This was an action in ejectment, commenced by the defendant in error George W. Strawn, as plaintiff, against the plaintiff in error, A.C. Brady, as defendant, for the purpose of recovering possession of a certain tract of land situated in Okmulgee county. The petition was in the ordinary form prescribed by statute. The answer consisted: (1) Of a general denial of all the *Page 160 allegations of the petition not specifically admitted; and (2) of the allegation that by force of various deeds of conveyance the defendant had been in the adverse possession of the lands in controversy, receiving the rents and profits therefrom for more than five years, and was in the possession thereof at the time the plaintiff took the deed under which he claimed title, and by reason of such adverse possession the deed under which the plaintiff claimed title was void. There was no reply, but when the cause was reached, it was tried without objection as though a reply had been filed; and, after the evidence was all in, the trial court took the case under advisement. While the cause was thus pending, the plaintiff filed a motion to substitute J.C. Cassaver, his grantor, as plaintiff instead of the original plaintiff. The motion set forth as reasons therefor that it appeared from the evidence introduced in the trial that at the date of the quitclaim deed by Cassaver to the plaintiff, Strawn, and ever since that time, the defendant, Brady, had been in the adverse possession of said land, claiming title thereto, and for that reason Strawn could not recover in his own name. In due time this motion came on for hearing, and, the court indicating its intention to sustain it, the defendant asked leave to reopen the case and file answer —
"against J.C. Cassaver, showing that the proceedings in the county court of Wagoner county, through which Cassaver procured his deed, were void, and that Cassaver took no title to the land by virtue of such proceedings."
The court entered an order granting plaintiff leave to file an amended petition within ten days, and defendant leave to file an amended answer within ten days thereafter. No amended pleadings were filed by either party, and no further action was taken in the case until several *Page 161 months thereafter, when the court rendered judgment for Cassaver, the substituted plaintiff, for all the land described in the petition. It is this action of the trial court upon which the first assignment of error is predicated. Clearly, it was error to enter judgment for the substituted plaintiff in the circumstances above detailed.
Counsel for plaintiff concede, in their motion to substitute Cassaver as plaintiff instead of the original plaintiff, Strawn, that the evidence introduced at the trial on behalf of the defendant shows that at the date of the execution of the quitclaim deed by Cassaver to Strawn under which Strawn claimed the right of possession, Brady, the defendant, had been in the adverse possession of said land, claiming title thereto, and that for that reason Strawn could not recover in his own name. That such is the law has been long settled in this jurisdiction. Houston v. Scott, 20 Okla. 142, 94 P. 512, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 721. If we assume that Strawn had a right to amend his petition by substituting the name of his grantor, or to sue and recover possession in his name, even without his consent (Gannon v. Johnston, 40 Okla. 695, 140 P. 430, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 522), still that would not authorize the court to enter judgment in favor of Cassaver. Counsel for plaintiff do not pretend that they made any effort in pursuance of the leave granted by the court to amend their petition, but they contend that where leave to amend is granted and the specific amendment desired is pointed out, and the cause is proceeded with without objection, the amendment will be regarded as having been made. In support of this contention they cite Bullen v. A. V. W.Ry. Co., 20 Okla. 819, 95 P. 476.
Further assuming that this is the law, and that it is applicable to the situation above presented, we are confronted *Page 162 by this condition: The plaintiff asked leave to amend his petition, pointing out the specific amendment desired, which leave was granted by the court, but no amendment was actually made. Thereupon the defendant asked leave to amend his answer by attacking the title of the substituted plaintiff, which leave was granted, but no amendment made. If the rule invoked by counsel for plaintiff is applicable to him, why is it not also applicable to the defendant? Now, if we regard the amendments in both cases as having been made, it is obvious that there is a clean-cut issue joined by the amended pleadings between the substituted plaintiff and the defendant, upon which neither party has had his day in court.
There are other errors argued by counsel for the respective sides in their briefs, but as a trial upon the issues joined by the amended pleadings may entirely change the legal aspects of the case, we do not deem it necessary to notice them at this time.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for a trial upon the issues raised by the pleadings as amended.
All the Justices concur. *Page 163