Parker v. Metzger

7 P. 518, 12 Or. 407, 1885 Ore. LEXIS 59
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 7 P. 518 (Parker v. Metzger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Metzger, 7 P. 518, 12 Or. 407, 1885 Ore. LEXIS 59 (Or. 1885).

Opinion

Lord, J.

The substance of the facts as found by the referee, and out of which the main contention arises, are: That on or prior to the 15th day of November, 1865, the plaintiff owned and was in possession of, as a part of her portion of the donation land claim of Davis Duvall and wife, the N. E. quarter of the N. E. quarter of section 15, township 1 S., range 3 E., in Multnomah County, Oregon; that upon said date the plaintiff, then Priscilla Duvall, joined with her husband, Davis Duvall, in a conveyance of land in which said forty-acre tract, the land in dispute, together with other property, was deeded to one Tomlinson; that the said forty-acre tract was included in said conveyance by mistake of both parties, the intention of all parties being to convey only the land of Davis Duvall, and that the plaintiff joined in said deed solely for the purpose of barring her dower, the intention being to further vest in said Tomlinson the "W. half of the N. W. quarter of said N. E. quarter section, which he had purchased, and by similar mistake the said twenty-acre tract was not so conveyed; that no consideration was paid plaintiff or her said husband for said forty-acre tract deeded to Tomlinson, and that said twenty-acre tract was occupied by Tomlinson thereafter, and has not been in the occupation of plaintiff since said conveyance, and the said mistake was [408]*408not discovered by plaintiff, or anyone, until about the year 1874; that in July, 1874, the said Tomlinson died, leaving minor children surviving him, none of whom are of age; that on the 9th day of May, 1882, a guardian’s deed was made to the defendant Metzger of said premises, under a sale previously made by the guardian of said minors, under an order of the county court, and the said guardian’s deed was placed upon record before the commencement of this suit; that the said defendant Metzger had actual notice of the claim of plaintiff to said land before purchasing at said guardian’s sale, and that the plaintiff is the owner as to said defendants of said real estate, and that the defendants have no right, title, or interest thei’ein or thereto; that from and after said conveyance to said Tomlin-son the plaintiff and her husband continued to cultivate said portion of said forty-acre tract lying within her inclosure, and the plaintiff has continued in the occupation and cultivation thereof up to the present time, and has cut timber and sold timber from said forty-acre tract within four or five years after said conveyance was made; that all of said acts of ownership of said land by the plaintiff were done under the claim of ownership of all of said land adversely to all persons, and the said acts and the claim of ownership were open and notorious, and were well known to said Tomlinson during his lifetime.

These facts as found, we think, are substantially sustained by the evidence. The suit is "based upon two grounds, either of which, it is contended, entitles the plaintiff to the relief prayed for. Upon the first ground the plaintiff claims the legal title to the forty-acre tract of land in dispute by reason of adverse possession under a claim of title, and insists that being in possession of the premises, and invested with the title by operation of the Statute of Limitations, and the defendants claiming some interest therein adverse to her, she is entitled to the relief sought. On the other hand, it is contended that the Statute of Limitations does not vest the title in the person who holds the lands under it; that it affects the remedy only, and not the right; and that plaintiff, not having the legal title, has no standing ground upon which she can maintain this suit. In [409]*409support of this position we are referred to Goodwin v. Morris, 9 Oreg. 322, and Myer v. Beal, 5 Oreg. 130. But neither of these cases were actions or suits concerning title to real property; and as to actions of tort or upon contract, as decided in those cases, the law seems to be that the statute bars the remedy only.’ But the question here directly is, whether our statute bars the right, and vests the title in the party who brings himself within its provisions. If it does, then it is conceded that the suit may be maintained. This question has been very ably and thoroughly examined and answered by Mr. Justice Sawyer in Arrington v. Liscom, 34 Cal. 380. In that case the suit was, as here, to quiet title; and after an elaborate review of the authorities, the result reached was that adverse possession for the full period limited by the statute confers title, and that it is such title as entitles the holder to all the remedies to quiet his possession that-are incident to possession underwritten titles. In the course of his opinion he said: "Some recent statutes provide in express terms that adverse possession for the time prescribed shall extinguish adverse titles and vest the possessor with the fee. Ours contains no such express provision; but is not that the effect of our statute when properly construed? Angelí says, in the language of Mr. Chancellor Harper, in Drayton v. Marshall, 1 Rice Eq. 385: ‘The belief is that no case can be put in which a private individual knows that another person claims and is in the actual enjoyment of land which belongs to him, and neglects to prosecute his rights at law, when there is nothing to prevent his doing so, that he will not be barred by the Statute of Limitations/ (Ang. Lim. 5th ed. 374, § 381.) And Angelí further says: ‘It is also unquestionable that where the land has been held, under a claim to the fee, for the time prescribed by the statute, and an entry is made by the party who has the written title, such party may be dispossessed by an ejectment brought by him who has so held and claimed/ This was so held in Jackson v. Oltz, 8 Vend. 440. The lessor of the plaintiff had been in possession for the period prescribed by the statute, claiming title under a patent. Defendants afterwards entered and held under a title which had [410]*410been judicially determined to be valid. The action was brought by the plaintiffs, relying on the title acquired by adverse possession, against the defendants holding such paper title, and a recovery had. The court say: ‘ If the possession was adverse, and had been so for more than twenty years, as it had in this case, then the possession ripened into a title, and the plaintiff must recover against the defendant, though the paper title to the fifty acres is, in reality, not in him/

“ The same principle is recognized in Jackson v. Dieffendorf, 3 Johns. 269. And in Jackson v. Rightmyre, 16 Johns. 314, Mr. Chancellor Kent says that showing a possession of thirty-eight years under a claim of right ‘was showing an absolute right of possession sufficient to toll an entry/

“ Our Statute of Limitations relating to real estate is copied from the statute of New York, with but slight verbal changes, and we are not aware of any provision in the statute.of New York which would affect the construction on this point. In Bradstreet v. Huntington, 5 Peters, 438, Mr. Justice Johnson says ‘ that an adverse possession, when it actually exists, may be set up against any title whatsoever, either to make out a title under the act of limitations, or to show the nullity of a conveyance executed by one out of possession. On the first two of the propositions there can be no doubt, and none has been expressed/ And in Drayton v. Marshall, supra, Mr. Chancellor Harper says : ‘ The time then required to mature a title

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 P. 518, 12 Or. 407, 1885 Ore. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-metzger-or-1885.