The principle that where both parties claim under a common grantor, it is not necessary to show title back of such common grantor, is not applicable unless the parties claim the same property from the alleged common grantor.
Only the defendant Friedlander filed an answer. In it he admitted the averments in the petition as to residence, and as to his ownership of the property adjacent to and immediately north of *Page 798 the property which the petitioner claimed to own, but denied all other allegations. On the hearing, the trial judge granted a nonsuit and vacated a restraining order previously granted, on which ruling error is assigned. In the absence of proof that the plaintiff was in possession, it was an essential part of his case to show at least prima facie that he owned the land the trespass on which he sought to enjoin. The answer denied the averment of title. The plaintiff showed neither possession nor title; but insists that he was relieved of the necessity of proving title since it was made to appear that he and the defendant claimed under a common grantor. The facts forming the basis of that contention are these: After a considerable body of land had been subdivided, Mrs. Ola Williams held deeds to certain of the tracts which were laid out therefrom, and which were afterwards claimed by Sinclair and Friedlander, respectively. Mrs. Williams's deed included tract number 9 and certain other tracts which she conveyed to S. S. Williams, who conveyed them to Sinclair. Friedlander is a direct grantee of Mrs. Williams. The Friedlander and Sinclair deeds cover different properties, both of which, however, were contained in the conveyance into Mrs. Williams.
The Code, § 33-101, reads as follows: "A plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of the defendant's title. Where both parties claim under a common grantor, it is not necessary to show title back of such common grantor." The subject-matter of this section as a codification first appeared in the Code of 1895 as section 5004. The first sentence therein was codified from the decision of this court in Hitch v. Robinson,
Oftener than otherwise, the text-books dealing with the principle, that where both parties claim under a common grantor, it is not necessary to show title back of such common grantor, in immediate connection therewith lay down the rule that "in such event, in order to insure a recovery it is only necessary for the plaintiff to show that he has a better title from the common source." Warvelle on Ejectment, §§ 264, 266. Newell, in his treatise on Ejectment, page 580, Chapter 16, § 3, puts it this way: "As both parties admit the title to have been in the common source, they can not be heard to deny it or to fortify it by evidence on the trial. The party having the stronger or best claim of title from the common source as a starting point, must prevail." In 18 Am. Jur. 34, § 33, the same propositions are thus stated: "It is a well-established principle in the law of ejectment that where both parties to an action claim title from the same third person, each is estopped to deny the validity of the title of such third person, and the one having the better title deraigned from the common source must prevail." The annotation in 7 A.L.R., 860, to the case of Jennings v.
Marston,
In Jennings v. Marston, supra, may be found this pronouncement: "The rule rests upon the principle of estoppel, the defendant not being allowed the inconsistency of claiming both under and against the same title. But the inconsistency must be actual and substantial; and when it affirmatively appears, as we shall see it does in this case, that the real dispute is as to the location of a boundary line between two distinct tracts, one of which the common grantor derived from one source and conveyed to the plaintiff, and the other of which he derived from another source and conveyed to the defendant, there is no inconsistency, and therefore no estoppel to prevent the defendant from denying that the plaintiff's grantor had title to the land in dispute."
The identical question seems to have been ruled by the Supreme Court of Alabama in Butt v. Mastin,
Counsel for the plaintiff in error rely on the case ofWalton v. Sikes,
Able counsel for the plaintiff in error also rely onBarfield v. Birrick,
We are satisfied that, since the plaintiff was claiming one tract, and the defendant was claiming another, the plaintiff was not relieved of the necessity of proving title merely because the parties have deeds to the two tracts claimed by them respectively, their claims of title going back to a common grantor who herself was a grantee in a prior deed covering both tracts. *Page 804
We are of the opinion that the nonsuit was properly granted for the reason that the plaintiff showed no title.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.