Merwin v. Morris

42 A. 855, 71 Conn. 555, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 9, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 42 A. 855 (Merwin v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merwin v. Morris, 42 A. 855, 71 Conn. 555, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 27 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

The refusal to charge in the language of the 9th request is not error. The weight to be given to an entry with color of title, upon the question of adverse possession, depends upon the circumstances of the case and the nature of the color of title claimed. It does not necessarily follow that adverse possession can be proved by less evidence [568]*568when the entry is under color of title than when it is not. Under the circumstances of this case the court properly left to the jury the weight to be given to the defendants’ alleged color of title.

The other requests to charge, so far as applicable to the case disclosed by the finding, were substantially covered by the charge of the court.

The defendants, in argument, claimed error in the failure to charge in the language of the fifth request, as to what acts were necessary to establish in law a' re-entry by an owner who had been ousted. The request relates to the statute against selling disputed titles, and is obscure. The court understood it (and reasonably—for no other meaning seems consistent with the state of evidence or claims—) as a request to charge that if the plaintiff’s grantor was disseized when he conveyed to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff claims that after receiving this conveyance he took possession of the premises, he must show that he in fact retook actual possession. The request was properly refused. The court did charge that if the jury found that the plaintiff’s grantor was disseized at the time of conveyance to the plaintiff, their verdict must be for the defendants. The defendants cannot complain of this; it is more than they asked.

The requests to charge, including all that were made, cover some six printed pages. The charge extends over fifteen pages, and is open to the criticisms usually invited by undue length. This, however, as well as some occasional obscurity, is due in great part to an attempt to deal with the requests, many of which were unsuited to a clear presentation of the real issues. These issues were few: Was the grantor of the plaintiff disseized when he conveyed to the plaintiff? Did the deeds and other evidence, independent of the question of adverse possession, show ownership in the plaintiff? If so, had this ownership been terminated by a title through adverse possession acquired by the defendants ? If not, was the land in the actual, exclusive occupation of the defendants at the time of the alleged trespass ? These questions, except the one of the plaintiff’s ownership without reference to the ques[569]*569tion of adverse possession, all depended on the single question of fact,—-were the acts of the defendants in respect to the land in question such as under the circumstances of this case prove an ouster, or a title by adverse possession? The law necessary to enable the jury to pass upon these questions was stated by the court with sufficient accuracy.

The defendants select from the charge eleven passages as being erroneous.

That portion of the charge stated in the first passage was given in view of the conditions disclosed by the finding. The meaning of the language of the deeds in evidence, and their legal effect, was a question of law, and the court properly held that these deeds showed a title of record to the land described in the deeds, to be in the plaintiff. The identity of the land so described and the land in dispute, was a question, of fact for the jury; but it is stated in the finding that it was admitted that the land described in the deeds is the land in dispute, so that as to this fact there was really no controversy for the jury to settle. Under these circumstances, the omission of the court when charging that the title of record was in the plaintiff, to remind the jury that the identity of the land in dispute and the land to which a title of record was shown, was a question of fact for them, was a harmless omission.

The further and material question, whether the plaintiff’s predecessors in title were actually the owners of the land de scribed in the paper title, was left to the jury as a question of fact, as will appear when we deal with that part of the charge.

The second, third, fourth and fifth passages, relate to the law of adverse possession. The nature of adverse possession, as involved in the case on trial, was fully and correctly given. Huntington v. Whaley, 29 Conn. 891, 397, 398. The defendants’ brief suggests no ground of error in this part of the charge, except the claim that one passage implies taking a matter of fact from the jury, and another that a mere preponderance of evidence is not sufficient to sustain the defendants’ claim. These alleged implications, in view of the context, are fanciful. The court tells the jury that they are to [570]*570take into account all the claims of the plaintiff and defendants, “ and to determine whether the defendants have shown you by a preponderance of evidence that they have had such necessary adverse occupation of the property for the period claimed.” And further, the jury were told: “ It is not a matter of law. It is a matter of fact for you to determine, whether these acts and all others relating to this claimed possession are sufficient in your judgment, shown by a preponderance of evidence, to vindicate the claim here of adverse possession.”

The sixth, seventh and eighth passages relate to the fact that the deed from Jeremiah Platt, the defendants’ predecessor in title in 1773, states that the southern boundary of the land conveyed is “ Samuel Burwell’s Meadow,” and the fact that the deed.from Isaac S. Baldwin, the defendants’ predecessor in title in 1819, states that the southern boundary of the land conveyed is the land of “ Samuel Burwell’s heirs; ” in connection with the admitted fact that the land described as “ Samuel Burwell’s Meadow ” and the land of “ Samuel Bur-well’s heirs,” is the land known as “Phillips’ Meadow ” claimed by the plaintiff, and the further fact that according to the record title Phillips’ Meadow belonged to Samuel Burwell at the time of his death a few years subsequent to Platt’s deed, and from 1778 to 1817, two years before Baldwin’s deed, belonged to Samuel Burwell’s heirs.

The court charges the jury, in substance, that the statements in these deeds amount to an admission on the part of the grantors that- the Round Meadow lot owned by them is bounded on the south by the Phillips’ Meadow lot owned by Samuel Burwell and subsequently by Samuel Burwell’s heirs. This passage must be read in the light of the context. The court had just charged the jury that the defendants’ claim that a mere paper chain of title does not constitute ownership, without possession being shown on the part of the owner or some grantor, was correct, but that this abstract proposition was immaterial unless it applied to the facts of the case; and if the jury found that the defendants’ predecessors in title had admitted title to be in the plaintiff’s predecessors, and so found the title or ownership established, that then it was not [571]*571necessary for the owner to show actual exercise of possession, because the title draws possession unless the owner has been ousted of that possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A. 855, 71 Conn. 555, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merwin-v-morris-conn-1899.