54 Ala. 141 | Ala. | 1875
The specific objections to the introduction as evidence of the deed made by William G-. Riggs to C. M. Pearson, are all reducible to this: That the grantor, as administrator with the will annexed of the ancestor of the appellant, was without power or authority to sell and convey the lands. This may be admitted, and as a conveyance by the administrator of the right and title of his testator the deed is void, not even casting a cloud on the title
Continuity is an indispensable element of an adverse possession. If several persons enter on lands at different times, and there is not a- privity of estate between them, the several possessions cannot be tacked so as to make a continuity of possession on which the statute of limitations will operate. But if there is such privity of estate, or of title, as that the several possessions can and should be referred to the original entry, they are regarded as joined and continuous.—Ang. on Lim., §§ 413, 414. The possession of a landlord and his tenant, of an ancestor and his heirs, of a vendor and his vendee, may be tacked to complete the bar of the statute of limitations. There is no break or interruption in the possession — each possessor is connected with his predecessor, and the whole is a continuous possession.—Overfield v. Christie, 7 Sergt. & Rawls, 177; Valentine v. Cooley, Meigs, 613 ; Alexander v. Cranch, 8 Cranch, 464. The possession of Puller, the purchaser at the sale made by the executors of Pearson, and of the widow and heirs of Pear
In Griffins v. Tottenham, 1 Watts & Sergt. 488, it is held if one enter upon land claiming, but without title, and die in possession, leaving a widow and children, one of whom continues in possession and conveys the land to a third person, who goes into possession and continues it to a period exceeding the bar of the statute of limitations, the law will tack the possessions together so as to make a good title under the statute. The possessions were all, as in this case, connected with and derived from the original entry. They could not properly be regarded as the separate and independent tortious acts of several trespassers.
The appellant’s cause of action accrued on the 19th May, 1856. His infancy terminated in May, 1870, according to the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions. Deducting the period of the late war, during which the operation of the statute of limitations was suspended, (from the 11th day of January, 1861, to the 21st of September, 1865,) ten years, the time prescribed within which an action for the recovery of lands or the possession thereof must be brought, expired on the 29th January, 1871, when the appellant was .of full age. The suit was commenced on the 16th January, 1878, within less than three years after the termination of appellant’s infancy. The court charged the jury, that the defendant Fuller, the vendee of the executors of Pearson, and the widow and heir of Pearson, who were also defendants, could unite or tack their several possessions to that of Pearson, so as to make out the period of ten years within which the statute would operate a bar. The court further charged, that in computing the ten years, the time during which the
This statute does not, as did the former statutes, suspend the operation of the statute of limitations during the continuance of the enumerated disabilities. Its theory is, that ten years from the accrual of the right shall bar an entry, or an action for the recovery of lands or the possession thereof. Disabilities occurring with the right, shall not suspend the operation of the statute, but three years shall remain to the person laboring under them, after their removal, within which to assert the right. Such is the language and policy of the statute. The former statute excluding the period of disability, from the computation of the bar, was supposed to render titles and possessions too insecure, and unreasonably to prolong the day of litigation. To remedy the mischief,
The remaining charges of the court conform to the views we have expressed. The judgment must be affirmed.