This is an action of ejectment and has been here before — reported in
In 1795 Gotlieb Shober obtained two grants from the State, one for 1,280 acres and the other for 1,920 acres. These lands he sold to "Tim" Pickering, and afterwards, in 1815, they were sold by Banner, sheriff, for taxes and bought by A. D. Murphy. The deed from Banner, sheriff, to Murphy, contained but one boundary, and included a large quantity of land not included in either of the grants from the State to Shober. The plaintiff contends that the land in controversy had never been granted until December, 1888, when it was granted to him. The commissioners find that the defendant has acquired the title conveyed by Banner, sheriff, to Murphy; that the deed from Banner to Murphy and the mesne conveyances from Murphy to the defendant cover the land in controversy. But the grant for 1,280 acres covers no part of the land in controversy, and the 1,920-acre grant covers only a very small border on one side of the land in controversy. They further find that the (543) defendant and those under whom he claims have had actual possession of the lands included in the 1,280-acre grant for more than twenty-one years. But they have not had actual possession of any part of the land contained in the Banner deed to Murphy, outside of the two grants to Shober, for as much as twenty years, and that the plaintiff's grant of 1888 covers the land in dispute. From these facts they conclude as a matter of law that the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
The defendant contends that there is error in the finding; that the plaintiff and those under whom he claims have not had the actual possession of the land in controversy for more than twenty years, under the rule laid down by this Court; and that this error appears from the *Page 373 finding of fact No. 9, which is as follows: "That the defendants and those under whom they claim have had adverse possession for more than twenty-one years of the lands embraced in the 1,280-acre grant to Gotlieb Shober." And defendant claims that the land in controversy and the 1,280-acre grant to Shober are both within the boundary of the Banner deed and the other deeds of mesne conveyances to him; that the possession of any part of the land included within the boundary of the Banner deed is the possession of the whole. And, therefore, while the commissioners say they find that he has not been in possession of the land in controversy for as much as twenty years, the facts they find show that he and those under whom he claims have been in actual possession for twenty-one years.
In this contention the defendant is in error. If the defendant had had no title, except that derived from the sheriff's deed, his contention would have been correct; but the trouble is he had a good title to that part of the boundary of which he had the actual possession. And the rule is, to ripen a colorable title into a good title, there must be such possession and acts of dominion by the colorable claimant as will make him liable to an action of ejectment. This is said to be the test. (544)Everett v. Newton,
It is, therefore, seen that the defendant has never been exposed to an action of ejectment, which is laid down as the test. And, singular as it may appear to laymen, it seems that the defendant would have been better off if he had not had a good title to the 1,280 acres and the 1,920 acres granted to Shober, or any of the land he claims, than he is. Or, to express it in other words, he did not become the owner of the land in controversy because he was the owner of the other two tracts.
There is no error and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Cited: Dargan v. R. R.,
(545)