Pearson v. Dryden
This text of 43 P. 166 (Pearson v. Dryden) 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.
Opinion
Opinion by
This is an action by Samuel Pearson to recover the possession of real property from William H. Bryden. The complaint is in the usual form, alleging title and right to possession in plaintiff, and a wrongful withholding by the defendant. The answer denies the allegations of the complaint, and sets up title by adverse possession in the defendant, which is denied by the reply. From the pleadings and evidence it appears that plaintiff and defendant have been the owners of adjoining tracts of land in Multnomah County for many years; that in eighteen hundred and seventy-seven, at plaintiff’s request, Mr. Burrage, the then county surveyor, surveyed out and marked a line between the premises of the respective parties for a division line; that immediately thereafter a fence was built along such line by the parties, which has been maintained ever since as a division fence; that each party occupied, cultivated, and improved his respective lands up to the fence, claiming to own to the line so marked, without objection from the other until eighteen hundred and ninety, when another line was run by Hurlburt, the then county surveyor, differing from that formerly run by Burrage, whereupon the plaintiff, for the first time, claimed to own the land between the two lines which had been enclosed and occupied by the defendant, and subsequently brought this action to recover possession thereof. There was a judgment for plaintiff and defendant appeals. Reversed.
[352]*352
It is contended by the defendant that, although this instruction may be correct as an abstract proposition of law, the court erred in giving it in this case, because it has no application to any issue therein, and in this we think he is correct. There was no question of license in the case. It was admitted by plaintiff all through the trial that defendant was and had been in the exclusive, undisputed possession of the tract in dispute from the time of the Burrage survey in eighteen hundred and seventy-seven up to eighteen hundred and ninety, when the Hurlburt survey was made, under the belief of both parties that it belonged to him. The only witnesses in regard to the circumstances under which the possession was taken were the plaintiff and defendant, and neither of them testified to anything from which a license could in any way be inferred, but they both testified that defendant entered into and took possession of the land in controversy as his own. It has been repeatedly held by this court that abstract propositions of law, not applicable to the facts in evidence, are misleading and mischievous, however correct in themselves, because they necessarily tend to draw the minds of the jury away from the real facts in the case to something which they may conceive to exist, although not found [353]*353in the evidence. The authorities on this question aro collated by the late Chief Justice Strahan in Bowen v. Clarke, 22 Or. 566 (30 Pac. 430). The instruction complained of had a tendency to mislead the jury by leaving them to infer that, in the opinion of the court, the the acquiescence of plaintiff in defendant’s occupancy up to the Burrage line might be considered as a mere license, when the undisputed evidence showed to the contrary. For this reason, • we think it was error to give it.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
43 P. 166, 28 Or. 350, 1896 Ore. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-dryden-or-1896.