delivered the Opinion of the Court.
We granted Petitioner’s cross-petition for certiorari review
1
of the court of appeals decision in
Peters v. Smuggler-Durant Mining Corporation,
Golden Rule Resources, Inc. (Golden Rule), a respondent in this case, became the successor in interest to the original lessee of a mining lease owned by Smuggler-Durant Mining Company (Smuggler-Durant). The lease granted Golden Rule the right of exclusive possession to the real property and the right of first refusal to purchase the property. Three cabins, the ownership of which is the source of this litigation, are located on the property.
On March 12, 1982, Frank A. and William J. Loushin, possessors of one of the cabins, executed a quitclaim deed in favor of Petitioner Frank Peters (Peters). The deed purported to convey their interest in the “cabin and land beneath” located on the north half of the Last Chance Mining Claim in Pitkin County. The deed was recorded upon delivery on March 18, 1982. For the period in question, Peters was in actual possession of the property.
On September 27, 1983, Peters made the first payment of taxes on the three cabins for the 1982 tax year. He made subsequent tax *577 payments for the years 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, and 1988 (and after the commencement of the lawsuit, for 1989).
On February 22, 1990, Peters filed a complaint against Smuggler-Durant claiming ownership by adverse possession of the cabins and a portion of the land surrounding them. The land and cabins occupied by Peters are located within the mining claims owned by Smuggler-Durant and leased by Golden Rule.
The complaint against Smuggler-Durant alleged that Peters was entitled to ownership of the property in question due to adverse possession for eighteen years pursuant to section 38-41-101, 16A C.R.S. (1982), and “through payment of taxes and color of title for more than seven years.” Golden Rule moved to intervene as a party defendant pursuant to C.R.C.P. 24. The district court granted the motion on May 10,1990.
Peters filed an amended complaint on September 30, 1991, adding Last Chance No. 2 Inc. (Last Chance), as a defendant, specifying the amount of land claimed by adverse possession as 4.2 acres, and providing a detailed metes and bounds description of the 4.2 acre parcel of land. In addition, the amended complaint more specifically alleged compliance with each of the elements of the seven-year adverse possession statute, section 38-41-108,16A C.R.S. (1982) (the seven-year statute).
The district court entered a decree in quiet title on October 7, 1992, in favor of Peters, finding, with respect to Peters’ claims under section 38-41-108, that: (1) Peters received and recorded a quitclaim deed conveying the “cabin and land beneath” on March 18, 1982; (2) Peters remained in possession of and paid taxes on the land for seven successive years prior to the filing of this claim; and (3) the deed was sufficient to constitute color of title to the 4.2 acres. The district court found that Peters had failed to establish a claim under the eighteen-year adverse possession statute.
The court of appeals concluded that it was bound by early case precedent holding that section 38-41-108 requires “that seven full years must expire between the time when the person claiming the property under color of title first pays taxes and the commencement of his or her lawsuit.”
Peters,
The court of appeals rejected Peters’ alternative argument that, if a full seven years is required to elapse between the first payment of taxes and commencement of suit, the period should be calculated from the date of the amended complaint rather than the initial complaint. We agree that the seven-year statute requires a full seven years to expire between the first tax payment and the commencement of a lawsuit, and that the seven year period in this case is calculated when the initial complaint was filed.
I.
Peters first argues that the seven-year adverse possession statute requires only that one be in possession under color of title for seven years prior to commencing a lawsuit, and that one pay all taxes legally assessed during that seven year period of possession. We disagree.
Our seven-year adverse possession statute, as originally enacted in 1893, provided in pertinent part that:
Every person in the actual possession of lands or tenements, under claim and col- or of title, made in good faith, and who shall, for seven successive years, continue in such possession, and shall also, during said time, pay all taxes legally assessed on such lands or tenements, shall be held and adjudged to be the legal owner of said lands or tenements, *578 to the extent and according to the purport of his or her paper title.
Ch. 118, sec. 6, 1893 Colo. Sess. Laws 328, 328-29. The current version of this statute remains substantially unchanged. See § 38-41-108.
Our statute was specifically patterned after an Illinois statute.
See Empire Ranch & Cattle Co. v. Howell,
We have held that when Colorado adopts a statute of another state and, at the time of its enactment here, the statute had been construed by the appellate court of the state after which it was patterned, the presumption is that our legislature intended the same statutory construction by the courts of this state.
Vider v. Zavislan,
Though the Vider case dealt with a different aspect of the adverse possession statutes, the Supreme Court of Illinois considered the issue presented here on several occasions prior to our General Assembly’s enactment of the statute. Furthermore, there is nothing in the record here to overcome the presumption that the construction given the statute by the State of Illinois was intended to be adopted by our General Assembly in enacting the same statute here.
A.
Illinois adopted its seven-year adverse possession statute in 1839. The current statute, which is substantively unchanged from its original version, see 1839 Ill. Laws, sec. 1, p. 267, provides that:
§ 13-109. Payment of taxes with col- or of title. Every person in the actual possession of lands or tenements, under claim and color of title, made in good faith, and who for 7 successive years continues in such possession, and also, during such time, pays all taxes legally assessed on such lands or tenements, shall be held and adjudged to be the legal owner of such lands or tenements, to the extent and according to the purport of his or her paper title. All persons holding under such possession, by purchase, legacy or descent, before such 7 years have expired, and who continue such possession, and continue to pay the taxes as above set forth so as to complete the possession and payment of taxes for the term above set forth, are entitled to the benefit of this Section.
