Clarke v. Cross

2 R.I. 440
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 R.I. 440 (Clarke v. Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Cross, 2 R.I. 440 (R.I. 1853).

Opinion

Brayton, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question raised in the argument of this cause is, *442 whether, under our Statute of possessions, where a person entitled to a right of entry is subject in succession to several of the disabilities mentioned in the proviso to that statute, he may claim the benefit of that proviso to all such disabilities, or must bring his suit within ten years after the removal of the first.

It seems to have been assumed in the discussion, that if the owner were under no disability at the commencement of the adverse possession, the operation of the statute would not be arrested by one subsequently arising ; but it was claimed, if one did not then exist, and others arose before its removal, the owner could not be barred until after' all these disabilities had ceased. But if the point thus assumed be conceded, it opens the statute, notwithstanding the difference in phraseology between it and the Statute of 21 James 1, c. 16, to the settled construction given to that and similar statutes in most of the States, and there could be little hesitation in deciding, that the disability, existing at the commencement of the adverse possession, is the only one of which the plaintiff could avail himself. The question, therefore, is rather at what time the first impediment must exist, than whether one subsequently arising can be added.

By the general provisions of this act, an uninterrupted adverse possession for twenty years gives to the occupant a title as perfect as if acquired by deed duly recorded, whatever may have been the condition of the owner, even though an infant, feme covert, or non compos men-tis, and whatever may have been the time when the possession commenced or was completed. The title is as perfect against all the world as it would have been by the levying of a fine under the Statute 4 Henry VII. The *443 defendant may plead it, as he might plead a title acquired by any mode of common assurance.

But the absolute operation of these general provisions is to some extent controlled by the proviso, which is as follows : “ Provided, that nothing in this act shall be construed, deemed or taken to extend to prejudice the rights and claims of persons under age, non compos mentis, or those imprisoned or beyond seas, they bringing their suit therefor within the space of ten years after such impediment is removed.”

It is claimed that the rights of a person, who is subject to several of the disabilities mentioned in this proviso, are preserved by it unprejudiced until ten years after the removal of them all.

What is the effect of the possession, supposing no disability to exist ? Against whom, from what time, and against what estate, right or title does it run ?

If the title continue in the same person, from the commencement of the possession to the end of the twenty years, all will agree that the possession runs against that person, and that title from the commencement. But suppose, at the end of eleven years, it passes from him by conveyance, devise, or descent cast, and there be a disability in the person next entitled, would not the continuance of the possession for twenty years bar the right? There never was any doubt of this. It could hardly happen in this trading, changing country, that the title would remain in the same person for twenty years; and if its transfer, whether by deed, devise, or descent, could defeat the effect of possession, there would be nothing fixed or definite upon which the statute could operate with certainty, and it would never fulfil its proposed object of quieting .possessions and avoiding suits at law.

*444 This was the construction put upon the Statute 4 Henry VII. That statute was silent as to the person in whom the disability should exist. It was held that the statute ran against the right, equally in the heir as in the ancestor, and that the disability, which by the statute must exist at the time of fine levied, must be also in the person then entitled ; that it run against the right, in whomsoever it might be, as if it were and continued to be in him who had it at first.

Is the effect of the statute different if the estate continue in the same person ? The statute begins to run with the commencement of the adverse possession, each successive year counting against the title, until the close of the twentieth i'ear, when it bars the title, and then by relation back to the commencement of the possession, binds the right and estate for that intervening time.

Now how is this result avoided by the proviso ? The term prejudice,” employed in the proviso, evidently has the same meaning as the term “bar,”in the proviso as to remainder men and reversioners, for unless the party is barred he is not prejudiced. The proviso supposes the twenty years have run and the title is barred by the body of the act. But in considering this proviso there are certain things which arrest our attention, as indicating what was not the intention of the legislature, and thereby negatively indicating what must have been the true intent.

1. It was evidentlynot intended that any impediment, arising after the expiration of the twenty years, should be within the saving, for it would contradict the body of the act, if, when the title had become perfect, it should be defeated by matter subsequent.

2. It was not intended that the party in order to avoid the bar should have twenty full years free from all im *445 pediments, for if he be under impediments for the first ten years and it then be removed, he is barred by the twenty years, unless he sue within the last ten years in which he is free.

3.' He has ten years certain after the removal of the disability, whatever time he may have had in the beginning free from impediment. It could not, therefore, have been contemplated that he had had any time, prior to the disability, or the legislature would have provided that it should be counted, if, in any case, it would with the ten years make more than twenty years in the whole free from, disability.

4. The impediments are all put upon the same footing, whether voluntary or involuntary. It is not, then, to be presumed that the legislature intended that a party should protect himself from the bar by voluntarily creating a disability, as by going out of the country or contracting marriage. Such a construction would leave the statute open to all the evils intended to be guarded against; and, so far from settling, it would unsettle titles. At most, the intention could have been to save those who had not been for at least ten years during the twenty years’ possession, free to sue. No difference is made in the construction of any of the statutes, between voluntary and involuntary disabilities. Doe v. Jones, (4 T. R. 301. 307.)

Infancy, from the nature of things, could not be a disability arising subsequent to the commencement of the possession, for the disability must exist in the person then entitled. The only other involuntary impediments are non compos mentis and imprisonment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hammond v. Rosewell
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2008

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 R.I. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-cross-ri-1853.