44 Kan. 94 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The first and principal question involved in this case is, whether the fourth finding of fact made by the court below is sustained by sufficient evidence or not. On the trial of the case a deed of conveyance was introduced in evidence, answering to the description of the deed described in the fourth finding of fact in every,particulai’, except that prima facie it purports to have been executed on August’30, 1868, instead of April 30,1867. If such deed was in fact executed on April 30,1867, then the finding is correct, and no valid objection can be urged against the regularity or validity of the deed as a deed. But if it was executed on August 30,1868, then it must have been a forgery so far as one of the grantors, Je-Mahn is concerned, for he was dead at that time, although it may have been the valid deed of, and may have been executed and acknowledged by the other grantor, Louisa Je-Mahn, for she was still alive and as competent to éxecute a deed as she ever was. Both this deed and the deed described in the fifth finding of the court below, to wit, a deed executed for the same land on April 30, 1867, by the grantees mentioned in the first deed, George L. Young and Josetta Young his wife, to John Higginbotham, were introduced in evidence, and also A. R. Button, the justice of the peace before whom these' deeds were acknowledged, was introduced as a witness on the trial. So also was Higginbotham. But for some unexplained reason neither Young nor his wife, nor Louisa Je-Mahn, nor Ben Bayne, nor B. T. Payne, was introduced as a witness in the case by either party, nor was the testimony of any one of them given on the trial. Payne was the person who wrote these deeds, or did the writing in filling them up, and who witnessed the Je-Mahn deed and was present when it was acknowledged. The evidence introduced on the trial shows that where the
“Seo. 3. That three years’ quiet, undisturbed, actual possession of any such land by any, purchaser thereof in good faith as aforesaid, under color of title, shall be a complete bar to any action for the recovery of said lands by the holders of any adverse title to the same, and such possession shall be deemed to vest in the possessor a full and complete title to the same in fee simple.”
It is perhaps unnecessary to extend this opinion farther, for what we have already decided will give to Higginbotham the title to the property in controversy, and will affirm the judgment of the court below. But Higginbotham has other and further muniments of title. He has the deed of Louisa Shearer, formerly Louisa Je-Mahn, executed on July 23,1880,
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.