735 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 5/13-109 (West 1996 Supp.). The early Illinois cases interpreting the seven-year statute consistently held that possession, color of title, and payment of taxes must concur for seven successive years in order to create a bar against the true owner under the statute.
See, e.g., De Proft v. Heydecker,
In 1942, although subsequent to the adoption of our 1893 statute, the Illinois Supreme Court again reaffirmed its prior holdings and concluded that it is well settled that “seven full years must have intervéned between the day when the first payment of taxes was made and the day of the commencement of the litigation.”
Harlan v. Douthit,
The argument made by the adverse possessor in
Harlan
is remarkably similar to that presented here. There, the plaintiff, alleging that he was the owner of an undivided interest of the property in question, filed for partition of the land parcel.
Id.
The same argument offered here fails because of the longstanding rule of statutory construction regarding “borrowed” statutes. The Supreme Court of Illinois has spoken decisively on the issue presented for our review. Absent a contrary indication of intent by our legislature, we presume that the same construction given the seven-year adverse possession statute by the Supreme Court of Illinois was intended here. Furthermore, though our own case law construing the statute is scant, it appears that Colorado has intended to adopt the same statutory construction as Illinois.
B.
Sections 38-41-108 and -109, 16A C.R.S. (1982), of our adverse possession statutes are parallel provisions and must be considered in relation to each other.
Webermeier v. Pace,
Section 38-41-108 is applicable when a person is in actual possession of land or tenements under color of title. Section 38-41-109 is applicable when a person has color of title to vacant or unoccupied land. Our appellate courts have construed the color of title and tax payment requirements under these separate provisions in an interchangeable manner.
In
Empire Ranch & Cattle Co. v. Howell,
In another case construing the predecessor to section 38-41-109, the court of appeals again reiterated the requirement that seven full years must elapse between the date of the first tax payment after color of title is taken and the commencement of the suit to recover the land.
Cristler v. Beardsley, 25
Colo.App. 369, 371,
Finally, in
Whitehead v. Bennett,
In reviewing the case law addressing our seven-year adverse possession statute, in conjunction with the construction given the same statute by the Supreme Court of Illinois, we conclude that color of title, possession, and payment of taxes must concur in time to trigger the running of the statute. Because seven full years had not elapsed between Peters’ first payment of taxes on September 27, 1983, and the commencement of the quiet title action on February 22,1990, his cause of action under section 38-41-108 must fail.
Statutes that are in derogation of property rights, as with other rights under the common law, must be strictly construed.
Cf. Van Waters & Rogers, Inc. v. Keelan,
Hence, although Peters satisfied the color of title and the actual possession requirements, he failed to comply with the final element of having a full seven years elapse from the first payment of taxes to the commencement of the lawsuit.
II.
Peters alternatively argues that the filing of the first amended complaint on September 30, 1991, “asserted a separate and additional claim under § 38-41-108, C.R.S., inasmuch as seven years had elapsed since the first payment of taxes (September 27, 1983).” Peters thus argues that the date of the filing of this separate claim in the amended complaint, allegedly not presented in the original complaint, should become the lawsuit commencement date for purposes of compliance with the full seven year requirement of section 38-41-108. We disagree.
According to our rules of civil procedure, “[wjhenever the claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading, the amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading.” C.R.C.P. 15(c);
see also Halliburton v. Public Serv. Co.,
We have said that when a new action is joined by filing an amended complaint, the new action will not relate back to the date of the original complaint.
See Walker v. Associated Press,
The original complaint in this case was filed on February 22, 1990. In paragraph four of the original complaint, Peters specifically alleges actual, adverse, hostile, under claim of right, exclusive and uninterrupted possession for over eighteen years, “and through payment of taxes and color of title for more than seven years.” (Emphasis added.) The alleged “separate and distinct” claim raised in the amended complaint is supported by the factual claims raised in the original complaint, and the conduct, transactions, or occurrences are found in the original complaint such that the amended complaint relates back to the original.
Peters also cites
Ireland v. Wynkoop,
Here, Peters is actually attempting to create a new commencement date of his lawsuit in order to comply with the three concurrent elements necessary to affirmatively invoke a statute of limitation bar of possession by the true owner. But the filing of an amended complaint, which simply reiterates a claim already stated in the original complaint, cannot be used as a means to alter or avoid the requirement of strict compliance with the seven-year adverse possession statute.
Because the amended complaint raises no separate and distinct claim not already raised in the original complaint, there is no reason that the date of the amended complaint should govern the calculation of the seven year period for tax payments under section 38-41-108. Under section 38-41-108, color of title, possession, and payment of taxes must concur to commence the running of the seven years. The amended complaint in this *582 case relates back to the date of the original complaint pursuant to C.R.C.P. 15(c), and the required seven years preceding commencement of the action in the case had not run.
III.
The court of appeals judgment against Peters’ adverse possession claim, and its necessarily .component direction setting aside the district court’s decree in quiet title based thereon, is affirmed.
Notes
. Certiorari was granted on the following two issues:
1. Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that § 38-41-108, 16A C.R.S. (1982), requires that suit may not be filed until seven years after the date of the first payment of taxes.
2. Assuming that a full seven -years must elapse after the first payment of taxes before a claim under § 38-41-108, 16A C.R.S. (1982), may be filed, did the court of appeals err in refusing to accept an amended complaint, so filed, as sufficient to satisfy the statute.
. The State of South Dakota enacted an adverse possession statute, requiring a period of actual possession, payment of taxes, and color of title for ten successive years,
see
S.D. Codified Laws § 15-3-15 (Michie 1984), patterned after that of Illinois.
See Judd v. Meoska,
. Peters relies on
Fastenau v. Engel,
