Wells v. Rock Island Improvement Co.

110 Ark. 534 | Ark. | 1913

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). In Connerly v. Dickinson, 81 Ark. 258-263, a quarter section of land was assessed for taxes as an entirety and the taxes thereon were paid. This court held that the payment of taxes on the land as thus assessed under section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest did not give title as against those who had actual possession of a part of the tract under a deed which conveyed to them the whole of the quarter section. And in Wheeler v. Foote, 80 Ark. 435, we held that section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest does not apply where a part of the particular tract on which the taxes were paid was improved and actually occupied by another person.

These cases, upon which appellants rely, differ from the case at bar in that the particular tract in controversy here was assessed separately and the taxes thereon paid on the tract as thus separately assessed, and no part of this tract was actually invaded by the actual possession of appellants.

This court has often held that the actual possession of a part of a tract of land described in a deed gives the grantee possession, constructively, to the whole of the tract as therein described. See Connerly v. Dickinson, supra, and cases there cited. But if a tract of land thus described in a deed is divided into legal subdivisions and each subdivision is separately assessed for taxation, if one of these separate tracts is unenclosed and unimproved, the payment of taxes thereon as provided by section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest will give title as against the owner who only had constructive possession thereof at the time the taxes were paid but who had not taken actual possession of any part thereof. This separate assessment and payment of taxes under the statute is notice to the owner that his constructive possession has been displaced and if the payments continue according to the provisions of section 5057 of Kirby’s Digest this will destroy the constructive possession of the true owner and give title to the parties so paying the taxes. The constructive possession of land follows the title in the absence of actual possession'adverse to it. Connerly v. Dickinson, supra, and cases there cited. But there can be no such thing as co-existing and adverse constructive possession under section 5057, and the language in Towson v. Denson, 74 Ark. 302, .indicating that there might be such cases was mere obiter. The very purpose of section 5057 was to create a constructive possession by the payment of taxes equivalent to actual possession that shut out the constructive possession of the owner who did not pay taxes. To hold otherwise would be to abrogate the provisions of section 5057, supra; for every owner of unenclosed and unimproved land holds the constructive possession thereof.

Had the whole of the southwest quarter of section 20 been assessed as one tract and taxes paid thereon by the appellee it would not have acquired title to any part of the tract. In that case section 5057 would not apply at all. But the separate assessment of the tract in controversy and the payment of taxes thereon by appellee, under the statute as stated, took the constructive possession out of appellants and gave it to appellee, which, under the construction given the statute in Towson v. Denson, supra, and other cases following it, invested appellee with the title.

The decree is therefore affirmed.