85 Vt. 408 | Vt. | 1912
This is' trespass for entry on land in St. Johnsbury East Village. Plea, the general issue with notice •of special matter in defence, including license and possessory title in the defendant’s grantor, Jane Barker, who deeded the locus to him in August, 1909, which is a strip of land about •eleven feet wide extending across the southerly side of a small parcel of land lying easterly of and adjoining the main highway leading through said village, bounded westerly by said highway, northerly by the store of Mrs. Barker, easterly by Joseph Webster’s land, and southerly by the defendant’s other land. On Oct. 22, 1883, the plaintiff owned the above bounded piece of land, the Barker store, and the Webster premises, and was in lawful possession thereof. On that day she conveyed the Webster premises to Henry F. Hardy by warranty deed, including a right of way across said piece of land, therein called the “common, ” for the purpose of passing to and from the same, and the right to have the “common” kept open and unencumbered by buildings or otherwise.
On Dec. 30, 1884, the plaintiff conveyed said store to Mrs. Barker. The court held that the plaintiff still had the record
In support of his claim of possessory title, the defendant showed by Mrs. Barker that she claimed to own the “common” ever after she bought the store; that shortly after- she bought the store she leased it to one Estabrook, and to several successive tenants named; that none of these tenants had a written lease, and that at the time they took possession of the store she said nothing to any of them about using the “common” nor any part of it, nor about their right to use it in connection with the-store.
This being so, the plaintiff claims that it was error to permit, Mrs. Barker to testify for what purposes and to what extent her tenants had used the “common,” because the privity between her and her tenants -was limited' to the store, and did not, extend to the “common,” and so the acts of the tenants upon the “common” were mere trespasses, and cannot be tacked together to make continuity of possession by her. But that continuity could be kept up by her intention if her tenants-acted under her authority given at times other than those at which they took possession; and as it does not appear that they did not, it- must be presumed in favor of the judgment that-they did. In this view it was not error to allow her to testify that she made no objection to her tenants using the “common.”
Nor was it error to allow her to testify that she had told various persons that she owned the “common,” and told her tenant Fisher so, for that was but allowing her declarations of a claim of right, which is essential to the acquisition of title by adverse possession, — Lathrop v. Levarn, 83 Vt. 1, 74 Atl. 331, and which may be shown by the declarations of the claimant. Webb v. Richardson, 42 Vt. 465, 473.
The plaintiff testified on cross examination that she had always claimed to the listers to own the “common,” and had informed them fully concerning it each time they made a quadrennial appraisal, but that she could not tell whether they entered it in the appraisals or not. As bearing on the question whether the plaintiff was claiming to own the property in question at the time of the appraisals, the defendant was permitted,
The jury found especially that the defendant got a prescriptive title to the locus by his deed from Mrs. Barker, and also-that he had a license to do what he did do thereon.
It,was error to admit the quadrennial appraisals as bearing on the question whether the plaintiff was claiming to own the-land, for it amounted to holding that if the land was not set to her in the appraisals, as it was not, they were evidence tending; to show that she was not then claiming it as she said she was, and this involved the assumption that if she was thus claiming it the land would have been set to her, or the fact of her claim been stated, neither of which follows, for it was not the official duty of the listers to do either on her mere claim, and therefore-no inference of non-claim could be drawn from the fact that they did neither. To draw such an inference would be like asserting a conclusion that has no connection with the premises.
Nor was the error cured by the court’s telling the jury that if the plaintiff stated to the listers that she owned the land and? claimed it, and the jury so found, the fact that it was not set in the list would not make against her, — for that still left the appraisals to be weighed against such a finding.
But inasmuch as the court held that the plaintiff owned the land unless Mrs. Barker had acquired title to it by adverse-possession, it was immaterial whether the plaintiff claimed it or not, for neither her claim nor her non-claim could add to nor take from the defendant’s burden of showing prescriptive-title. This being so, she was not harmed by the error in this-particular respect. But she was discredited by reason of the error, and her memory if not her integrity thereby impeached;, and as it does not affirmatively appear that she did not testify to other matters that were- material to the issues in the case, it does not appear with any degree of certainty that she was-
Reversed cmd remanded.