Clarke v. McClure

10 Va. 305
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 7, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Va. 305 (Clarke v. McClure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. McClure, 10 Va. 305 (Va. 1853).

Opinion

Allen, J.

This was an action of ejectment, in which the defendant relied upon an adverse possession in himself and those under whom he claimed, to defeat the plaintiff’s recovery. A bill of exceptions was filed, setting out evidence on both sides. It does not appear that all the evidence is so set forth; but it must be intended to have set forth, if not all, at least so much of the evidence as served to show the mate[309]*309riality of the instructions which each party asked for: And the instructions themselves must be construed with reference to the facts, which the evidence set forth, proved or tended to prove. The court gave the instruction asked for by the plaintiff; and gave the first instruction asked for by the defendant, with a qualification; and refused to give the second- instruction asked for by the defendant: And the bill of exceptions brings up for review the correctness of these decisions.

The questions, though presented under different aspects, at last resolve themselves into one.

John McClure, the fee simple owner of a lot in the-city of Wheeling, permitted his brother Andrew to enter upon, improve and enjoy the property, and take the rents, under an alleged verbal gift of the property to his brother for his life or the lives of himself and wife; and Andrew, as it was contended, claimed to own an estate for life derived from such verbal gift; which claim was known to John McClure during the whole time that his brother held the possession.

On these facts the question arises, Whether an open, exclusive, notorious and uninterrupted possession for more than twenty years before the institution of this suit, taken and held as aforesaid and under such a claim, was such an adverse possession as would bar the plaintiff’s action of ejectment.?

As a general rule, possession, to give title, must be adversary. And where the defendant has entered under the plaintiff, and acknowledged his title as that under which he holds, he cannot controvert it. Thus the lessee is not permitted to dispute the title of the landlord. Having entered under and holding in subserviency to it, it is that which maintains and justifies his possession, and he impeaches his own title by assailing it. Where it is sought to make out a title by adverse possession, the possession as a general rule [310]*310should be adverse in its inception. Where the original possession was taken in subordination to the title of another, it has been decided that the tenant could not, own change the character of his possession.

It has however been held, that a person who has taken possession by agreement, may. under certain circumstances, disavow the title under which he had entered; and that an open and explicit disclaimer of a holding under such title, accompanied with the -assertion of an adverse title in himself, and notice to the party under whom he entered, will make his possession adverse to the rightful owner. The privity existing between them is said to be dissolved by such a proceeding; that his possession becomes tortious, and in effect equivalent to an ouster of the rightful owner; and the statute begins to run from the time of such wrongful act, as in any other case of a tortious ouster. An adverse possession depends upon the intention with which the possession was taken or held. Whenever the act itself imports that there is a superior title in another by whose permission, and in subordination to whose still continuing and subsisting title, the entry is made, such entry cannot be adverse to the owner of the legal title; and such possession so commencing cannot be converted into an adverse possession, but by a disclaimer, the assertion of an adverse title and notice. “It would,” says Judge Marshall in Kirk v. Smith, 9 Wheat. R. 241, “ shock the sense of right, which must be felt equally by legislators, and by judges, if a possession which was permissive, and entirely consistent with the title of another, should silently bar that title.”

In conformity with these principles, it is held that the possession of the purchaser from the plaintiff without deed, is friendly to the plaintiff, and stops the running of the statute. Gay v. Moffitt, 2 Bibb. R. 506. In Williams v. Snidow, 4 Leigh 14, the same doctrine [311]*311was laid down and acted on, although the vendee had been put in possession, had paid the purchase money and used and occupied the property for his own exclusive benefit. But the contract was executory, no conveyance had been executed, the contract recognized the legal title as outstanding, and the entiy was in subordination thereto.

It is supposed that a different rule in regard to adverse possession, has been established in sundry cases decided in the Supreme court of the United States, begining with the case of Blight's lessee v. Rochester, 7 Wheat. R. 535; followed by The Society for the propagation of the Gospel v. Clarke, 4 Peters’ R. 480; Bradstreet v. Huntington, 5 Peters’ R. 402; Willison v. Watkins, 3 Peters’ R. 43; Boone v. Chiles, 10 Peters’ R. 177; Zeller’s lessee v. Eckert, 4 How. S. C. R. 289. These cases contain dicta of the judges, which, considered apart from the cases in which they were uttered, would seem to imply that the possession without a conveyance is to be treated as adverse to that of the vendor.

If such be the rule of that court, it is a sufficient answer to say that the case of Williams v. Snidow, ubi supra, establishes the law to be otherwise in Virginia, and conforms with the doctrines of the English cases. But the cases themselves, when examined, show that in almost every instance the person in possession claimed the absolute estate. The case of Blight’s lessee v. Rochester, 7 Wheat. R. 535, is the leading case; and the remarks of Chief Justice Marshall have in almost totidem verbis been reaffirmed in all the subsequent cases. There the plaintiffs were the heirs of John Dunlop, a citizen of the United States. John was the brother of James Dunlop an alien, who came to the country after the treaty of peace, but before the treaty of 1794. After the death of James Dunlop,, one Hun[312]*312ter, professing to have purchased a piece of the land of James had died seized, from his brother John, and conveyed the land to the defendant, who entered and held possession.

The title of James Dunlop, not being in existence at the date of the treaty of peace was not protected by the treaty of 1794, and James being an alien when he died, nothing descended to his brother John; and the effort on the part of the heirs of John Dunlop, was to recover the land, not because they had title, for no such title descended to their ancestor, but because, as Hunter had professed to have purchased from John Dunlop, and to have conveyed the title so alleged to have been purchased, to the defendant, that this was a recognition of the title in John Dunlop, and the purchaser from Hunter was estopped from denying their title. From this statement it will be perceived that the defendant, who purchased from Hunter, though he supposed Hunter was selling and conveying the Dun-lop title, entered as owner of the absolute estate. Notwithstanding he purchased and received a conveyance of a derivative title, he entered and held for himself as owner of the fee.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Va. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-mcclure-va-1853.