18 S.D. 441 | S.D. | 1904
At the trial of this action now before us on rehearing the title to certain real property was quieted in plaintiff, but on appeal to this court the judgment was reversed as to the defendant John W. Cranmer on the ground that plaintiff’s ownership was not sufficiently established. Weeks v. Cranmer, 17 S. D. 173, 95 N. W. 875.
In support of the allegation that plaintiff, is the owner in fee and in actual possession of the premises, our attention is now specially directed for the first time to a judgment in ejectment in his favor, a writ of possession addressed to the sheriff commanding him to deliver actual possession to plaintiff, and the return of that officer affirmatively showing that the writ was duly executed on the 11th day of November, 1896, by placing plaintiff in actual occupancy of the premises. Now, when the existence of a condition or thing is admitted or prov
Chief Justice Field, in disposing of a case where the plaintiff failed to prove title deraigned from a paramount source, characterizes the legal effect of actual possession of real prop
While plaintiff’s documentary evidence was insufficient to prove title deraigned from the United States government, or a common grantor, its introduction was entirely proper for the