Lessee of Clymer v. Dawkins

44 U.S. 674, 11 L. Ed. 778, 3 How. 674, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 44 U.S. 674 (Lessee of Clymer v. Dawkins) 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
Lessee of Clymer v. Dawkins, 44 U.S. 674, 11 L. Ed. 778, 3 How. 674, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 455 (1845).

Opinion

■Mr. Justice STORY

delivered the opinion of the court.

' This is the case of a writ of ¡error to the Circuit Court of the district of Kentucky. The original suit .was añ ejectment for a. certain tract of land, in Kentucky, containing eleven thousand acres; and upon the trial, upon the general issue, a verdict was found for the defendants, upon which judgment passed for them. A bill of exceptions was taken by the plaintiff, to the opinions of the court at the" trial; and to revise those opinions, the-present writ of error is brought by the plaintiff.

On the 24th of December, 1806, a patent for the tract of eleven thousand acres of .land was granted by the. commonwealth of Kentuckyy'untó George Clymer, (under whose will the lessors of the -plaintiff make claim?) one-third, and unto Charles.Lynch and John Blanton, (under whom'the defendants make claim,)'two-thirds. In the year 1810, if not at án earlier period, (for there is some repugnancy in the various dates stated in the record,) Lynch and Blanton procured a partition of the tract to be made, by .the authority of the County Court of 'Henry, by certain commissioners, appointed pursuant' to the Kentucky statute of 1792, by which one-third was assigned ■in severalty to Clymer, (he being then a non-resident,) by-certain1 metes and ■ bounds; and the remaining two-thirds were assigned to Lynch and Blanton, by certain other metes and bounds. The return of the commissioners was filed, acknowledged, and admitted to record in the clerk’s office pf the county of Henry, in I8l0; but the Court of that county do not seem to have ordered the return to be received and recorded until 1827. How this delay took place, has not been' satisfactorily explained; and the omission has been insisted upon as an objection to the validity of the partition.

All the defendants appear, from the evidence, to have derived title to the lands in their respective occupation, and to have entered into possession of the same, after the partition was made, and by titles in severalty, derived exclusively from or under Lynch and Blanton; and the lands held-by them are situate exclusively within the tract as-, signed by the, partition to Lynch and Blanton. The main defence relied upon hy the defendants, at the trial, was an adverse possession to the title of Clymer, during the period prescribed by the Statute of Limitations of-Kentucky. To rebut this defence, the plaintiff insisted that the partition was void, and being void,- the defendants having entered into the land under the patent to Clylfier, Lynch and Blanton, who still, notwithstanding the partition, in point of law, remained ■ tenants in common of the land, were not at liberty .to set up an adverse possession against that title; nor at liberty to set up *688 any outstanding superior title in any third person, under any elder patent offered in evidence, to defeat the plaintiff in the action.

The.plaintiff, upon the evidence, (which need not be here particularly recited,) moved the-court to instruct the jury as follows: [See fjie statement of the reporter.]

The defendants also moved the court to give certain instructions to the jury; which instructions the court refused to give, but gave the following instruction .in substitution thereof: [See. statement..]

To the instructions so refused as propounded by the plaintiff, and to the several instructions so given by the court, the plaintiff excepted; and the cause-stands before us for consideration upon the validity of these exceptions.

The first point made at the argument for the plaintiff; is as to the validity of the partition under the proceedings in the county of Henry. In our judgment, it is wholly unnecessary to decide whether those proceedings were absolutely void or not; for, assuming them to have been defective or invalid, still, as they were matter of public notoriety, of which Clymer was bound, at his peril, to take notice ; and. as Lynch and Blanton, under those proceedings, claimed an exclusive title to the land assigned to them, adversely to Clymer; if the defendants entered under that • exclusive title, the possession must be deemed adverse, in point of law, to that of Clymer;

And this leads us to the consideration of the instructions actually given by the court, which cover the whole ground in controversy, and, if correct in point of law, show, that the court rightly refused to give the instructions asked by the plaintiff, so far as they were not consistent with the instructions actually given. It is very clear that the court are not bound to give instructions in the terms required by either party; but it is, sufficient if so much - thereof are given as are applicable to the evidence before the jury, and the merits of the case, as presented by the parties.

The first instruction given by the court is as favourable to the plaintiff, in all its bearings, as the law either justifies or requires, and is in direct response to the substance of some of the instructions asked by the plaintiff. It in substance states that if the defendants entered under the title of Clymer, Lynch and Blanton, as tenants in common,- and did not claim any title except to two-thirds of the parcels of land respectively held by them, and not to the entirety thereof, ■. then their entry into the possession did not oust either Clymer or his devisees of his or their undivided third' part, and was not adverse 'thereto; and that the defendants so entering could not avail themselves of the defence of the Statute of Limitations; and they could not avail themselves of the outstanding legal title of third persons by any elder patent. So far as this instruction goes, it is manifest that-it was favourable to the plaintiff; and indeed it is not now per se objected to, but the objection is, that it does not go far enough, and thus wras to the prejudice of the plaintiff.

*689 The real point in controversy turns upon the second instruction given Bythe court, in answer to the prayer of the defendants. • That instruction, in substance, states, that if any of the defendants entered into possession of the lands respectively claimed by them, and held the same for more than twenty years before the commencement of the suit, by a purchase and claim thereof in-entirety and severalty, and not for an undivided part thereof, in co-tenancy with Clymer or his devisees, -but adversely to them, then such defendant was entitled to a verdict.in his favour, whethér he held by a purchase from Lynch, or Blanton, or any other person who had ever after-wards, up to the commencement of the suit, continued thus to hold the possession. We see(no objection, to this instruction, which ought to prevail in favour of the plaintiff: on the contrary, we deem it entirely correct, and consonant to the principles of law upon this subject; It is true, that the entry and possession of one tenant in common of and into the land held .in common, is ordinarily deemed the entry and possession of all the tenants; and this presumption will prevail in favour of all, until some notorious act of ouster or adverse possession by the party so entering into possession, is brought home to the knowledge or notice of, the others. When this occurs, the possession is from that period treated as adverse to the other tenants, and it will afterwárds be as operative against them, as if the party had entered under an adverse title. Now such a notorious ouster or adverse possession may be by any overt act

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Bluebook (online)
44 U.S. 674, 11 L. Ed. 778, 3 How. 674, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lessee-of-clymer-v-dawkins-scotus-1845.