Altschul v. O'Neill

58 P. 95, 35 Or. 202, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 206
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 58 P. 95 (Altschul v. O'Neill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altschul v. O'Neill, 58 P. 95, 35 Or. 202, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 206 (Or. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Chibe Justice Wolverton,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

There was a contention by counsel for plaintiff at the argument that the legal title to this land did not pass out [205]*205of the government of the United States until the date of the approval of the selection list on January 27, 1894; that the statute of limitations would not begin to run while such title was in the government, and hence that defendant could not invoke the benefit of the statute, as the approval was less than four years prior to the commencement of the action. It was maintained, on the other hand, that the title passed out of the government when the selection list was filed, September 16, 1886, and therefore that the statute began to run at that date, and, having fully pursued its course, the defendant is the owner in fee. Conceding, but not deciding, that the legal title passed from the government September 16, 1886, we will consider the case upon that hypothesis. Defendant relies upon two defenses : One, that he is the owner of the legal title or fee, acquired by adverse possession ; and the other, that the plaintiff, his ancestor, predecessor, or grantor, has not been seised or possessed of the premises within ten years, hence that he is barred from asserting any claim thereto. Both are based upon the statute, which provides that no action shall be maintained for the recovery of real property unless it appear that the plaintiff, his ancestor, predecessor, or grantor, was seised or possessed thereof within ten years before the commencement of such action: Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 4. The same acts by which it is claimed the plaintiff was disseised during the statutory limitation are relied upon as constituting the seisin of defendant, holding adversely in the meanwhile, and form the basis of his ownership in fee; so that, if they are appropriate and sufficient to constitute the one defense, they are ample to support the other. "We will therefore make no attempt to distinguish between the two as we proceed. The one issue is, which of the parties has the better title? And he who has it should prevail.

[206]*2061. A perfect title always carries with it, in legal contemplation, lawful seisin and possession. Such seisin and possession is co-extensive 'with the right, and is deemed to continue until ouster by actual possession of another under claim of right. It is well understood that the mere possession will not in itself, however long continued, bar the right of entry in him who is seised of the fee, for it might not have originally been taken or subsequently held with intention to claim the premises as owner, or it might be permissive : Buswell, Lim. § 227. As was said by Mr. Justice Baldwin in United States v. Arredondo, 31 U. S. (6 Pet.) 689, 743 : “The law deems every man to be in the legal seisin and possession of land to which he has a perfect and complete title. This seisin and possession is co-extensive with the right, and continues till he is ousted thereof by an actual adverse possession.” And by Chief Justice Richardson in Lund v. Parker, 3 N. H. 49 : “In .settling the question whether possession is adverse or not, every presumption is to be made in favor of the legal title. The law presumes that the possession has gone with the title, until the contrary is shown.” Hence, we may say in the present case, the plaintiff having shown that he was the owner of the legal title by ample documentary evidence, that the presumption of his seisin will continue until it has been shown that he has been disseised and dispossessed of the premises by the defendant; and the burden of proof is upon the defendant to show that his entry was sufficient in character to disseise or dispossess the plaintiff, and that his possession continued to be adverse for more than ten years prior to the commencement of this action. It is sometimes a difficult question to determine when disseisin has taken place, and the reasoning upon the question is somewhat refined, and not at all times fully understood. The books speak of “disseisin in fact” and [207]*207“disseisin by election.’’ With the latter we have nothing to do, for it is disseisin in fact that will set the statute of limitations running, and give title after the full time has expired. Blackstone defines disseisin as “a wrongful putting out of him that is seised of the freehold 3 Bl. Comm. 169. Littleton says : “Disseisin is properly where a man entreth into lands or tenements where his entry is not congeable, and ousteth him which hath the freehold 2 Co. Litt. § 279. And Coke that: “Every entry is no disseisin, unless there be an ouster also of the freehold:” Id. Lord Manseild, in Taylor v. Horde, 1 Burrows, 107, says: “Disseisin, therefore, must mean some way or other turning the tenant out of his tenure, and usurping his place and feudal relation. ’ ’ Thornton, J., in Unger v. Mooney, 63 Cal. 586 (49 Am. Rep. 100), after citing various authorities, remarks: “It must be with intent to usurp the place of true owner, and put him out of possession.” Richardson, C. J., in Towle v. Ayer, 8 N. H. 57, says : “Seisin then may be defined to be the possession of land under a claim, either express or implied by law, of an estate amounting at least to a freehold.” Further on: “Disseisin is a trespass, but it is not every trespass which amounts to an actual disseisin. A disseisin is a continued trespass under a claim of title.” Again: “To constitute an actual disseisin, there must be an entry with intent to usurp the possession, and to oust another of his freehold.” And summing up : “There is, then, an actual disseisin whenever one man wrongfully enters upon the land of another, with intent to usurp the possession, and, retaining the possession, actually turns the owner out, or at least keeps him out.”

And Chancellor Wendell, in Varick v. Jackson, 2 Wend. 167, 202 (19 Am. Dec. 571): “By a careful examination of the authorities., it will be found that there could be no [208]*208disseisin in fact except by tbe wrongful entry of a person claiming the freehold, and an actual ouster or expulsion of the true owner, or by some other act which was tantamount.” Mr. Justice Miller, in Harvey v. Tyler, 69 U. S. (2 Wall.) 328, 349, says : “We think this law to'i be too well settled to need argument to sustain it. There I must be title somewhere to all land in this country, either I in the government, or in some one deriving title from the government, state or national. Any one in possession with no claim to the land whatever must, in presumption of law, be in possession in amity with and in subservience to that title. Where there is no claim of right/ the possession cannot be adverse to the true title.” In Kincheloe v. Tracewells, 11 Gratt. 587, 605, it is said: “An entry by one upon land in possession, actual or constructive, of another, in order to operate as an ouster and gain a possession to the party entering, must be accompanied by a claim of title.’ ’ And in Sacket v. McDonnell, 8 Biss. 394 (Fed. Cas. No. 12,202), Judge Blodgett, in his instruction to the jury, says: “To sustain this defense, the defendants must show that they or their father, under whom they claim, entered into possession under a claim of title adverse to that of the plaintiffs, or of those under whom they claim ; that is, there must have been in some form an assertion on the part of the elder McDonnell, when he took possession, that he claimed title to this property as against all other titles.” See, also, Kerr v.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 95, 35 Or. 202, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altschul-v-oneill-or-1899.