Forrest v. Jelke

7 Ohio C.C. 23
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio C.C. 23 (Forrest v. Jelke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forrest v. Jelke, 7 Ohio C.C. 23 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Smith, J.

In the court of common pleas, Mr. Jelke brought an action in ejectment against the defendant, Mrs. Forrest, to recover certain real estate, of which he averred in his petition that he was the owner, and to the possession of which he was entitled, and that the defendant unlawfully kept him out of the possession thereof.

The answer filed by the defendant, by the first defense admits that she is in the possession of the said premises, but. denies that the plaintiff has any title thereto. For a second defense she avers, that prior to September 26, 1863, one Leonard Swartz was the owner of a certain tract of land containing 12 19-100 acres, and on that day he and his wife Sarah con[25]*25veyed to W. T. Forrest, the husband of the defendant, eight acres off of the west side thereof, and that said Forest after-wards devised the same to her; that at the time of the conveyance thereof by Swartz to Forrest, there was, and for many years had been, a board fence between what was known as the pasture lot of said tract of twelve acres, and the lawn or house tract of eight acres so conveyed to Forrest; that this fence was thereafter accepted as the line between the two tracts, by Swartz and Forrest, and that they treated the same as the line between their respective tracts, and each cultivated and improved up to the same, and exercised dominion on their several tracts up to such fence; that the part now in controversy has ever since said conveyance to Forrest, remained in the uninterrupted and undisturbed possession of said Forrest and of this defendant, his devisee, with the knowledge of Swartz and of his grantees, including the plaintiff, from September 26, 1863, to the date of the filing of the petition in this case (August 13, 1890), whereby the plaintiff is estopped from claiming title or possession thereto. The reply of the plaintiff denies all of these allegations.

Several questions have been presented to us as to form and effect of these pleadings, and the character of evidence which was admissible under them. We are of the opinion :

First — That the petition was in proper form, and as it did not show that the statute of limitations had run against the claim of the plaintiff, he was not bound therein to bring himself within any of the exceptions contained in such statute.

Second — The first defense was a denial of the title of the plaintiff to this land. Under this, the defendant was authorized to show, that she and her grantor had occupied the land in question, adversely, for more than twenty-one years before the bringing of the action, and therefore that the plaintiff had no title or right to recover as against her. But the second defense did not seem to specially plead the bar of the statute, as the defendant might have done; or at least did not do so in the usual and proper form — it did not in terms allege that [26]*26the plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue within twenty-one years next before the bringing of the action. It did allege that defendant and her grantor had held the undisputed possession thereof since September 26, 1863, under such.circumstances as would estop the plaintiff from claiming the possession. It was rather a plea of estoppel than of the statute of limitations, and we think it did not require of plaintiff that by his reply he should set out facts'which showed that he was within one of the exceptions of the statute of limitations.

Third — On the issues thus made, it became a question of proof. The plaintiff, to entitle him to recover, was bound to show that be had a good paper title, which, if shown, would prima facie entitle him to the possession. This the defendant might defeat by showing that for more than twenty-one years next before the bringing of the suit, she and her grantor had occupied the premises openly, notoriously and adversely, unless in rebuttal the plaintiff could show that notwithstanding this, owing to some exception in the statute itself, he was authorized to bring the action when he did.

On this basis the trial proceeded to the court and jury, evidence having been introduced by both parties in support of their respective claims, and without objection, and we understand it to be conceded that the plaintiff proved a good paper title in himself, and that the defendant showed that she and her husband, under whom she claimed, had been in the open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession of the strip in question, from September 26, 1863, up to the commencement of this action (August 13, 1890), a period of nearly twenty-seven years. The plaintiff then could only be entitled to recover, by showing that under some exception of the statute, it had not run against him.

The facts shown were these: On the 26th of September, 1863, Mrs. Sarah A. Swartz, wife of Leonard Swartz, was the owner of the whole tract of 12 acres before mentioned, the eight acres of which, were on that day conveyed by her and her husband to Mr. Forrest. She had acquired the title to the [27]*27whole tract by conveyance from Geo. W. Swartz, on January 27, 1862, as we think, though the deed, evidently by mistake, appears to be acknowledged January 27, 1861. We understand it to be conceded by counsel on both sides, that under the provisions of the statute of limitations of 1850, which we think govern this case, that so long as the marriage relation existed between Mr. and Mrs. Swartz, and for ten years after the death of the husband, if the wife survived him, she would not be barred from prosecuting an action to recover the title to real estate acquired and held by her during coverture, or from recovering the same if she could prove a good paper title thereto, notwithstanding the fact that the defendant in the action had occupied the property in question for much more than the twenty-one years next prior to the bringing of the action.

But on February 21, 1873, Mrs. Swartz, with'her. husband, conveyed all of her interest in the remainder of the twelve acres, and in this strip of land in question, to a Mr. Core, and his title afterwards came to Jelke, the plaintiff. Of course, Core might have brought his action at once against Forrest to recover the strip, as might any of his grantees. As Forrest at that time had occupied this strip adversely only a little more than ten years, to gain the title thereto by occupancy he must continue such adverse possession for nearly eleven more years, and the principal question which has been argued to us, (and it is a very interesting one), is, whether Core, or any of his grantees, deriving title from Mrs. Swartz, then a married woman, must, to prevent the bar of the statute, have brought an action for the recovery of the property before Forrest or his grantees had so occupied it for twenty-one years. Or whether, under sec. 10 of the Code of 1853 (S. & C. 945), which was in force when the right of Mrs. Swartz to bring this action accrued), her grantee occupied precisely the same position that she would have done, had she retained the title. If so, such grantee, according to the provisions of such sec-ion, might “ after the expiration of twenty-one years from the [28]*28time his right or title first descended or accrued, bring such action within ten years after such disability is removed, and at no time thereafter.” And in this case, the disability of coverture of Mrs. Swartz was removed by the death of her husband, whom she survived.

So far as we can see, this question is settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court in the cases of Ford v. Langel, 4 Ohio St. 465, and Wintermute v.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio C.C. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrest-v-jelke-ohiocirct-1892.