25 Mo. 318 | Mo. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
When this case was here before, (22 Mo. 417,) we remarked that we all concurred in reversing the judgment on the ground that “ possession was not, as the circuit court seemed to suppose, as a mere matter of law, actual notice within the meaning of the recording actsand we then observed that we deferred, until all the circumstances of the transaction should be fully developed in a new trial, our opinion on the question “ how far and under what circumstances the fact of open and notorious possession and apparent ownership of real property was to be considered evidence of actual notice.” A majority of the judges then intimated their opinion that the actual notice of the statute was a fact to be proved as any other fact, and that, as men rarely purchased farms without examining them personally, the fact of possession might, under ordinary circumstances, be fairly presumed to have been within the purchaser’s knowledge when he bought; and that in this state, where the land is generally in the occupation of owners in fee,-if knowledge be brought home to the purchaser
This new trial has now been had, and the evidence given was to the effect that there was a house and farm on the laud; that the plaintiff was at the time of the defendant’s purchase, and had been for eight or ten years previously, in the possession of a mill situate on the land, with an acre of ground attached to it, and that the defendant resided at the time he purchased in the county of St. Louis, about one hundred and fifty miles from the land, and had not been previously in the county where the land lay. The plaintiff then, in order to show that the defendant knew, at the time he made the purchase, that the plaintiff was in the possession of the mill and acre of ground, gave in evidence the statements of defendant — made on several occasions, in answer to the inquiry whether Huckstep, his grantor, had not told him before the sale that he (Huckstep) had sold the mill and acre of ground to the plaintiff — to the effect that “ he told him plaintiff had a mill on the land and would have to move it now.” Upon this evidence the court directed the jury that “ if the plaintiff was on the acre of ground and mill thereon at the time of the defendant’s purchase, and that fact was then known to the defendant, it was a sufficient notice in law of the plaintiff’s previous purchase so as to affect the defendant with notice of the plaintiff’s title,” and that “ possession of a tract of land by one claiming to have previously purchased it is sufficient evidence of such previous notice if such possession was known to the subsequent purchaser at the time of his purchase.” _
From the proof here, the jury might have inferred, and no doubt did infer, that the defendant made the purchase at a distance from the farm and without any personal examination of it; and the plaintiff therefore resorted to the defendant’s admissions in order to show his knowledge of the plaintiff’s pos
Upon this evidence the jury was told that if the plaintiff was on the land and the defendant knew it, this was sufficient notice in law of the plaintiff’s previous purchase, when of course such a possession, not as owner but as the mere tenant at will of the owner, afforded no evidence whatever of any conveyance to the plaintiff. The judgment must he reversed and the cause remanded.