Unick v. Saint Joseph Loan & Trust Co.

21 N.W.2d 752, 146 Neb. 789, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 25
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1946
DocketNo. 32044
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 752 (Unick v. Saint Joseph Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unick v. Saint Joseph Loan & Trust Co., 21 N.W.2d 752, 146 Neb. 789, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 25 (Neb. 1946).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

This is a suit in equity to quiet title to a quarter section of farm land in Buffalo County. The trial court found generally for plaintiff and quieted the title in him by reason of [791]*791adverse possession. Motion for new trial having been overruled, certain answering defendants appealed to this court. Assignments of error are that the decree is contrary to the evidence and the law. We find that these contentions cannot be sustained.

For purposes of clarity we will, insofar as it is necessary, first identify the parties and their legal relationship. Christian Schaub, deceased 1897, and Louisa Schaub, deceased 1914, were husband and wife. Defendants, Charles W. Schaub and Edward A. Schaub, and one Albert Schaub, who is not a party to this action, are their surviving children. Defendants, Ameal C. Meier and Henry Meier, are their grandsons, the surviving children of a daughter, deceased 1881. John P. Jensen and Kenneth H. Dryden were made defendants by reason of a quitclaim deed, dated April 18, 1945, from Edward and Charles, single, purportedly conveying one-half of their alleged one-half interest in the property involved.

Plaintiff, Louis Unick, received a warranty deed to the property from one John H. Feldman and wife on February 8, 1938, filed February 10, 1938. He bases his right to a decree quieting title in him by tacking his possession and ownership upon that of his grantor who went into possession and claim of ownership by virtue of a warranty deed, dated February 20, 1903, recorded April 13, 1903, whereby Louisa Schaub, widow, and Albert Schaub, single, conveyed all their respective rights to John H. Feldman.

It is conceded that on June 4, 1889, Christian received receipt from the United States Land Office showing final payment made upon the land, together with a promise that deed would be issued, which thereafter followed on February 6, 1891. Defendants contend that an agreement dated May 4, 1890, recorded July 15, 1892, whereby Christian, the father, conveyed the property to Albert in consideration of monthly maintenance payments, medical attention, and housing during the grantor’s lifetime, and a warranty deed dated March 11, 1891, recorded March 23, 1891, whereby Christian conveyed an undivided tyvo-thirds interest in the [792]*792property to Albert, were both void because the property was the homestead and grantor’s wife, Louisa, did not join in the execution of either of the instruments. If that be true, it is apparent that a warranty deed dated March 6, 1895, recorded April 19, 1895, whereby Albert conveyed to his mother, Louisa, the undivided two-thirds interest previously conveyed to him by the father, accomplished nothing.

Upon these premises it is defendants’ theory that at the death of Christian, intestate, in 1897, the property descended, by virtue of then existing statutes, to his wife, Louisa, for life with remainder to his heirs, the three sons who each took a one-fourth interest and the two grandsons who each took a one-eighth interest. They argue by analogy that the warranty deed to the property executed and delivered in 1903 to John H. Feldman, plaintiff’s grantor, conveyed only the widow’s life estate' and Albert’s one-fourth interest.

It is therefore confidently asserted by defendants: (1) That adverse possession could not be computed against them as remaindermen until after the death of Christian’s widow in 1914; and (2) that plaintiff’s grantor, Feldman, became thereafter only a tenant in common with défendants who were without any notice or knowledge of Feldman’s claim of absolute ownership, thus title by adverse possession could not be obtained by him or by plaintiff through him.

For the purposes of this opinion we may assume, without discussing or deciding the legal propositions relating thereto, that defendants were remaindermen as claimed and apply the recently established rule that: “The period for which adverse possession may be computed begins from the date when a right of entry and a right of possession exist, and not from the date when the remainderman has a right to bring an action to quiet title as to his future interest.” Maxwell v. Hamel, 138 Neb. 49, 292 N. W. 38.

Nevertheless, the application of that rule is riot decisive of the case. In 1914, if defendants’ position is correct as we have heretofore assumed, defendants had a right of entry and possession and Feldman and defendants were [793]*793thereafter tenants in common of all the property involved except Albert’s one-fourth interest which it is conceded was always Feldman’s absolutely by virtue of the warranty deed executed in 1903. In that situation Feldman was thereafter in actual, continuous possession of all the property claiming all of it as absolute owner for a period of 24 years and plaintiff, his grantee, was in actual possession under a like claim for seven years after that time, or a total of 31 years, before these defendants ever asserted any right or title to or any interest in the property. Therefore, the question presented is whether defendants, as cotenants, none of whom were under any disability, had notice or knowledge, actual or constructive, of the hostile claim of plaintiff and his predecessor causing their ouster and barring their present claims by virtue of section 25-202, R. S. 1943, the ten-year statute of limitations.

An ouster, in the law of tenancy in common, has been defined as the wrongful dispossession or exclusion by one tenant in common of his cotenant or cotenants from the common property of which they are entitled to possession. 62 C. J., Tenancy in Common, s. 32, p. 426.

In that connection it is the general rule that possession of real property by a tenant in common is ordinarily the possession of all cotenants and that before their ouster arises notice or knowledge of acts causing their ouster must be brought home to them in some plain and unequivocal manner. However, the notice or knowledge out of which ouster arises need not be actual but may be constructively inferred from acts and circumstances attending adverse possession which are open, notorious, and unequivocal in their character and import. In other words, notice of such hostile claim may be shown by acts of the cotenant in possession of such a notorious and hostile character as would put a man of ordinary prudence upon his guard, but, on the other hand, acts which are reasonably consistent with the existence of title in his cotenants would not be sufficient.

Thus, we have concluded in this jurisdiction that where one tenant in common enters upon the whole estate, sub[794]*794stantially improves it beyond that ordinarily proper for the full enjoyment or use of the estate as a tenant in common, takes all the rents and profits, pays all the taxes, makes it his home and openly claims the whole for more than the period of the statute of limitations, an ouster of his cotenants will be presumed although not otherwise proved. See Severson v. McKenzie, 122 Neb. 827, 241 N. W. 774, which followed Lund v. Nelson, 89 Neb. 449, 131 N. W. 919, and distinguished Walter v. Walter, 117 Neb. 671, 222 N. W. 49, upon the facts. See, also, Aynes v. Bantz, 114 Neb. 226, 206 N. W. 754, and Craven v. Craven, 68 Neb. 459, 94 N. W. 604.

As authoratively stated in 62 C. J., Tenancy in Common, s. 48, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 752, 146 Neb. 789, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unick-v-saint-joseph-loan-trust-co-neb-1946.