45 Minn. 545 | Minn. | 1891
On this appeal we are to decide whether the evidence justified a finding that for 20 years prior to the commencement of this action (November, 1889) the land in question had been in the continuous adverse possession of the defendant Butler and of one Dexter, to whose rights Butler succeeded by conveyance. In August, 1867, Silas M. Bicker being the owner (as tenant in common with others, who have since conveyed their title to the plaintiff) of an undivided one-third of the land, and one Stanchfield having an invalid tax-deed of the same land, Bicker and Stanchfield executed to Dexter a warranty deed of conveyance of the whole land, which was then recorded. The land is chiefly meadow land, only a small part of it being suitable for cultivation. The same year Dexter entered upon the land and cut the grass, and in the spring of 1868 he moved into a small house on the premises, and up to the time of his death, February 12, 1885, continued his residence and occupancy, cultivating a small tract as a garden, and cutting the grass on the remainder. He also made permanent improvements by constructing a system of ditches for the draining of the land. At the time of his death Dexter had some live-stock on the • place, and a quantity of corn and hay in stack. He was a single
When the tax-deed to Stanchfield was offered in evidence, the court sustained an objection to its reception, but afterwards did consider it as in evidence. The plaintiff was not prejudiced by this. There is no claim that Stanchfield had acquired any title by that deed. The controversy here is whether the defendants have title by adverse possession. The fact that Bicker and Stanchfield executed a deed of conveyance to Dexter of all the land is undisputed, and by such conveyance Dexter had color of title irrespective of the tax-deed to Stanchfield. We do not see that it can have made any difference, either in the course of the trial or in the decision, whether that invalid deed be treated as in the case or out of it.
There can be no reasonable doubt that the court was justified in finding that Dexter was in the actual, open, exclusive possession of the whole land, at least from the time he entered and commenced residing on the place, in the spring of 1868, to the time of his death there, in February, 1885; and that his possession was adverse or hostile, so as to constitute an ouster of the persons under whom the plaintiff claims, and who really owned an undivided two-thirds of the land. His entry and possession being under a recorded conveyance purporting to convey the whole estate, the fact that his grantor was a tenant in common with others did not prevent his exclusive possession being hostile and adverse in its character. Bogardus v. Trinity
Order affirmed.
Vanderburgh, J., took no part in this case. Mitchell, J., was absent when the decision was filed.