Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Plaintiffs are the widow and children of Thomas Size-more, deceased. About the year 1880, they and their father were living on a tract of land located about a mile from the tract in controversy and separated therefrom by an intervening tract owned by another. According to the evidence for plaintiffs, Thomas Sizemore, in the early eighties, erected a dam across the creek on the land in controversy and built thereon a small mill house, 14 by 14 square, and put in a set of grist burrs with which to grind corn. He never cleared or cultivated any of the land, but his son-in-law felled a few trees and built thereon a small cabin which was never occupied. It further appears that some time later he marked a boundary around the land in controversy, and claimed to the extent of this boundary. He occasionally cut timber from the land for the purpose of making boards, canoes, etc. From the time the mill was built he used it for the purpose of grinding com for the people of the community when there was sufficient water for that purpose. Sometimes Thomas Sizemore and his sons slept and atp In the mill. Thomas Sizemore was killed in the year 1896. Thereafter, John Stidham, his son-in-law, attempted to move into the unoccupied cabin near the mill, but John Aikman, through whom defendant claims, objected and the cabin was never occupied. After Thomas Sizemore’s death, his children ran the mill for about two years and until it burned down, when they and their mother moved to Jackson county. After that, sixteen years elapsed before this suit was brought.
In a case like this, plaintiffs can recover only on the strength of their own title and not on the weakness of the defendant’s title. Ashcraft v. Courtney, 121 S. W. 625. Their claim to title is based solely on adverse possession. To establish title by adverse possession, the evidence must show that the possession was open, notorious, ex-
Judgment .reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.