Chastang v. Chastang

141 Ala. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 141 Ala. 451 (Chastang v. Chastang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chastang v. Chastang, 141 Ala. 451 (Ala. 1904).

Opinion

SIMPSON, J.

This was an action, in the nature of an action of ejectment brought by appellee, Pauline Chastang, against appellant, Adele Chastang.

The title of the plaintiff was based on a claim of adverse possession of twenty years, while the defendant derived her title through her ancestor who held a complete paper title from the United States Government, being a patent from, the Government to her father, dated November 15, 1854.

There is no pretense that, any of the land, except three or four acres, (to which appellant admits adverse possession Avas established) has ever been enclosed until about five years ago, Avlien the defendant enclosed i t, by building a wire fence.

It is proved also that defendant’s father, Zeno Chas-tang, took possession of the tract of land under the United States patent, by building ón a portion of it, a house, in Avhich he and his family continued to live, successively up to the time of the commencement of this suit.

[456]*456The plaintiff proved that her ancestor, Theodore Collins, had a house on the three or four acre tract, which was enclosed by a fence, and that he lived there most of his life, having entered it about forty-five years ago, but, short time before he died he moved away and lived with his daughter, the plaintiff, on another tract of land. Rut it seems to he proven, by the evidence that, as to the three or four acre tract, the adverse possession was continuous. As to the remainder of the tract, the son of Theodore Collins testified that his father claimed a strip of about twenty-four acres, but he does “not know exactly where the line is,” blit told him “not to go west of a certain tree,” which tree was about thirty-five feet from where the wire fence now is, but . the witness does not say in what direction. He states that the land which his father claimed ran north and south, with a branch on the north.

He and other witnesses testify that, at different times Theodore Collins cut fire-wood for his own use and for selling to the steamboats, and rail timber, from the land outside the rail fence.

There is no testimony showing any acts indicating any distinct boundary to the land supposed to have been claimed by’Theodore Collins, nor do the witnesses testify definitely as to just, where he cut wood, except that most of them say he cut wood outside the rail fence; one says he cut some north and some south of the rail fence, the plaintiff says he cut wood all over it, and one witness says he cut wood “in any old place.”

The witness Andre, who is eighty years of age, states that Theodore Collins has been dead twenty-five years; that he lived on the land described in the complaint over twenty-five years; that he was in possession of the land described from the time he moved on it ’till he died. Zeno Chastang (father of defendant) lived on the place west of Collins: witness heard a conversation between Collins, and Zeno Chastang, in which Zeno pointed out the line, and told the boys who* were cutting timber, “This is the land, that on the west is my land, don’t go over there, on the other sidei is Collins.’” Witness describes this! land as being about a. quarter of a mile from [457]*457tlie lower corner to the upper corner, nearly square, a littlei larger north and. south than east and west. He states also that Zeno required Collins to move his fence, so that each man should ‘‘have his own fence about his own land," and that this was done leaving the alley between them. This was about forty years ago, “before the Avar.”

There seems to 1m; no proof of any acts of ownership by the heirs of Collins, since his death, except that his son-in-law, Juzang, and his sons lived in the house, and did not use, the land (outside the enclosure) except to get fire Avood, and that a man named Graham occupied it for a while and one of the AA'itnesses got some poles once for Graham to repair the fence; that the Avitness Avas stopped from getting rails on said land, about thirty steps south of the Collins rail fence by defendant, she claiming That it Avas her land.

The defendant’s Avitnesses sIioav that Zeno also claimed the land, that he got Avood off it, and that it was the custom of the country to get Avood anywhere; that about eighteen or tAventy years ago the heirs of Zeno divided the lands of their father’s estate, excepting this land; that they Avere about to divide this also, but Theodore Collins’ Avife told them she had a deed from then’ father and, Avhile they denied that she ■ had said deed, they did not divide; this land, but Avaitad for her to find the deed.

Nothing seems to have been done, in regard to this land, by either party, so far as the evidence states, since that time, until about five years before the trial of the case (January 29, 1903), AAiien the defendant built a Avire fence around the land.

Plaintiff also introduced in evidence a number of tax receipts, running back as far as 1855, but not for every year since that time. Most of them give the value of the, real estate but not the amount of taxes paid; a few give the amount of taxes paid and not the value of the real estate1. The only one of Avhich indicates anything about the amount of land paid on are receipts for 1851 — 20 acres; 1855 — 24 acres, and 1861 — 24 acres. None of them indicate AAdiere the land is.

[458]*458The defendant l-eqnested in writing that the court give the following charge, which request was refused, to-wit.: “The court charges the jury that they cannot, under the evidence in this case, find for the plaintiff as to any land which was not included within the rail fence which surrounded the. house of Theodore Collins or within the fence surrounding the garden or field of the plaintiff, Pauline Chastang.”

All titles in the United States emanate originally from the Government of the United States, and when a party has a patent from the Government, or a direct chain of conveyances from the Government to the present holder, he has what is called a complete title.

Passing over other ways by which he may lose this title, his title or his right to assert it may be lost by adverse possession or prescription ’ in favor of some other-party. But when the law places such high dignity upon a regular documentary title, and requires strict formalities to evidence it, it necessarily follows that it requires .clear and definite proof of those things which rest in parol, to overcome: it.

Hence, the essential elements of adverse possession are, 1st: The possession must be hostile and under claim of right; 2d, It must be actual; 3d, It must be open and notorious; 4th, It must be exclusive, and 5th, It must be continuous. If any of these constituents be wanting the possession will not effect a bar to the legal title. — 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, (2d Ed.) 795; Murray v. Hoyle, 97 Ala. 588, 593; Ross v. Goodwin, 88 Ala. 390; Eureka, Co. et al. v. Norment et al., 104 Ala. 625; Goodson v. Brothers, Admr., 111 Ala. 589; Normen t v. Eureka, Co., 98 Ala. 181.

It seems so evident that it has not been deemed necessary to state it in any case that the party claiming to hold adversety must show by some evidence that he is holding the particular piece of land to which he claims title, and to show that, there must be some evidence showing the exact boundaries of the land claimed by him.

If a man claims title under a deed purporting to convey five acres in the N. E. and six acres in the S. E. [459]

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Bluebook (online)
141 Ala. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chastang-v-chastang-ala-1904.