Fish v. Fish

By the Court,

Allen, J.

The learned referee fell into the prevalent error of confounding the adverse possession under claim of title, which will avoid a deed of the premises as champertous, with the adverse possession which will ripen into a title by lapse of time and- without entry or action at the suit of the true owner. The statute against champerty (3 R. S. 5th ed. § 167) makes every grant.of lands absolutely void, if at the time of the delivery thereof such lands shall be in the actual possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor. .The possession must not only be adverse, but it must be under some specific title *515which, if valid, would sustain the claim. A general assertion of ownership, without reference to a particular title, or relying.upon a title which would not entitle the party to the possession, is insufficient. The statute regulating and defining adverse possessions, and prescribing their effect in quieting titles and limiting actions, is essentially different in its terms from the act against champerty, referred to. (See 3 R. S. 5th ed. 503.) The distinction between the two acts and the cases arising under them is considered and pointed out very clearly by Selden, J. in Crary v. Goodman, (22 N. Y. Sep. 170.) The objects of the two acts were different. The one was to quiet titles and terminate disputes, and the other was to- prevent the transfer of disputed titles; and hence the difference in their phraseology. To avoid a deed given by one out of possession, the party in possession must hold adversely “claiming under a title,” and not “under claim, of title.” The general assertion of claim by the defendant here may perhaps have been sufficient as “a claim of title,” under the statute of limitations, but it was not a “claim under a specific title,” within the act against champerty.

He could not claim under the deed from Teall, for the reason that he had conveyed that title with warranty to Aaron J. Fish, under whom the plaintiff took his title. That certainly was not a title adverse to that of Norton, the plaintiff’s grantor. It was in truth the same title under which he held the premises, and the title which the defendant had conveyed to the plaintiff’s grantor could not be a title in him under which he could set up an adverse possession to avoid a deed by his own grantee.

The tax certificate did not constitute a title under which the defendant did or could claim an adverse possession.

1. The title to the certificate was not in him, and the legal interest represented or conferred by the certificate was in Spencer and not in the defendant. His equitable interests, whatever they were, did not constitute a title under *516which he could claim adversely, so as to avoid a deed of the owner out of actual possession.

[Onondaga General Term, April 7, 1863.

Allen, Mullin, Morgan and Bacon, Justices.]

2. The certificate gave to nb one the possession or the right of possession, and did not undertake or profess to transfer the title to the premises. Upon certain conditions, and after the lapse of the time mentioned by its terms, the holder might become entitled to and upon proper application acquire the title to the term sold. But that title has never been acquired, by the defendant or any one else. It follows that the defendant did not, at the time of the deed from Nelson to the plaintiff, hold adversely, “claiming under a title adversely to that of the grantor •” and the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted; costs to abide the event.