Baty v. Elrod

92 N.W. 1032, 66 Neb. 735, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 489
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1902
DocketNo. 12,213
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 1032 (Baty v. Elrod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baty v. Elrod, 92 N.W. 1032, 66 Neb. 735, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 489 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Lobingier, C.

This is an action of ejectment involving the title to a strip of land eighty rods long and about 100 feet wide, situated in section 14, township 22 'north, range 2 west, in Madison county, Nebraska. The north half of the southwest quarter of the section was entered as a homestead in 1872, by one John Horsham, who received his patent from the government in 1881, and conveyed the land to the defendants jointly in 1882. The latter, who are husband and wife, conveyed the land to their daughter in 1894, and she on the same day conveyed to her mother, the defendant Mrs. Anna M. Elrod, who claims to be the owner of the tract entered by Horsham, including the disputed strip. The southeast quarter of the section was entered as a [737]*737homestead in 1876 by one John Miller, whose patent was issued in 1884. Plaintiff claims as the grantee of Miller’s heirs, his deed having been executed in 1897, and also claims as his west boundary the west line of the disputed strip. Defendant, Mrs. Elrod, on the other hand, claims that the east line of the disputed strip is the true boundary of her land.

This action was begun on January 17, 1900; plaintiff’s theory being that the disputed strip was a part of the southeast quarter which he acquired by his deed from the Miller heirs. The theory of defense is twofold: (1) That the disputed strip is really a part of the southwest quarter and, therefore, passed under the government patent and the deed from Horsham; (2) that even if it be conceded that the disputed strip is a part of the southeast quarter, nevertheless, Mrs. Elrod has acquired title by adverse possession.

We shall first consider the errors assigned with reference to the instructions. Plaintiff requested the court to charge the jury as follows:

“You are instructed that adverse possession of land formerly owned by the United States can only be computed against the person who may acquire or purchase such land from the government, from the date when the purchaser or homesteader is entitled to a patent from the government. And, therefore, in this case, if you find from the evidence that the strip of land in controversy was a part of the southeast quarter of section 14, town 22, range 2 west, 6th P. M., in Madison county, then you will not consider any evidence as to the adverse possession of said strip of land by Horsham or any one else until the date when you shall find from the evidence that John Miller, the patentee of said southeast quarter, was entitled to a patent to said land from the United States.”

This instruction was refused, and Ave think rightly, because it Avas not applicable to or based upon any evidence. Plaintiff made no attempt to show when Miller was “entitled to a patent from the government.” The beginning of [738]*738adverse possession was not, as is claimed elsewhere in plaintiff in error’s brief, deferred until the issuance of the patent, but as Avas declared by this court in Carroll v. Patrick, 23 Nebr., 834, 847, “as betAveen individuals, the statute of limitation begins to run from the time the party entering the land did all that was required of him to perfect his purchase.” The doctrine of this case is in no way qualified by Mills v. Traver, 35 Nebr., 292, for it is there said (p. 296) : “The statute of limitations did not commence to run against defendant in error until his right to the patent was complete.” In tills case Miller may have been entitled to his patent years before it Avas actually issued. Indeed, it is a matter of common knoAvledge tliat the patentee frequently, if not usually, does not receive his patent until a considerable time after he might have de'manded it. There could be no presumption, then, that Miller’s patent was issued the moment he was entitled to it; and in the absence of any evidence as to when his right to a patent accrued, it Avould clearly have been error to have given the instruction asked.

Complaint is also made of the folloAving instruction given by the court:

“The person who has been in the adverse possession of a tract of land and in person and by his grantors continuously for more than ten years before the commencement of an action to eject him therefrom becomes the owner thereof regardless whether he had originally any title thereto or not. To constitute adverse possession such as to invest a party claiming it with title to and right of possession of the land in dispute the possession must have been open, visible, notorious, exclusive and adverse for more than ten years before the commencement of the action. The possession must have been such as was consistent Avith the nature of the property and is indicative of an honest claim of ownership thereof; and if you find from the evidence in this case that Anna M. Elrod by herself and her grantors John Horsham, James Elrod and Celia Elrod was for more than ten years continuously before the commence-[739]*739mént of this case, to wit the 17th day of January, 1900, in the open, visible, notorious, exclusive adverse possession of the premises in dispute, claiming to own the same, your verdict must he for the defendant.”

It is claimed that this was inapplicable to the evidence, because Horsham’s possession terminated in 1883, while the patent for the southwest quarter was not issued until 1884, and that as there could be no adverse possession against the government, Horsham’s possession could not be included. But aside from the fact that the possession, as we have just seen, might, and probably did, become adverse before the issue of the patent, there is the further fact that the objection is based on the theory that the disputed strip is a part of the southeast quarter. But defendants claim it as a part of the sbuthwest quarter, and introduced evidence in support of their claim, and Horsham’s possession continued about two years after the patent for that quarter was issued. Thus, the instruction was applicable to defendants’ theory, though not to plaintiff’s, and was also pertinent to the evidence offered by the former. It is true that if defendants established their claim that the disputed strip was a part of the southwest quarter, they would not need to rely upon adverse possession, since their paper title would be sufficient. But we are unable to see how plaintiff could be prejudiced by permitting them to rely entirely upon adverse possession if they chose. For the same reasons, we think the court committed no error in receiving evidence of Horsham’s occupancy and cultivation of the tract in controversy.

Plaintiff also presented requests (3 and 4) for instructions to the effect that the defendants’ possession of the disputed strip was not adverse if they did not claim or intend to occupy more land than their deed from Hor-sham called for, or if they were merely claiming up to the east line of the strip, under the mistaken belief that it was the true boundary line of the southwest quarter; and counsel relies upon Grube v. Wells, 34 Ia., 148, to support these requests. Such, indeed, appears to be the law of [740]*740Iowa, bat not of this jurisdiction. “If one, by mistake, inclose the land of another, and claim it as his own, to certain fixed monuments or boundaries, his actual and uninterrupted possession as owner for the statutory period will work a disseizin and his title will be perfect.” Obernalte v. Edgar, 28 Nebr., 70; Levy v. Yerga, 25 Nebr., 764; Tex v. Pflug, 24 Nebr., 666. In the first of these cases, Grube v. Wells,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 1032, 66 Neb. 735, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baty-v-elrod-neb-1902.