189 Ky. 815 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
In this action of ejectment, between the appellants, Thomas H. Nelson and William K. Nelson, whom we will call the plaintiffs, and the appellees, Moses Johnson and Fred Johnson, whom we will hereafter call the defendants, the ownership of a tract of fifty acres of very rough and broken land was involved. The plaintiffs and defendants claim to have derived title to the lands from a common source. The plaintiffs claim title to the tract by inheritance from their father, Hayden Nelson, who in turn inherited it from his father, Thomas H. Nelson,the grandfather of plaintiffs, and to distinguish him from one of the plaintiffs we will hereafter call him, the elder. The defendant, Moses Johnson, asserted title to the land from a parol gift to him by Thomas H. Nelson, the elder, and a continuous, peaceable and adverse occupancy of it by virtue of the gift, thereafter, for the necessary statutory period to create title by adverse possession. Thereafter, he conveyed it to his son, Fred Johnson, who during the pendency of the action, reconveyed the tract -of land to Moses Johnson. A trial resulted in a verdict of the jury and a judgment of the court in accordance therewith, awarding the ownership of the land to the defendant, Moses Johnson.. The plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, they have appealed.
The averments of the answer of defendants, setting up title to the land by adverse possession, were denied. It was conceded by agreement, however, that the plaintiffs ’ title to the land was valid and they were entitled to recover it, unless the adverse possession, under claim of right by the defendants, had existed and had ripened into a title in favor of Moses Johnson. The burden of proof was thus cast upon the defendants, which they assumed.
(1) The chief grounds upon which a reversal is urged are (a) The facts proven by the evidence, when their truth is admitted, were insufficient to warrant the submission of the action to the jury, and (b) the verdict was flagrantly against the weight of the evidence,' and (c) the court erred in instructing the jury. Entertain
(2) To sustain a claim of title arising from the adverse possession of lands, for the statutory period of limitations, it must be proven to the satisfaction of the jury, by competent and legal evidence, that the claimant had an actual, open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession, continuously, during the period. To determine whether the necessary elements which go to make up an adverse holding of lands for the necessary period of limitation, it is necessary to consider the circumstances attending the possession, and the acts and declarations of the claimant, while in possession, as well as the relation of the legal title holder to the claimant. As remote as twenty years previous to the war between the states, the elder Nelson was the owner of a large farm containing about 375 acres, all the acreage of which, although situated in a very irregular shape, was contiguous and upon which he resided and continued to reside until his death in February, 1897, at the age of 89 years. At the northern end of the farm was situated a portion of it, which was originally a separate tract of land and is called the Grlore farm, after one of its owners, who preceded the elder Nelson in the proprietorship of it. It contained about 87 acres and was- contiguous to the other lands of Nelson only upon the western side of it. Upon the other three, sides, it adjoined the lands of
(a) An actual possession is such a possession as, in general terms, indicates an exclusive ownership of the property, and this is usually shown by a residence thereon, an enclosure of at least a portion of the lands, or their cultivation, or at least in every instance such use of the lands as is practicable, and for the purposes -for which such character of lands are ordinarily used. The evidence proved, without dispute, that Moses Johnson resided upon the land continuously from 187'3 until 1915, and thereafter held the actual possession by cultivating the cleared lands up until 1918. Within the tract there were about fourteen or fifteen acres of cleared lands, lying in three different bodies, one around the dwelling, containing six or seven acres, another opposite the dwelling, and across the creek from it, containing 2y2 acres, and, another east of the dwelling containing six or seven acres, and these lands the defendant cultivated or caused to be cultivated each year and appropriated the proceeds to his own uses. The remainder of the tract seems to have been very broken, steep- and hilly, unfitted for cultivation and covered with trees. At different times the defendant had inclosed different portions of the woodland and used it for purposes of pasture, cut timber and firewood from it, and made such uses of the land as are customary with owners of his estate to use such lands. From time to time, he cut and sold fencing posts and trees for other timber purposes from the land, and rented the lands to tenants, who cultivated the fields and paid the rent to him. For two years before the death of the elder Nelson the defendant with the knowledge of Nelson, had a tenant upon the land, who resided in a house, which he erected thereon, and who cleared several acres of the lands. Of course, the above stated acts of possession and dominion were open and notorious to every one, and there is no pretense, that either the elder Nelson or any one who claims under him, was not fully apprised of the circumstances. There is no evidence which indicates that the possession of the defendant was not wholly exclusive during the lifetime
The instruction of the court, which limited Johnson’s right to hold the land by adverse possession to fifteen consecutive years, next preceding the institution of the action, was error, as any fifteen consecutive years of adverse possession after the gift was made, and after the statute was set in motion as above stated, would create title in him. Sanders v. Barbee, 8 K. L. R. 773. Up to the time to which the evidence indicates that a gift had been made of the land to Johnson, the presumption is, in the absence of any explanation, that he was holding the land in subservience to the title of the elder Nelson, as a bare possession, though actual, is presumed to be a holding amicable to the legal title. The second instruction given by the court defining adverse possession was, also, erroneous, as a mere claim of possession, and in
The plaintiffs offered evidence which conduced to prove that the lands were not a gift to the defendant, Johnson, and that he resided thereon and used them to the extent he did by the permission of the elder Nelson and his successor in title, and never set up any claim of right in himself until in the year 1911, and tRus the lands were at all time in the possession of plaintiffs and their predecessors. They, also, gave evidence which conduced to prove that in the year 1905 or 1906, and probably at an earlier period, the plaintiffs entered upon the lands, within the boundary in controversy and rented out to tenants and caused to be cultivated certain portions of the lands, for different years. They gave evidence to the effect that they had entered upon about fifteen acres of the lands, which Johnson claimed had been given to him by the elder Nelson, but which he does not now claim and which is not in the boundary in controversy and took possession of same and used and controlled same ever since, and that they did this with the intention of taking possession of the entire tract. The defendant, Johnson, claims that the plaintiffs entered and took possession of this portion of the land by his permission and in consideration of an agreement between him and them, that the plaintiffs would pay the taxes upon the lands claimed by Johnson. Another portion of the land which plaintiffs entered upon and cultivated for one year or more, Johnson claims was done by his permission, and upon an understanding, that, it should be cultivated by plaintiffs for only one year, and that he.resumed possession of it thereafter and held it since. Johnson denies that plaintiffs entered upon or cultivated other portions which they claim to have done. The plaintiffs, also, gave evidence to the effect that in 1906, they cut timber trees from the lands, and that in 1911 one of the plaintiffs, with the knowledge of Johnson, entered upon the lands and carried away a portion of a corn crop which Johnson had grown thereon. The plaintiffs offered an instruc
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.