Christy v. Alford

58 U.S. 601, 15 L. Ed. 256, 17 How. 601, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 U.S. 601 (Christy v. Alford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christy v. Alford, 58 U.S. 601, 15 L. Ed. 256, 17 How. 601, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 546 (1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before us by a writ of error to the district-court for the district of Texas. It was an action of trespass, to try the title to a tract of land. On. the trial, the defendant relied on the 15th Section of the statute of limitations, passed in 1841, by the congress of the- then Republic of Texas, which is in the following words : Every suit to be instituted to recover real estate, as against him, her, or them, in possession, under title or color of title, shall be instituted within three years next after cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterwards, saving,” &c.

In reference to this defence the district judge instructed the jury, that a possession under the said 15th' section might be in two or more, holding in privity, one under another; and if the possession of both so holding will make out the term prescribed by said section, and he sued has title or color of title, then the bar will be effectual.

The plaintiff excepted to this instruction, and the jury found a verdict for the defendant.

Several objections to this instruction have been relied on in this court. The first is, that a holding by two persons, for the. space of three years,, one claiming and holding in privity with the other, does not satisfy the statute; that the person who is sued must himself have held for the space of three years. The argument is, that the period of three years begins to run when *602 “ cause of action shall have accrued;” that the statute does not say when a cause of action, or the first cause of action accrued, but, when cause of action accrued; that cause of action accrues against each tenant, in succession, when he enters, whether he, come into the land in privity with the preceding occupant or not; for each is a trespasser by an unlawful entry; that the statute refers, not to the cause of action which first accrues to the. plaintiff by reason of an unlawful entry, but to the cause of action which accrues to him by reason of the entry of the particular person sued. It is conceded that this construction of the statute is not in conformity with that put upon the -21 Jac. I. ch. 16, and its reenactments in this country; but it is insisted that the particular terms of the statute in question call for a different interpretation, because the bar therein provided for is confined to certain cases therein enumerated, and is not applicable to all cases of adverse holding for the space of three years.

It must be admitted that the bar afforded by the 15th section of the statute is confined to the particular cases therein described; but the question is, whether that description excludes cases where there has been an adverse holding for three years, by different persons holding in privity with each other; and we are of opinion that such cases are included in the 15th section. We think both the language of the law and its subject-matter, as well as the analogous cases respecting the interpretation of similar statutes, call for this construction. The plaintiff would read the law as if it had said, “'within three years next after cause of action shall have accrued” against the person sued. But these words are not in the law, nor would the court be justified in interpolating them. It is true, the only cases enumerated in the law are suits against persons in possession under title or color of title. But the definitions of the terms, title and color of title, which immediately follow, are: “ By the term title, as used in this section, is meant a regular chain of transfer from and under the sovereignty of the soil; and color of title is constituted by a. consecutive chain of such transfer down to him, her, or them, in possession, without being regular, as if one or more of the memorials, or muniments, be not registered or not duly registered,” &e. It is quite plain, therefore, that when this section speaks of a suit against one in possession under title or color of title, it is not confined to cases in which the defendant was the first to enter under that title. If' he be in a regular chain of transfer from and under the sovereignty of the soil, or in a consecutive chain of such transfer, though informal in its instruments, he is a defendant within the descriptive words of this section ; and it is wholly immaterial *603 whether he was the first taker from the sovereign of the soil or not.

The words, “ a.s against him, her, or them in possession, under title or color of title,” restrict the benefit of this bar- to those persons who hold under such a title ; the words, “ shall be instituted within three years next after cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterwards,” prescribe the length of time during which cause of action must have existed, by reason of an adverse holding under such a title. And as, by the very terms of the act, the person setting up this bar must be in a chain of transfer from the sovereignty of the soil down to himself, it necessarily follows that the defendant setting up the bar must be in privity with his predecessors in the title, and that he cannot rely on the title or possession of any one under whom he does not claim. There is nothing in the act to restrict the party sued from relying on the possession of any predecessor in that title under the sovereignty of the soil, which has come to himself, and the purpose of the act requires that he should be .allowed tó do so. That purpose was to give repose to such titles by three years’ adverse possession. But if the construction contended for by the plaintiff in error were adopted, three years’ possession under that title, by one person, would not quiet that title. If a descent were cast, or an alienation took place, after three years had elapsed, a right of action would accrue againsCthe heir or purchaser who should enter, and that action would not be barred because the defendant had not himself held possession for three years.

This would be an extraordinary anomaly. At the common law a descent cast tolled the right of entry, because the heir came in by operation of law; and a discontinuance was worked by the alienation of a tenant in tail, so that the alienee could not be entered on by the heir in tail. These rules of the common law were changed, in part, by the 32 Hen. VIII. ch. 33, and have been wholly abrogated in most of the United States; but that the title of the heir or alienee should be worse than that of the ancestor or grantor, and that an action, wholly barred against the latter, should be revived and be in force upon an entry by the former, under a title already protected by the act, would indeed be strange. We see nothing in the language or objects of the law, and certainly there is nothing in the decisions under analogous laws, calling for this interpretation.

Though we do not know that the supreme court of Texas has had occasion to decide the precise question here presented, that-learned court has repeately expressed views of this section of the act of' 1841, in accordance with those we have above given. In Wheeler v. Moody, 9 Texas R. 377, that court, in *604 considering a defence set up under the 15th section of this act, say: “ The possession heed not be continued by the same person ; but, when held by different persons, it must be shown that a privity existed between them.” So, in Horton v. Crawford, 10 Texas R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 U.S. 601, 15 L. Ed. 256, 17 How. 601, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christy-v-alford-scotus-1855.