delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendant in error, William O. Towle, filed his bill in the circuit court of Massac county on May 25, 1909, to remove a tax deed, and subsequent conveyances based thereon, as clouds upon the title to the south-west quarter of section 24, township 16, south of range 6, east, in said county, which he claims to own by virtue of a warranty deed obtained from C. L. Clanahan in 1890, followed by possession. Plaintiff in error, Cora Quante, claims said land by virtue of said tax deed, and the conveyances based thereon, and seven years’ payment of taxes. On a hearing the circuit court entered a decree in favor of defendant in error, directing, however, that he re-pay the taxes' theretofore paid by plaintiff in error, with interest. This writ of error is sued out to review that decree.
The evidence introduced shows substantially the following state of facts: After defendant in error had purchased ' said land from Clanahan he entered into possession under said deed, claiming to be the owner in fee simple. He was at that time interested in certain enterprises in Metropo-' lis, Massac county, including the operation of a saw-mill. Soon after taking possession of the land he hired some men to cut timber therefrom for this saw-mill. He caused to be built on the land two shanties for them to live in and pens for the oxen that were used in hauling the timber. About twenty men, with twenty yoke of oxen, were engaged in cutting and hauling timber on the land for some four years. In 1894 a bank in Metropolis in which he was interested failed, and being financially embarrassed he'discontinued all his business, including the cutting of timber on this land, and went west to better his fortune, leaving his homestead and all his property for his creditors to take if they chose and giving no further attention to this land until in 1909, when he returned, and on investigating the records found that it had not been transferred to any of his creditors. It had, however, been sold for taxes to C. L. Clanahan in 1895, and on September 2, 1897, Clanahan had assigned his certificate of purchase to one Noah Critchlow, who the same day received from the county clerk a tax deed for the land and on the same day conveyed the land to Clanahan. The latter sold the quarter section in 1898 to Hiram Quante and August Quante. Later Hiram Quante died and his land was partitioned among his heirs, the land in question being allotted in severalty to plaintiff in error, Cora Quante, who was one of said heirs. On May 187.1909, defendant in error, with a surveyor and several laborers, went upon the land and started to survey it, cutting out underbrush so as to make a path for the party. Trees were blazed and posts set at intervals, the survey being completed May 20. They then commenced running wire fences, and by about three o’clock on May 21 had placed two wires along the entire north side, one wire along the entire east side, (with the exception of certain ponds, which they waded into and wired as far as they could go with gum boots,) two wires along the entire south side (to within a few feet of the corner) and about a quarter of a mile of wire on the west side. At this time August Quante, representing the plaintiff in error, came to the land with a gang of men under the leadership of Thomas King. Quante told Towle that he had heard that he (Towle) was fencing the property, and that it belonged to the. plaintiff in error. Towle answered that that question would have to be settled in court. Quante’s men, under the direction of King, immediately started wiring the land, following the line laid down by the defendant in error’s surveyor and fastening their wire to the posts already used, sometimes over defendant in error’s wire and sometimes under it. Whefi the men working for plaintiff in error came to the deeper water of the ponds they stripped 'off their clothing and carried the wire across, using a boat in one instance. Defendant in error finished wiring the land some time on May 21, except across the ponds and except two openings for a wagon road, which he was requested to leave open for a week in order that timber might be hauled. He afterward found that he had placed the wire on the east side about seventy-five feet too far east, and on May 24 he changed the wire on that side to the correct line. On that same date plaintiff in error’s party was putting up wire on the east side on the same erroneous line first used by defendant in error. They also changed their wire to the correct line a day or two later. The last of May or first of June some men acting for the plaintiff in error went onto the land and cleared off some underbrush, prepared the ground and planted about three acres of corn, which they cultivated during that year. In putting up the fence around the land and planting and cultivating this corn the men acting for plaintiff in error did not attempt to take down or disturb the fence placed around the land by defendant in error but lifted' up the wire to pass under it in order to reach the corn field.
We think it is clear from this record that at no time from 1895, when the defendant in error went west, up to May 18, 1909, had anyone attempted to exercise the slightest actual dominion over this land. During all of those years it was vacant and unoccupied. No contention is made by plaintiff in error in her brief that the tax deed under which she claims is paramount title or that the tax sale was valid. The only claim made is that this tax deed is good color of title under the Statute of Limitations, and that having paid all the taxes under this color of title for more than seven successive years while the land was vacant, and afterwards having taken possession of the land between May 21 and May 25, 1905, she thereby perfected her title.
It is first contended by plaintiff in error that as her answer denied title in defendant in error it was incumbent upon him to show title to the land before he could recover. In a suit to set.aside a tax deed as a cloud on the title, propí that the complainant, at the time the bill was filed, was in possession of the property, claiming in good faith to be the owner thereof under a deed conveying the same to him, is sufficient proof of the title. (Glos v. McKerlie,
It is claimed on the one hand and denied on the other, that there is such privity between Critchlow and plaintiff in error as to preclude her from raising this question. “The term privity denotes mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property.” (1 Greenleaf on Evidence,— 15th ed.—sec. 189; Union Nat. Bank v. International Bank,
The bill alleges that defendant in error was in possession of the land in question at the time the bill was filed, and he contends that the proof introduced proves this allegation, while plaintiff in error insists that the proof does not show that defendant in error took actual possession of the land in question before it was fenced in by plaintiff in error. The rule is, that every presumption will be made in favor of the holder of the legal title, and as against him no presumption will be drawn in favor of the holder of color of title, only. (White v. Harris,
It is further contended that even if possession was taken by defendant in error he was disseized by the acts of plaintiff in error. If the holder of paramount title' goes into possession of the property before the party who has color of title and who has paid taxes for seven successive years, the possession of the holder of the paramount title •will be protected. (McCagg v. Heacock,,
Harris, supra.) Defendant in error must have been actually ousted of possession by plaintiff in error before the filing of the bill. A joint possession by two, even though the claim of each is adverse to the other, will not be a disseizin of one by the other. Where two are in possession the seizin follows the title, and there can be no disseizin unless the rightful owner is altogether deprived of possession. If he does not elect to abandon possession to the in-trader the intrusion does not work a disseizin. (Tiedeman on Real Prop.—2d ed.—sec. 698; 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.-—869, and cases cited; Smith v. Burtis,
The decree of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
