85 Neb. 539 | Neb. | 1909
This is an action to quiet in plaintiff title to land originally within the public streets of the city of Lincoln, and to enjoin defendant from interfering with plaintiff’s enjoyment of said real estate. Defendant prevailed, and plaintiff appeals.
2. The judgment of the district court must be affirmed unless we find that the evidence establishes plaintiff’s title by adverse possession. The' basic element of every adverse title is possession under a claim of right. The rule is well stated in the second paragraph of the syllabus in Colvin v. Republican Valley Laud Ass’n, 23 Neb. 75: “The statute of limitations will not run in favor of an occupant of real estate, unless the occupancy and possession are adverse to the time owner and with the intent and purpose of the occupant to assert his ownership of the property. His possession must be as owner and adverse to every other person.” The opinion follows Horbach v. Miller, 4 Neb. 31, and is in accord with the reasoning of Maxwell, J., in Gatling v. Lane, 17 Neb. 77, 80: “A person who enters upon the land of another with the intention of occupying the same as his own, and carries that intention into effect by open, notorious, exclusive adverse possession of the premises for ten years, thereby disseizes the owner; and this is so whether the entry and possession are contrary to the will of ,the owner or not, if the occupant denies the owner’s title and claims the land as his own.” Smith v. Hitchcock, 38 Neb. 104; Hoffine v. Ewings, 60 Neb. 729; Knight v. Denman, 64 Neb. 814; Bush v. Griffin, 76 Neb. 214; Butler v. Smith, 84 Neb. 78. Bearing this well-established principle in mind, we will examine the evidence.
The testimony of Thomas Ryan, plaintiff’s grantor, establishes satisfactorily that in 1883 a substantial fence was constructed pipón the outer boundary of the disputed tracts, and that the witness from said year until in 1887
Upon the facts the judgment of the district court is right and is
Affirmed.