Neale v. Lee

19 D.C. 5
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1890
DocketNo. 26,753
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 D.C. 5 (Neale v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neale v. Lee, 19 D.C. 5 (D.C. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice James

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action of trespass for cutting down the wall of the plaintiffs’ dwelling house. The defendant claims that the house in question encroached 8 inches upon his land, and that, after reasonable notice to the plaintiffs, he had removed the encroaching part of the building in. order, that he might build on the line of his own lot, using-in doing so reasonable care and skill.

The parties were adjoining owners, and the question in this case is whether the plaintiff had acquired title to the 8 inches in controversy by adverse possession.

It appears by the bill of exceptions that one Frederick Koones testified that he purchased from one Bay ley the the whole of lot 16 in square 499, on the 15th of May, 1852; that about a year afterwards he liad a survey of the said lot made by the then city surveyor, who located what he represented to be the exact metes and bounds thereof; that thereupon he built two frame houses upon the eastern part of said lot as so located, and that the house in controversy is the eastern one, and now stands where it was then built; that he claimed the said two houses and the ground upon which they were built as his property down to the 25th of September, 1857, when he sold the same to one Colquhoun; that while lie held them he supposed that they were entirely built upon his own ground, and had intended to build them on the property covered by his deed ; but that having built them he claimed them as they stood as his own. On cross-examination he further testified that he did not know of any mistake by the surveyor until about two weeks before the time of this trial, and that he intended to claim lot 16, which his deed called for, and always supposed that the [11]*11house stood on that lot; but that he did in fact claim the whole of the ground covered by the said houses.

Susan Sheldon testified on behalf of the plaintiffs that Colquhoun died in the year 1863. His last will was produced in evidence, by which he devised and bequeathed h> his sister, Mary S. Williams, all the property of which he died possessed. The same witness testified that Mary S. Williams died intestate, and that Elizabeth Williams was her sole heir at law. Plaintiff produced a deed from Elizabeth Williams-to Thomas Neale, dated May 11, 1873, and plaintiffs introduced evidence to show that Thomas Neale died intestate, leaving them his sole l^eirs at law. Susan Sheldon further testified that she occupied the whole of the house in controversy as tenant to Colquhoun, Mary S. Williams, Elizabeth Williams, and Thomas Neale, continuously, until about two years before the death of the latter, in 1888, paying rent to them successively.

The deeds and the will introduced by the plaintiffs contained the following descriptions of the property conveyed : The deed from Bayley to Koones described it as “ lot 16 in square 499 ; ” the deed from Koones to Colquhoun described it as part of lot 16, being 26 feet in front, together with the buildings belonging to the same. Colquhoun’s will devised to Mary S. Williams all of his property without describing it, but adding: “I mean everything I possess — real, personal,and mixed.” Elizabeth Williams’s deed to Neale describes the premises as “ being the same property conveyed by deed from Frederick Koones to W. S. Colquhoun, and the same devised by the will of Colquhoun to Mary S. Williams,” and then adds: “together with the-buildings ” belonging to the same. These conveyances will be considered presently in connection with the question of continuity of adverse possession.

The plaintiffs further introduced testimony tending h> show that one Wright succeeded Susan Sheldon, and occupied, as tenant under' Thomas Neale and the plaintiffs, [12]*12■down to the time of the alleged trespass, and also the circumstances of the trespass in cutting away and removing a portion of plaintiffs’ house.

The defendant, as a witness on his own behalf, testified that, after purchasing lot 17, in 1877, immediately adjoining lot 16 ou the east, he had it surveyed, in September of that year, by the then city surveyor, when he discovered that plaintiffs’ house encroached 8 inches on his lot, as ■located by the surveyor. He further offered testimony tending to show that he had informed the said Neale, father of the plaintiffs, of the encroachment, “and that said Neale had stated, both to the defendant and to other witnesses, that he would remove the said encroachment whenever said defendant was ready to build on his said lot 17, and that he had inquired about the cost of said removal.”

Upon this evidence the court gave to the jury the following instructions at the request of the plaintiffs :

“If the jury shall find from the evidence that, prior to the alleged admissions, promises, and agreements testified to on behalf of the defendant, as having been made by Thomas Xeale, the father of the plaintiffs in this suit, the said Neale had, through himself and his grantors, been in actual, undisputed, and continued possession of the premises in controversy in this suit, claiming title thereto for the full and uninterrupted period of twenty years, they are instructed to disregard the alleged admissions, promises, or agreements, and to make up their verdict as though no such testimony had been offered or received in the case.”

This instruction involved two propositions; the first relating to the law of adverse possession, the second to the effect of certain admissions or promises made by the possessor after the period of twenty years had elapsed. The jury were told, in effect, that actual, undisputed, and continued possession by Neale, through himself and his grantors, claiming title for the full and uninterrupted period of twenty years, would establish a legal title in him, and that [13]*13the admissions and promises alleged to have been made by-him after that period could not affect that legal title, and., were therefore to be wholly disregarded.

When possession is to be deemed adverse, so as to set the Statute of Limitation in motion, has been the subject of variable definition, even by the Supreme Court of the United States. In Clarke’s Lessee vs. Courtney, 5 Peters, 354, Mr. Justice Story, speaking for the court, said :

“ If a mere trespasser, without any claim or pretense of title, enters into land and holds the same adversely to the title of the true owner, it is an ouster or disseizin of the latter.”

It would seem to follow that, since disseizin puts the true owner to his re-entry, the statute.must begin to run, and that claim or pretense of antecedent title is not necessary, in order to render the subsequent possession adverse. At the same term of the court Mr. Justice Johnson said, in Bradstreet vs. Huntington, 5 Peters, 440:

“ Whenever tlio proof is that one in possession holds for himself, to the exclusion of others, the possession so held must be adverse to all others.”

Claim of right is not here included, much less a claim of antecedent right. But in Ewing vs. Burnett, 11 Peters, 52, Mr. Justice Baldwin, speaking for the court, seemed to regard a claim of right, and perhaps of antecedent right, as an element of adverse possession. We suppose that any apparent conflict in these opinions is explained by the following passage in Mr. Wallace’s note to Nepean vs. Doe and Taylor vs. Horde, 2 Smith’s Leading Cases, Part II, 707 :

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Tippett
569 A.2d 1186 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 D.C. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neale-v-lee-dc-1890.