McGowan v. Carlton

1930 OK 227, 288 P. 338, 143 Okla. 106, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 6, 1930
Docket19346
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1930 OK 227 (McGowan v. Carlton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGowan v. Carlton, 1930 OK 227, 288 P. 338, 143 Okla. 106, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 566 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

HALL, C.

This was an action to quiet title and to cancel the deed of the record owner of the land. The foundation of plaintiff’s cause of action was adverse possession ; that is, he claimed absolute title of the premises by prescription, by reason of being in continuous, open, notorious, adverse, and hostile possession of the premises for more than 15 years. The essential facts are as follows:

J. S. Carlton, plaintiff in this action and defendant in error herein, purchased the land in question from one W. B. Dennis, who claimed the land through a deed of conveyance from Simon Graham, the allottee, an unrestricted Indian. Carlton, the plaintiff, went into possession of this land October, 1908. The Indian, Simon Graham, at the time he conveyed the land, was not <?f age, and he instituted an action to recover the land. He did not become of age until May 29, 1911. It seems that this action was compromised, and Graham, the allottee, gave a new deed to Dennis, plaintiff’s grantor, to cure the defect in the title. Carlton, the plaintiff, still remained in adverse possession of the land, claiming the ownership at all times after the allottee became of age. On June 30, 1911, eight days before Simon Graham, the allottee, executed the second deed to W. D. Dennis, he executed a deed conveying this land to G. T. McGowan, the defendant in this action and plaintiff in error herein. The regularity or validity of this deed is not questioned. On February 28, 1927. nearly 10 years after the allottee became of age, and after the execution of the deed from the allottee to the defendant McGowan, plaintiff filed this action to quiet liis title against McGowan, the grantee in this deed. The defendant’s answer was in the nature of ■ a general denial, and by way of cross-petition or counterclaim, setting up h’s aforesaid deed to the land. Trial was had, and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff, quieting the title in plaintiff as against all claims of the defendant, including his deed by which he claimed title to the premises. The theory upon which plaintiff was granted relief was that he had obtained an indefeasible title to the premises by prescription — adverse possession with the necessary accompanying elements for a period of 15 years.

The defendant appealed, and seeks to reverse this case solely upon the doctrine announced and discussed at length in the case of Clark v. Duncanson, 79 Okla. 180, 192 Pac. 806, 16 A. L. R. 315. In other words, it is his contention that, as in this case, where plaintiff sues to quiet title and to cancel’ the deed conveying the legal title in the real estate, basing his cause of action on adverse possession, the owner of the legal title may answer by way of cross-petition or counterclaim,' and that his caíase of action to have his title quieted against plaintiff, and thereby overthrow plaintiff’s title by prescription, is not barred by the statutes of limitation.

It must be Conceded that the question presented is not without its difficulties when a conclusion is sought to be reached upon some clear and consistent principle of law. This is so because the subject-matter is so apparently interlocked with the equitable principle, that statutes of limitation are not often employed to establish affirmative or positive rights; and also by reason of our exceedingly general and somewhat indefinite statutory provisions relating to - a counterclaim, its use, and the time in which mattei’s may bo set up -thereunder without contravening the statutes of limitation. The adjudications on the subject, if not clearly analyzed, present a mass of hopeless confusion.

It is not our purpose here to attempt any extended discussion to the end of reconciling the apparent conflict and divergent views indicated in many of the judicial opinions regarding the operative force of a statute of limitation as a weapon of attack. It is sufficient hea-e to say that nearly all, if not all, the courts, whenever the matter has been presented, have held that, where a person has been in adverse possession of land for the period designated by the statute, sufficient to bar an aetioia for the recovery thereof, the title of the former owner passes to the occupant so that he can maintain an action to quiet' title or in ejectment against siach foa-mer owner. In other words, the statute of limitations, in this character of cases, is a weapon of offense as well as a shield of defense. The universal rule is set forth in 2 Corpus Juris, p. 251, as follows:

“A title acquired by adverse possession is available either for attack or defense, and *108 this is so whether the action is legal or equitable in, its nature.”

To the same effect is the language of 1 Ruling Case Law, p. 690:

“The title so gained (by prescription) may be used by the disseisor either as a weapon or as a shield, as his necessities may demand, in a-ny court or proceeding. The" right, as well as the remedy, of the disseizee is destroyed.”

Among- the numerous cases, the following ones expressly declare and illustrate the above rule: Fagan v. Bach, 253 Ill. 588, 97 N. E. 1087, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 505; Rogers v. Day, 115 Mich. 664, 74 N. W. 190, 69 A. S. R. 593; Sharon v. Tucker, 144 U. S. 533; Craven v. Craven, 181 Ind. 553, 105 N. E. 41; Harrington v. Liscom, 34 Cal. 365; Freeman v. Funk, 85 Kan. 473, 117 Pac. 1024; McMann v. McMann, 123 Okla. 26, 252 Pac. 1093; and the recent case of Stolfa v. Gaines, 140 Okla. 292, 283 Pac. 563.

In several other Oklahoma cases, the rule has been followed and approved without any particular comment, but in the last-named ease, Stolfa v. Gaines, t¡he question was considered and discussed at length; and if the matter was ever an open question in this state, it may be said that it is now definitely settled.

On account of the confusion which has arisen regarding a statute of limitations as-a means of attack, we deem it appropriate to quote briefly excerpts from a few of the adjudications on the point at issue. The opinion in the case of Freeman v. Funk, 117 Pac. 1024, supra, by the Supreme Court of Kansas, contains an exhaustive discussion of the cases relating to statutes of limitation, as conferring or denying positive rights. The Kansas cases, which are so pronounced in their adherence to. the “sword and shield theory” of limitation statutes, were fully analyzed and discussed in that opinion. The writer, of the opinion clearly shows that the Kansas courts have extended the doctrine beyond the limitations given it by any other court, yet, in that case, the court, following’ its own decisions, held “that adverse possession and the operation of the statute of limitations, created a title which can be used offensively or defensively.”

In the body of the opinion,'the court very aptly said:

“The weapon and shield phrase is proper in many cases and under many circumstances, but it cannot be of general application. 'Whenever possession and the statute of limitations have created a fixed status, vesting a good title against all adverse claimants, such title constitutes a weapon offensive, as well as defensive; and the fact that this condition has been brought about by the running of the statute does not change its character, or the rights thereunder. Certainly as to title by adverse possession, this court is in line with practically all the courts of this country.”

In the Illinois case of Fagan v.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 227, 288 P. 338, 143 Okla. 106, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-carlton-okla-1930.