87 Ala. 569 | Ala. | 1888
Appellants’ title to the land, to recover which they bring the action of ejectment, had its origin in the act of Congress of June 3, 1856, by which there was granted to the State of Alabama, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of certain railroads, “every alternate
The defendant entered into possession of the land sued for, about November 1, 1870, under a deed executed in the name of the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company, by J. C. Stanton, general superintendent and attorney in fact, and has been in possession ever since, claiming in his own right. There being no evidence of any written authority from the governing body of the company, for which Stanton purported to act as agent, to execute the deed, it conveyed no legal title or estate to defendant. — Standifer v. Swan, 78 Ala. 88. This was admitted on the trial, and the deed was relied on only as color of title, to show the character and extent of defendant’s possession, flis contention is, that his continuous adverse possession matured into a title by operation of the statute of limitations of ten years. The suit was commenced July 13, 1885. The material question is,, at what time did the statute begin to run against plaintiffs’ cause of action.
Further statement of the provisions of the congressional
This construction is not controverted; but it insisted, that the statute began to operate from May 17, 1871, the date of the completion of the road; and as more than ten years elapsed after that time, before the commencement of the suit, that the statute is a full defense. It may be conceded, that if nothing intervened to prevent it, the statute commenced to run on the completion of the road, as the trust would have been executed, and the object of a suit brought thereafter, though in the name of the State, would be to enforce the rights of the company — a litigation in which the State had no real interest. This brings for consideration the legal effect and operation of certain conveyances made by the railroad company to the State, and by the State to the plaintiffs. On March 2, 1870, the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company executed to the State a mortgage of the lands granted by the act of Congress, except such as had been previously sold; and on February 8, 1877, the State, by its Governor, conveyed the land to plaintiffs as trustees. The mortgage and deed were duly recorded. The mortgage
At tbe time of tbe execution of tbe mortgage, tbe railroad company bad only a beneficial interest in tbe land; tbe road not having been completed, tbe legal title was in tbe State. Tbe mortgage expressly conveys any title and estate which tbe company might thereafter acquire. There can be no question, that tbe company could include in tbe mortgage property to be thereafter acquired. Tbe only title and estate which tbe company could thereafter acquire, was tbe legal title and estate — the indefeasible ownership. Tbe company having the equitable interest, and an existing right to. tbe legal estate on complying with tbe prescribed condition, and tbe mortgage including botli tbe equitable and tbe subsequently acquired legal estate, tbe completion of tbe road did not divest the State of tbe legal title, which it bad at tbe date of tbe mortgage. Though the company may have become entitled to it, the mortgage operated, by its terms, to continue it in tbe State.
Another view: Tbe mortgage contains tbe words, grant, bargain, sell and convey. These words, tbe statute declares, must be construed, unless it otherwise clearly appears from
The ten years limitation does not apply to the State, not only on the cardinal and elementary rule, that statutes of limitation do not apply to the State unless it is expressly named, or it was clearly intended to be included, but because of exclusion by express provision, prescribing the limitation of twenty years to “actions at the suit of the State against a citizen thereof, for the recovery of real or personal property.” — Code, 1886, § 2613. It is also well settled, that the possession of the defendant during the time the title remained in the State, though adverse, can not be talren into the computation under the plea of the limitation of- ten years. Kennedy v. Townsley, 16 Ala. 239; Iverson v. Dubose, 27 Ala. 418; Farley v. Smith, 39 Ala. 38; Cary v. Whitney, 48 Me. 516.
The suit was commenced less than twenty years from the time defendant entered into possession, and less than ten years after plaintiffs became the grantees of the State. It follows from the foregoing principles, that the statute of limitations is no defense to the action. The court erred in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the defendant,
Reversed and remanded.