34 Iowa 148 | Iowa | 1871
The district court found the following facts, and thereon rendered judgment for plaintiff : The plaintiff is the owner of lot 280, in the northern addition to the city of Burlington, and the defendant owns lot 1, in Wood’s subdivision, which adjoins plaintiff’s lot on the
The question presented by the foregoing facts, as found by the district court for determination, is this: Is defendant protected in her possession of the land in dispute by the statute of limitation ?
I. The statute of limitation is not available as a defense, unless the defendant holds the land under color of title, or has had actual adverse .possession for the full time limited by the statute for the commencement of the action. Wright v. Keithler, 7 Iowa, 92; Jones v. Hockman, 12 id. 101; S. C., 16 id. 487. It is not claimed that in the case before us defendant holds color of title to the land, but recovery is resisted on the ground that she and her grantor have been in the adverse possession of the property for the time which, under the statute, will bar the action. We are required to determine whether the possession relied~Upon is of that character which is deemed by the law adverse.
An essential ingredient of adverse possession is a elañm of right hostile to the true owner. So, if one enter upon
II. The quo animo in which the possession was taken and held is a test of its adverse character. The inquiry, therefore, as to the intention of the possessor, is essential in order to determine the nature of his possession, and, before his possession may be pronounced adverse, it must be found that he intended to hold in ^hostility to the true owner. McNamee v. Moreland, 26 Iowa, 97. See, also, Bradstreet v. Huntington, supra, and the other authorities last cited.
III. The facts relied upon to constitute adverse possession must be strictly proved ; they cannot be presumed. The law presumes that the possession of land is always’ under the regular title, and will not permit this presumption to be overcome by another presumption. There can be no such thing as conflicting legal presumptions. McNamee v. Moreland, supra; Fele v. Doe, 1 Blackf. 129.
IY. The defendant’s grantor, when he entered upon the land in dispute, did not claim title thereto. He claimed title to lot 1, but to no part of lot 260. It is very plain that, under the authorities above cited, the claim of right must be as broad as the possession. Defendant’s claim was limited to lot 1- — -his possession covered that lot, and a part of lot 260; he took possession of more land than he claimed. But, is the fact, that the Toelief of defendant and her grantor, that lot 1 extended to the line of their possession, equivalent in law to a claim of title to the land
As we have seen, the intention, the qxio cmvmo of the possessor, must be shown. .This cannot be done by mere proof of possession: it must be shown to exist under certain conditions, to be qualified 'by the existence of a claim of right; for the adjective characteristics of a thing cannot be shown by proof of the mere existence of the thing itself.
In this case, we have the possession admitted. As we have seen, it must be shown to be adverse under a claim of right. Simple belief on the part of defendant of her right to the laud, we have pointed out, is not equivalent to, nor will it supply the place of, the cl^jm required by the law, and, as we have shown, possession will not establish the quo animo. There is, then, in the case, absolutely no evidence of the adverse holding of defendant.
Y. The following cases are cited by defendant’s counsel, in support of views contrary to the doctrines we have just announced. We will briefly notice them.
Burdick v. Heivly, 23 Iowa, 511, is not in conflict with the foregoing views. In that case, there was a claim of right distinctly shown, if not an agreement of the parties to the effect, that the disputed line was in fact the true boundary of the lands. In Close v. Samm, 27 Iowa, 503, the right in question related to the flowing back of water upon the mill of plaintiff, by a dam built by the other party. That right was sustained upon evidence of prescription, and it was claimed to the extent exercised by defendant. Here was an express claim of right. In illustration of the ruling made by the court, Mr. Justice Cole supposes the case of conflicting claims to land adjacent to a boundary line. But the case he puts expressly supposes the party, availing himself of the statute of limitation to claim the lands, and to set up an adverse possession under color of title. In Brown v. Bridges, 31 Iowa, 138, the right of plaintiff to recover is based upon prescription, and it clearly appears that he had claimed and held possession of the land in dispute, and upon that ground set up his prescriptive title. In Stuyvesant v. Tomkins, 9 Johns. 61, the point decided is, that trespass, guare clausum fregit, will not lie on behalf of one not in possession of lands. Whatever appears in that case, relating to the point under consideration, was said arguendo.
In these authorities, there is to be found nothing in conflict with tbe conclusions we bave reached in this case.
In our opinion, the ruling of tbe district court upon the facts found is correct.
Affirmed.