23 Or. 347 | Or. | 1893
The pleadings and evidence, contained in the bill of exceptions, show that there is a fence along
Upon this state of the case, the court, among other instructions, gave the following, which was excepted to by the plaintiff: “If the jury find from the evidence that the witness Smith continuously occupied the land in controversy as a pasture and meadow, and continuously claimed title up to the fence described in the evidence as the northern limit of the disputed tract from 1870 to 1887, and that in 1887 said Smith turned the land over to this defendant, and put defendant into actual possession, and that this defendant thus entered into the actual possession of this disputed tract, and claimed title up to the fence aforesaid, and the plaintiff Ramsey knew of the occupancy and claim of Smith and the defendant and acquiesced in such occupancy and claim by Smith and
To determine this case, we must look at the instruction excepted to, and ascertain from it whether the law is correctly stated as applicable to the facts. In effect the jury are told that if they find from the evidence that the defendant and his predecessor Smith had been for ten years next preceding the commencement of the action in the actual possession of the land in dispute up to the fence referred to in the evidence, claiming title to that fence, and that the plaintiff knew and acquiesced in such claim and occupancy for that period, then such possession shall be deemed adverse, and the verdict should be for the defendant. By this instruction, the jury are informed what acts upon the part of the defendant would amount in law to adverse possession, and left to determine from the evidence whether or not the defendant and his predecessor had done such acts. In Ross v. Gould, 5 Me. 212, it is said that a ‘ ‘ disseisin cannot be committed by mistake, because the intention * * * is an essential ingredient in a disseisin.” But in Cole v. Parker, 70 Mo.
Within the principle announced in this decision, it was held in Caufield v. Clark, 17 Or. 474 (21 Pac. Rep. 443; 11 Am. St. Rep. 845), that where a person, under a mistake as to the boundaries, enters and occupies land not embraced in his title,- claiming it as his own for the requisite statutory period, he becomes invested with title thereto by possession, although his entry and possession were by a mistake. In French v. Pearce, 8 Conn. 445 (21 Am. Dec. 680), the court says that though “the intention of the possessor to claim adversely is an essential ingredient, ” yet “the person who enters upon land believing and claiming it to be his own,” though under mistake, “does thus enter and possess. The very nature of the act is an assertion of his own title and the denial of the title of all others.”' And again, that “it is as certain that a disseisin may be committed by mistake as that a man may by mistake take possession of land, claiming title, and believing it to be his own.” And further: “Adopt the rule that an entry and possession under a claim of right, if through mistake, does not constitute an adverse possession, and a new principle is substituted. The inquiry no longer is, whether visible possession, with the intent
The case is different where, as in Brown v. Cockerill, 33 Ala. 45, the court says: “If a party occupies land up to a certain fence, because he believes it be the line, but having no intention to claim up to the fence if it should be beyond the line, an indispensable element of adverse possession is wanting. The intent to claim does not exist, and the claim which is set up is upon the condition that the fence is upon the line.” In cases of this sort the possession taken is conditional, and the intent to claim the ownership of the land does not exist, and is not therefore such a claim of ownership as the law requires to constitute an adverse claim or possession.
In the case at bar, the evidence for the defendant tended to show that Smith and defendant claimed to own all the land up to the fence with the plaintiff’s knowledge and acquiescence, and his evidence does not controvert it. There was nothing in the case that tended to show that the possession taken by Smith and the defendant was conditional, but that they took actual possession, claiming to own the land up to the fence. And the court told the jury, in effect, that if they found from the evi
The judgment is affirmed.