(after stating the facts.) — To overturn said decree the appellants seem to reply here mainly upon the three propositions, vis: (1) That the appellees have not shown themselves- to have any title to the claimed undivided one-half interest in the particular one thousand acres described in the bill. That the undivided one-half interest in a 1000 acre grant shown to have been conveyed by Pedro Miranda to Joseph S. Sanchez and subsequently levied upon and sold under an execution and judgment against said Joseph S. Sanchez and purchased at the sale by the ancestor of the complainants below formed no part of the 1000 acre grant to Pedro Miranda that is described in the bill, but consisted of an entirely different tract. (2.) That the deed made by the Coroner of St. Johns County to the ancestor of the complainants in pursuance of an execution sale under a judgment against Joseph S. Sanchez, he being at the time Sheriff of the County* conveyed no title because no judgment against said Joseph S. Sanchez was shown or proven for the enforcement of which said execution was issued under which said sale was made. (3) That even if the complainants below showed title in themselves they are barred by adverse occupancy and possession for a period of seven years by the defendants below.
As to the first of these contentions we are satisfied upon
The second of the above contentions cannot avail the appellants at this time or here, for the reason that said Coroner’s deed made in pursuance of a public sale of said land under an execution against Joseph S. Sanchez was admitted in evidence without any objection to the effect that before it became admissible the judgment and execution under which such sale was made, .should have been introduced as a predicate for its admission. Had, this objection been made and urged at the. time the Coroner’s deed was offered in evidence, or. before the Chancellor,, the complainant would have had an opportunity, to introduce the missing judgment;'but by-their failure to .object upon this ground they must be held to have waived the objection and to have consented to the admission of the deed with all the probative force of which as such, it, upon
The third contention of the appellants that the decree appealed from is erroneous because the proofs show that the appellants the Stokelys have been in the adverse possession of the lands in dispute for upwards of seven years under a claim of right to the whole tract, and that the appellees are therefore barred by the statute of limitations from maintaining this suit, is likewise untenable. In the first place no such question as the bar of the statute of limitations was raised or presented in the pleadings of the cause, nor does it appear to have been advanced at the hearing before the Chancellor below, but, however this may be, we do not think that the proofs in the cause show such an act of ouster by the Stokelys of their co-tenants the Conners brought home to the knoweldge of the latter as would put in operation in favor of the former the bar of the statute of limitations. The appellants the Stokelys and the appellees the Conners are shown by the proofs to be tenants in common of the land in dispute. “The general rule is that the seisin or the possession of one tenant in common is deemed to be the possessor of all. But if one ousts the other, or denies his tenure, his possession becomes adverse, or if the circumstances show an intent on his part to hold adversely. But a tenant in common, to show an ouster of his co-tenant, must show acts of possession inconsistent with and exclusive of the rights of such co-tenant, and such as would amount to an ouster between landlord and tenant, and knowledge on the part of his co-tenant, of his claim of exclusive ownership. He has the right to assume that the possession of his co-tenant in his possession, until informed to the
It is again contended for the appellants that according to the ruling of this court in Benner v. Street, 32 Fla. 274, 13 South. Rep. 407, and in Street v. Benner, 20 Fla. 700, no decree of partition should be made until all the defendants have answered, or until a decree pro confesso has been regularly entered against all those who fail to answer, and that the decree appealed from is erroneous because the transcript of record brought here on this appeal does not show that a decree pro confesso was entered against the defendants to the- bill who failed to answer or plead thereto. We are in perfect accord with the rule of practice laid down in the two cases last above cited. But there is another rule of practice equally binding upon us, and that is that where an appellant comes here complaining of alleged error, the burden is upon him to make the error complained of clearly to appear. The presumptions are always in favor of the correctness of