, in ejectment, it is not necessary to plead specially the statute of limitations. It operates upon the right and vests title, and the facts, to confer title, may be given in evidence, under the general issue. Nelson v. Brodhack, 44 Mo. 596; Fulkerson v. Mitchell, 82 Mo. 13, and cas. cit.
There was no evidence to support plaintiffs’'declaration number five, and, consequently, no error in its refusal. Defendants’ declaration number three was upon the two years statute of limitations, and numbers two and four are unexceptionable, and the objections to
The court, by its action on these last two declarations, in effect, declared the law to be, that if it appeared from the evidence that the defendants were in the actual possession of the premises in question, before and at the time of the commencement of the suit, in good faith Maiming title thereto, and that neither the plaintiffs, nor any of them, nor any one under whom they claim, were ever in possession of said premises, or ever paid taxes on said premises, for the period of thirty years last past, then the defendants’ possession was within the protecting provisions of section 1 of the act of February 27, 1874 (Laws, p. 118). That section reads as follows:
“Any person claiming any real estate in the lawful possession of another, and which has not been in possession of such claimant, or any one under whom he claims, for thirty consecutive years, and on which neither he, nor those under whom he claims, has paid any taxes for all that period of time, and the equitable title to which has emanated from the government more than ten years, shall, within one year from the approval of this act, bring his action to recover the same, and, in default thereof, he shall be forever barred, and his right and title shall, ipso facto, vest in such possessor.”
Under the construction placed upon this act in Rollins v. McIntire, 87 Mo. 496, “the thirty years next preceding the date of the act is the period contemplated by the act, * * * and the claimant, at the date of the act, and his predecessors in the chain of title under which he claims, within said period of thirty years, as well as the person in actual possession at that date, are the parties contemplated by the act.” With this instruction, so far as it goes, no fault can be found. The
(1) The premises must not have been in the possession of the claimant, nor of any person under whom he claims, for thirty consecutive years next preceding the twenty-seventh of February, 1874, and no taxes must have been paid thereon for all that period of time, either by the claimant or those under whom he claims.
(2) The claimant must have failed to bring his action within one year after that date.
(3) The equitable title must have emanated from the government more than ten years prior to that date.
(4) The possessor must have been in lawful possession at that date.
(5) His possession must have been continued during the whole of the year immediately succeeding that date.
In the light of this construction of the statute, the theory upon which this case was tried is erroneous, as, under the law, as declared by the court, in order to defeat plaintiffs’ recovery, it was only necessary that defendants should have been in lawful possession of the premises at the commencement of the suit, and that the claimants, and those under whom they claim, should never have been in possession of the premises, nor paid any taxes thereon, for the period of thirty years last past. Whether, for the errors contained in the declarations of law, this case ought to be reversed, will depend upon a consideration of the undisputed and uncontra-dicted facts in the case, and here it may as well be premised that the' same error in regard to the period within which the claimant must have failed to pay taxes, contained in defendants’ first declaration, is also contained in plaintiffs’ fourth declaration, given by the court at their request, and they ought not to be heard to complain of an error which they invited and adopted.
The -undisputed facts bearing upon the question under consideration may be briefly stated as follows: On the nineteenth of February, 1819, a patent issued from the government of the United States to James Blackburn, for the land in controversy, whose title- after, wards vested in his son, John Patton Blackburn, by descent; the latter dying intestate, the title descended to his son, James R. Blackburn, and five other children, and'one grandchild of the said John Patton. James R. Blackburn, by deed dated July 20, 1860, and recorded January 9, 1861, acquired all the interest of the other heirs of John Patton Blackburn, except that of the grandchild. In 1862, James R. Blackburn died intestate, leaving surviving him one of the plaintiffs, his widow, and the others his only children, and heirs at law. The colorable title of the defendants was a deed from the patentee, James Blackburn, to John Evans, dated June 16, 1819; deed from Evans to John Reed, dated October 3, 1844; power of attorney from Reed to W. R. Love, dated February 11, 1864; and deed from Reed, by his said attorney in fact, to F. McLilley, dated May 13, 1864; these deeds were all recorded August 8, 1865. McLilley, the grantee of Reed, took actual possession of* the premises in 1866, or spring of 1867, and continued in possession, improving and using the premises as his own, until his death in 1872, and his possession was continued in his heirs until April 22, 1876, when plaintiffs, or some of them, instituted suit for the premises against the tenants of said heirs, in which a non-suit was taken; and afterwards, on the thirtieth of January, 1880, and within one year after taking said non-suit, they commenced another suit against the heirs themselves, in which another non- suit
The facts in this case fully meet all the requirements of the act of February 27, 1874 :
(1) The premises had not been in the possession of the plaintiffs, or of any person under whom they claim, for thirty consecutive years next preceding the twenty-seventh’ of February, 1874, nor had any taxes thereon been paid by them during all that time.
(2) The plaintiffs failed to bring their action within one year after that date.
(8) The title to the premises, legal and equitable,' had emanated from the government more than fifty years prior to that date.
(4) McLilley’s heirs were in the lawful possession of the premises at that date.
(5) Their possession continued during the whole-of the year immediately succeeding that date, and
(6) At the end of one year from that date, by virtue of the provisions of said act, plaintiffs’ title was ipso facto vested in McLilley’s heirs, and since has been acquired by the defendants.
And upon the uncontradicted evidence in the case, the court would have been warranted in declaring that the plaintiffs could not recover, from which it follows that the judgment of the circuit court ought not to be reversed for the errors in the declarations of law heretofore mentioned. R. S., sec. 37751
In the cases of Mansfield v. Pollock, 74 Mo. 185,
As to the remaining contention of counsel for appellants, that, at the time the act went into effect, all the plaintiffs, except one, were laboring under the disability of minority, it is sufficient to say that the statute makes no exceptions, and the settled rule is, iu respect to the .running of the statute-of limitations, that the statute will run against all persons, “and no exception to the .statute can be claimed, unless it is expressly mentioned in such statute,” and “ where the statute makes no exception the court can make none on the ground of any inherent equity, or because it may appear to be reasonable that the statute should not run against any party in a given case,” Tyler on Ejectment, 928, 929, and cas. cit.; Angell on Lim. [6 Ed.] 203, and cas. cit. The act of 1874 was evidently intended to be a statute of .absolute repose to those who came within the protection of its provisions. Judgment of the circuit court affirmed.