124 Ind. 129 | Ind. | 1890
The facts as they are stated in the special
verdict are, in substance, these: The land in controversy was entered by Jerome Sweet under a land warrant in 1852, but lie did not take possession of it. On the 26th day of July, 1853, Harrison Wood conveyed the land by deed of general warranty to Andrew Cramner. This deed was recorded on -the 7th of September of that year, but it does not /appear that Wood ever had possession of the land. Cram{ner lived on the land, cleared and fenced part of it. He died in possession of the land, leaving as his heirs Minerva Cramner, his widow, and Joseph J. Cramner, David B. Cramner and Ananias Cramner, his children. All of the children were infants at the time of their father’s death. The widow, Minerva Cramner, married John McWhorter, a brother of the defendant James McWhorter, with whom she lived until her death, in 1862. Her second husband and two of the children of the second marriage, Sarah and Adaline, survived her. On the 30th day of January, 1869, Joseph J. Cramner conveyed the one undivided third of the land'to
It 'is argued by appellants’ counsel that the trial court erred in rendering judgment on the special verdict in fayor of the appellee, and the first proposition stated in support of this general position is, that as the complaint alleges that the appellee is the owner in fee, there can be no recovery unless the special verdict shows that he is the owner in fee, and that it fails to do this. We think that counsel is clearly in error. The ancestor of the appellee’s grantor went into possession in 1853, and possession begun by him and continued by his heirs gave them a title in fee simple. Title acquired by possession is as high as any known to the law. Sims v. City of Frankfort, 79 Ind. 446; Riggs v. Riley, 113 Ind. 208. The right acquired by the ancestor vested in his children, and when the possession ripened into a title it became a fee. Brown v. Freed, 43 Ind. 253. But, independently of the rule just stated, the ease is with the appellee upon the point under discussion, for Sylvius Roe claims through Joseph J. Cramner, and he through Andrew Cramner, so that all the parties claim title from a common source, and this brings the case within the familiar rule that where title is claimed through a common grantor it is sufficient to trace it to that source. Wilson v. Peelle, 78 Ind. 384.
So far as concerns the breach of what the appellants’ counsel denominates a condition subsequent, it is enough to say that Sylvius Roe, by electing to sue for damages, and accepting judgment, precluded herself from entering for condition broken. It is a very ancient rule that a condition once gone is gone forever. Dumpor’s Case, 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 47; 2 Washburn Real Prop. (4th ed.) 12; Nordyke & Marmon Co. v. Gery, 112 Ind. 535.
Judgment affirmed.