35 Mo. 326 | Mo. | 1864
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case was before this court once before, by the style of
The defendant denied the co-tenancy, set up adverse possession, &o.
The evidence showed'that the land was confirmed to Francis Duquette ; that it was sold by Duquette’s administrator to John McKniglit and Thomas Brady, on the 29th of April, 1817 ; that McKnight’s interest was sold under execution against him to A. L. Magenis and Daniel Griffith, on the 22d of November, 1825, and Magenis conveyed his interest to Griffith on the 26th of November, 1825 ; that Griffith died in 1844, leaving a widow andTtwo children, one of whom is the defendant Eliza; and that in 1852, by partition among the heirs of Griffith, the tract of land in question was assigned to Eliza; that on May 30th, 1846, Brady’s administrator sold his interest in the tract of land to John O’Fallon, who sold the same to the plaintiff on June 28, 1859.
In stating these transfers no attention is paid to the objections made to several of the deeds and no opinion is given as to the effect of them, but for the present purpose they are assumed to be effectual to convey the interests they profess
In 1835, Griffith bought a tax bill to the tract for the taxes of the year 1833, which were assessed to Duquette, who had then long been dead, and from that time (1835) Griffith and his representatives continued to pay the taxes upon the land which were assessed to him, and after his death to his representatives. Prior to 1850 there was no actual possession of the land, and no acts of ownership exercised over it by the predecessors of the defendant other than the payment of taxes, verbal claim of title, and the appointment of agents to protect it from trespassers.
In 1850, the widow of Daniel Griffith took possession of the tract by enclosing and cultivating a portion of it, and that possession was continued by the defendant after the land was assigned to her in the suit in partition, down to the present time. No direct notice was ever given the plaintiff or his predecessors in title, that the defendant or her predecessors held adversely to him or them. The representatives of Daniel Griffith after his death, probably in ignorance of the real state of their title, claimed the entire ownership of the whole tract, and in all their actings, including the controversy and compromise with the town of St. Charles, assumed that they were the sole owners of the tract and recognized no co-tenancy with any other person. During all this time the plaintiff and his predecessors in title do not appear to have exercised any acts of ownership over the land, or to have asserted any claim to the possession of it down to the time of the bringing of this suit in 1859.
It is always difficult in cases of this character, to determ
The deed of 1835, from the Auditor of Public Accounts for the tax title, was admitted in evidence only as one means of showing the character of the subsequent possession; and for that purpose it was immaterial that no title may have been acquired thereby; and for the specific purpose for which it was offered it was admissible, notwithstanding that the purchase by one co-tenant of an outstanding encumbrance generally enures to the benefit of his co-tenants. Alone, it would not show that the subsequent possession was adverse, but it was a circumstance proper to be considered with others in determining the character of the possession.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.