McAllister v. Hartzell

60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 69
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 69 (McAllister v. Hartzell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAllister v. Hartzell, 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 69 (Ohio 1899).

Opinion

Spear, J.

Evidence was given at the trial by the plaintiff below tending to maintain his title to the land in dispute, and by the defendant below tending to rebut that proof. Also evidence by defendant to establish her defense of the statute of limitations. Plaintiff in rebuttal, gave evidence tending to show that the predecessor in title of defendant had, within twenty-one years before the bringingof the action, and while in possession, admitted that the title was in another, and had offered to purchase the land of that other. Also evidence tending to show that defendant herself, or her husband in her hearing, and in the presence of plaintiff, at the time of a sale at which plaintiff bought lots called 15 and 16, made declarations admitting that the true line between her land and said lots was five feet north of the south line of her building. And, in surrebuttal, defendant gave evidence in contradiction thereof. It appeared in evidence, apparently without question, that in the year 1869 or 1870, a tenant of the then owner of adjoining lands now owned by defendant, constructed a substantial building thereon which extended over and upon the strip in dispute, covering the same, and that as early as May, 1872, defendant’s predecessor in title purchased the land adjoining the strip on the •north, including the building, and then entered upon the whole so covered by the building, and took exclusive occupancy of it, and that that possession [82]*82has been ever since maintained uninterruptedly by successive purchasers, including defendant.

Upon this state of the proof the plaintiff requested the court to charge the jury that ‘ ‘ An offer to purchase by the adverse claimant during and within the period of twenty-one years before this suit was brought, the land claimed adversely in the' suit, would rebut the presumption of title gained by twenty-one years’ adverse possession.” Also “Any acknowledgment by the claimant, made within the period of twenty-one years, that the title was in another, or .that the claimant did not own the land, the statute of limitations would not run. ’ ’

But the court refused to give either proposition, and, in lieu thereof, charged as follows : “An offer to purchase by the adverse claimant during and within the period of twenty-one years before this suit was brought, the land claimed adversely in the suit, would be evidence bearing upon the question whether or not she held the property adversely, and should be considered by you in the easeor; if there is any other evidence as to what the defendant said or did in regard to where the south line of the McAllister property was, this should be considered as bearing upon her claim of adverse possession and ownership of the property in question. Or, if she made any acknowledgment in regard to how she was in possession of the property, it should be taken by you.” The refusal to give the requests, and the giving of the instruction above quoted, the circuit court held to be error.

Recurring to tne statute, we find, as to the limit this: “An action for the recovery of the title or possession of real property, can only be brought [83]*83within twenty-one years after the cause of such action accrues, ’ ’ and, as to the requisites of • a cause of action, these elements: that plaintiff has a legal estate, and is entitled to possession, and that the defendant unlawfully keeps him out. The question, therefore, is: Was the action begun in time? In other words, did the statute begin to run twenty-one years before the action was commenced, and if it did, were the acts and declarations charged sufficient to arrest its course? Did either of the essentials cease to exist? ' That the statute began to run more than twenty-one years before suit is not open to dispute. There is no question as to the original seizure. It was a disseisin, judged by all the definitions in the books. Nor is there question that the occupancy has been actual, open, exclusive, and continuous from that-day to this. Was it, during all that time, adverse? The claim is that it ceased to be adverse. This is based upon the proposition that the acts and declarations above recited destroyed the adversary character of the possession, and therefore tolled the statute.

The possession which may in time prove a full defense against the holder of the record title must be actual, open, exclusive, continuous, and adverse. The first four of these conditions, even if involved here, which they are not, have become so generally understood as not to require comment; the last'has been a source of extended and almost illimitable controversy. It is observed by the author of Smith’s Leading Cases in his notes to Taylor v. Horde, (1 Burr., 60), to be found at page 660 of Part II of that work, that: “The doctrine of adverse '•possession, until very lately constituted and perhaps still constitutes one of the least set-[84]*84tied, although most important heads of the English law,” and he quotes Lord Mansfield as saying in the principal case, referring to the general subject, that “thé more we read, unless we are very careful to distinguish, the more we shall be confounded.” It is understood that subsequent legislation, which will be referred to later on, has largely if not wholly relieved the confusion in England, but similar uncertainty seems to have prevailed in many of the states of this union, and the law in America on the subject has appeared to be as uncertain as it once was in the mother country. Our interest in the inquiry has led us to examine not only the authorities cited by counsel, but great numbers in addition; but it is not proposed here to try to harmonize the differing opinions and decisions, for it is not within the compass of the common mind to reconcile the irreconcilable.

The view taken by the circuit court in its holding, and here made in argument by the learned counsel for the defendant in error, is thought by them to be consonant with, and supported by the declarations of a number of text writers and decisions of not a few of our state courts. Support is found in the text of Tyler on Ejectment and Adverse Enjoyment. On page 921 it is observed: “ An offer to purchase land by a party of another is such a recognition of the title of the latter as will bar the defense of adverse possession. ’ ’ The citation, is to Jackson v. Britton, 4 Wend., 507, where the head note is that: ‘ ‘ An offer to purchase land by a party having the title, does not impair or affect his right. Such offer, however, by a party bars the defense of adverse possession.” The facts of the case, however, show that the negotiations were much broader than the [85]*85statement of the . head-note, and the case itself hardly supports the text.

Expressions in other text books, here and there, seem to give color to the proposition that the claimant’s mere declarations disclaiming title may arrest the statute. For instance, in 2 Wood on Limitations, p. 690, is found this language: “Second, the continuity of possession may also be broken by an acknowledgment by the occupant of the owner’s title before the statute runs in his favor. * * * The ground upon which these cases proceed is, that such an admission rebuts the allegation of adverse possession.” But the author observes later on that “a parol acknowledgment of title made while the statute is running must be such as to show that the occupant no longer intends to hold adversely, and must refer to the title set up by the occupant.” And cases in Pennsylvania, cited in support of the text, hold that declarations, after the statute begins to run, must show an intent to attorn to another in order to toll the statute. As in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-hartzell-ohio-1899.