122 P. 511 | Okla. | 1912
This is an action in ejectment. Plaintiff in error was plaintiff below, and will hereinafter be called such. Defendants in error were defendants below, and will therefore be referred to as such. Plaintiff and defendants own, respectively, two adjoining tracts of land. Plaintiff owns the tract on the west side of the common boundary line, and defendants own the tract on the east side thereof. Plaintiff's evidence, to which the trial court sustained a demurrer, consists partly of an agreed statement of facts and partly of parol testimony. It is from the order of the court sustaining a demurrer to his evidence, and rendering judgment dismissing his cause of action, that plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
Only the facts pertinent to the question presented by this appeal will here be stated. The tract of land now owned by plaintiff was patented by the federal government to one P. Reeder, who, on the 27th day of February, 1900, conveyed a three-fourths interest therein to three certain persons, who thereafter joined said Reeder in a deed conveying the entire tract to the Cimarron Mining Town-Site Company. This company, on June 24, 1903, conveyed a portion of said tract, including the land in controversy, to the Monarch Investment Company, who thereafter, *545 on June 22, 1904, conveyed the same to plaintiff herein. The tract owned by defendants was originally patented by the government to defendant Frances Cox. After the conveyance by Reeder on the 27th day of February, 1900, of a three-fourths interest in his tract, he and his grantees gave notice under the statute, and had the county surveyor survey the boundary line between the tract and the tract of defendants. Defendant Frances Cox, who was then the legal owner of the land, not being satisfied with the survey made by the county surveyor, appealed therefrom to the district court. That court ordered the boundary line run anew; but the order required each side to deposit with the clerk for costs the sum of $25, which defendant Frances Cox failed to do; and thereupon the court, on May 4th, 1903, confirmed the survey of the county surveyor. The tract of land in controversy lies west of the boundary line established by the surveyor, and is bounded on the west by a fence row, or what is referred to in the record as the allotment survey or line. It is admitted that at the time of all the conveyances hereinbefore mentioned to have been made by Reeder and his grantees up to December 22, 1902, the land had been occupied by defendant Frances Cox, and thereafter by her grantee and codefendant, Surena Cox; that defendants have at all times aforesaid been in actual possession of the land in controversy, and have received and enjoyed the rents and profits thereof.
The theory upon which the trial court sustained the demurrer to plaintiff's evidence is that plaintiff's grantor, not having been in possession of the lands in controversy, and not having taken and received the rents and profits thereof for the space of one year before the conveyance to plaintiff, said conveyance is void, because in violation of section 2215, Comp. Laws 1909 (section 2026, St. 1893), which reads as follows:
"Every person who buys or sells, or in any manner procures or makes or takes any promise or covenant to convey any pretended right or title to any lands or tenements, unless the grantor thereof or the person making such promise or covenant has been in possession, or he and those by whom he claims have been in possession of the same, or of the reversion and remainder thereof, *546 or have taken the rents and profits thereof for the space of one year before such grant, conveyance, sale, promise or covenant made, is guilty of a misdemeanor."
Plaintiff first contends that it is determined in Long BellLumber Co. v. Martin,
In the first paragraph of the syllabus, in Huston v. Scott etal., supra, it is held:
"A conveyance of land made in contravention of the provisions of section 2026, St. Okla. 1893, by the rightful owner is utterly void as against the person holding adversely, claiming to be the owner thereof under color of title; but, as between the parties and all the rest of the world, it is good, and passes the grantor's title."
In that case, defendant was in possession, claiming under color of title by virtue of a tax deed. Whether, if defendant had been in adverse possession without color of title, the deed in that case would have been void was not involved, and was not determined. Nor has this question been presented by the facts in any case subsequently decided. But the effect of this statute is accurately declared in the syllabus in Powers et al.v. Van Dyke et al.,
"St. Okla. 1893, sec. 2026 (Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, sec. 2112; Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 2215), making a misdemeanor the buying or selling of any pretended right or title to land, where *547 the grantor or those by whom he claims have not been in possession or taken the rents and profits thereof for the space of one year before such conveyance, is declaratory of the common law, and a conveyance of land made in contravention thereof by the rightful owner, as against the person holding adversely, is void."
There is no language in the statute that expressly makes essential to the crime it defines the existence of adverse possession under color of title. It declares one who buys or sells real estate of which the grantor and those by whom he claims have not been in possession, or taken the rents and profits for the space of one year, commits a misdemeanor; but one may be in possession of lands adverse to the owner thereof without having color of title. Swift v. Mulkey,
The possession, therefore, of defendants prior to the establishment of the boundary line by the surveyor may not have been adverse; but since that date they have refused to accept said boundary line, and have claimed the land up to the allotment line or fence; and, despite their knowledge as to the correct boundary line as established by the county surveyor, they have refused to deliver possession of their excess holdings to plaintiff or to his grantors. They have retained within their inclosure the disputed strip, have continued to occupy it, cultivate it, receive the profits therefrom, and to assert their ownership thereof. Since the location of the dividing line, at least, their occupancy has been with intent to claim the land as against the true owner; and since said time their possession has been hostile and adverse to plaintiff and his grantors. Phelps v. Henry,
Because plaintiff and his grantors have not been in possession of the disputed premises, and have not taken the rents and profits thereof for the space of one year before the conveyance of plaintiff, said conveyance is void as against defendants, holding said lands adversely; and the judgment of the trial court should be and is affirmed.
TURNER, C. J., and WILLIAMS and KANE, JJ., concur; DUNN, J., absent, and not participating. *549