162 N.E. 247 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1928
This is the second appeal of this case. See Philbin v. Carr
(1920),
By appellee's instruction No. 1, the jury was told that appellants had the burden of proving their title by a fair preponderance of evidence. This instruction was technically correct as far as it went, but, in view of our former decision, which is the law of this case, the jury should also have been told appellants had discharged that burden. These instructions were erroneous, in that they were contrary to the law of the case as determined upon the same evidence in the former appeal, it having there been determined, as stated above, that the legal title was in appellants.
Divers instructions were given by the court to the jury, submitting to it the question as to whether appellee had acquired title to the real estate involved by adverse possession. The evidence at this trial, particularly that pertaining to adverse possession, was the same as at the former trial, and, on the former appeal, it was held that, taking the evidence alone most favorable to appellee, excluding all other, it fell far short of fulfilling *447 the requirement of the law, and failed signally to make out a case of adverse possession.
Upon the same evidence then, on the former appeal, it was determined as a matter of law that appellee had not acquired title to the land by adverse possession. Without change in the evidence, this holding constituted the law of the case at the second trial, and the question was not for the jury.
We deem it unnecessary to consider other questions presented, and we do not consider them. The judgment is reversed, with instructions to grant a new trial.
Dausman, J., absent.
McMahan, J., not participating.