Gardiner v. Hinton

86 Miss. 604
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 Miss. 604 (Gardiner v. Hinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardiner v. Hinton, 86 Miss. 604 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Teuly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented by this record is whether appellant can successfully interpose the plea of adverse possession. Code 1892, § 2134, provides, “Ten years’ actual adverse possession by any person claiming to be the owner for that time, of any land, uninterruptedly continued for ten years by occupancy,' descent, conveyance, or otherwise, in whatever way such occupancy may have been commenced or continued, shall vest in every actual occupant or possessor of such land a full and complete title,” with certain exceptions saving the rights of minors and those suffering from unsound minds. The record proves in the instant case, beyond peradventure, the actual, open, and notorious possession by the appellants or their vendors for more than the statutory period before the institution of this suit, [612]*612on tbe 20th of February, 1903. That John Oreel entered into possession in 1885 under an unrecorded warranty deed conveying the entire tract in fee simple is not denied. That his vendee, the Kamper-Lewin Manufacturing Company, and its vendee, John Hamper, and his vendees, Eastman Gardiner and others, appellants, entered into possession and actual occupancy in 1891, is not denied. Since that date the proof establishes that the occupancy and possession of the property in controversy by the appellants has been open and notorious, marked by every possible assertion of sole and absolute title — the construction of valuable improvements, the regular payment of all taxes, the selling of lots located on the lands, and an absolute control and supervision, exercised in the same manner and to the same extent of an owner holding by an indefeasible title. That appellants or their immediate vendors recognized, or, in fact, knew or had any grounds to suspect, that any one other than themselves claimed any interest in or title to the lands at the date of their purchase and entry, is neither contended by counsel nor suggested by the record. This is a full compliance with all statutory requirements as to the nature, extent, and duration of the occupancy and possession necessary to vest by adverse possession full and complete ownership. Unless, therefore, ap-pellee can show that her case falls within some recognized legal exception which prevents the application of the statute, her claim, must fail.' The soundness of the general proposition that adverse possession, as defined by the statute, if uninterruptedly continued for the statutory period, vests full and complete title, is not questioned. But it is urged that the general rule has no application to the instant case, because it is said the possession of appellant was not adverse to appellee until the deed.from Isaiah Oreel to John Oreel, conveying the estate in severalty, was placed of record; that appellee, having no actual notice of any adverse claim by appellants or their vendors, only received constructive notice by and from the date of the filing of the deed for. reeord, and, as this only occurred [613]*613in 1895, less than ten years before the institution of the suit, the bar of the statute was not complete. This argument is founded upon the well-defined and firmly established principle that the possession of one co-tenant inures to the benefit of all. Nowhere, perhaps, is the rule expressed with more lucidity and legal precision than in Hignite v. Hignite, 65 Miss., 449 (4 South. Rep., 345; 7 Am. St. Rep., 673), where this court, through Cooper, C. J., says: “A tenant in common out of possession has a right to rely upon the possession of his co-tenant as one held according to the title, and for the benefit of all interested, until some action is taken by the other evidencing an intention to assert adverse and hostile claims. If one enters upon the land of a sole owner, and without his consent, he must know that such possession exists, and, within the time permitted by law, take steps to vindicate his right. But the possession of a co-tenant is a lawful possession, and of and by itself is not evidence of an ouster.” The appellee contends that the legal principle just quoted is applicable to, and should control the determination of, this case; that appellee, in default of actual and constructive notice of an assertion of hostile claim of exclusive ownership, had a perfect right to rely upon the possession of those holding under her co-tenant as being subordinate to, and for the benefit of, the joint title; and that, without such notice and in the absence of actual ouster, no character or duration of use and occupancy would ever ripen into a title adverse to her claim as co-tenant. The cases of Hignite v. Hignite, supra; Alsobrook v. Eggleston, 69 Miss., 836 (13 South. Rep., 850); and Bentley v. Callaghans Executor 79 Miss., 304 (30 South. Rep., 709), are cited and relied on as supporting the doctrine and showing its applicability to the instant case. To this argument it is replied by appellants: Conceding the accuracy of the general proposition that one co-tenant can never, unless in an exceptional case of actual ouster, acquire title to the joint property by adverse possession, that rule has no application to the instant case, for two reasons: [614]*614First — That appellants rely upon adverse possession — a possession adverse from its inception, an occupancy hostile from the moment of its commencement; that neither these appellants nor any of their vendors ever recognized any claim of appellee as co-tenant; that none of them ever occupied the relation of co-tenant toward appellee; and that the original entry into possession was not in subordination to the claim of appellee. Second — That the deed executed by Isaiah Creel, the tenant in common, to John Creel, of the estate in severalty, was in itself the assertion of an adverse title, and that this deed, even though unrecorded, when coupled with the actual occupancy of the lands, was a sufficient predicate on which to base the claim of adverse possession; and, the occupancy having continued for the statutory period, the title vested by operation of law, without regard to the “way such occupancy may have been commenced or continued.”

.We find ourselves unable to agree with the argument presented on behalf of appellee. The facts of this case do not bring it within the scope of the rule which prevents one co-tenant from acquiring a title in himself to the' common estate without either an actual ouster or actual or constructive notice of the assertion of the hostile claim. We maintain that doctrine in its fullest extent, and with unimpaired force, in cases when properly applicable. But in the instant case there is no effort on the part of any co-tenant, or any one who ever occupied that position toward appellee, to acquire a paramount title to the common estate. Here from the. moment of the entry the possession was antagonistic to the claim of appellee or any third person. The occupancy of John Creel in 1885 was! founded on an instrument which, by its very terms, constituted ■such an act of ouster as would have justified appellee in bringing ejectment for the property. And since that time every moment of occupancy has been a reiteration of this assertion of hostile claim of exclusive ownership. No case can be found in our reports advancing a contrary view. The cases cited .by [615]*615appellee axe easily and clearly distinguishable. The Hignite case is one where a co-tenant in possession sought to acquire a hostile title to the whole interest in the land, and, without giving notice of his intention, assert the same against his co-tenant.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Miss. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardiner-v-hinton-miss-1905.