The respondent commenced an action in the Circuit Court of Multnomah County, to recover the possession of certain real property situated in said county. The complaint is in the ordinary form, excepting that the allegation of the appellant’s possession and withholding the property is, that they are in possession, “or claim the possession of said above described real property as the owners thereof,” and wrongfully withhold the same from the respondent. The allegations of the complaint regarding the ownership of the property, the wrongful ’withholding the same, and the alleged damages for such withholding are controverted in the answer ; and in which the appellants allege ownership in themselves, and plead the *62statute of limitations ; which allegations last referred to áre controverted in the reply ; and in which it was in effect denied that the appellants had been in the possession of the premises at all, or that they had possession of them, or any part or portion of them at all.
When the case came on for trial, the respondent’s counsel asked leave to amend the 'complaint and reply, by striking out certain portions thereof, which was granted by the court; and thereupon the words “ or claim the possession of said above described real property as the owners thereof,” were stricken out of the complaint, and the words “ or for any .other period, or at all,” also the words, “ or that defendants, or either of them, have had possession of the real property in the complaint described, or any part or portion thereof,” were stricken out of the reply. This is claimed by the appellants’ counsel to have been erroneous ; that the said words left in the respective pleadings rendered them defective; that the complaint stated no cause of action with the words in it, and that the court could not allow it to be amended in that stage of the case. It does not appear what the counsel claimed as to the effect the words stricken out of the reply would have had if left in it; but it is apparent that it would have made the reply «contradict the complaint in a material particular.
The appellants’ counsel also claimed that after the pleadings were amended as stated, they still did not contain a cause of action, and he objected to the admission of evidence under them, and subsequently moved to arrest the judgment upon that ground. The respondents’ counsel, after the portions of his pleadings referred to were stricken out, introduced evidence of a record title to himself in the land, and then rested his case; whereupon, the appellants’ counsel moved for a judgment of nonsuit, claiming that the respondent’s pleadings taken together did not, after the*amendment, constitute a cause of action, and that the burden was upon the respondent to show that appellants’ possession was not adverse. The court overruled the motion, and allowed the appellants’ counsel an exception to the ruling, and which is claimed to be erroneous.
*63The latter then attempted to prove his defense set up in the answer, and gave evidence tending to show that the appellants took possession of the premises in controversy more than ten years prior to the commencement of the action, under a quit claim deed executed to them by one R. Hendrie ; that their possession had been uninterrupted and continuous ever since : and then offered in evidence a certified copy of the record of deeds of Multnomah County, of the said deed from Hendrie, for the purpose, as appellants’ counsel claimed, of showing that they entered under color of title. The respondent’s counsel objected to the introduction of the said deed, upon the grounds that a quit claim deed could not give rise to color of title. The court sustained the objection, and rejected the evidence, to which ruling an exception was allowed, and which is also claimed to have been erroneous.
The appellants’ counsel then offered in evidence a copy of a judgment of the said circuit court, rendered on the 12th day of February, 1866, in favor of said R. Hendrie, and against Mrs. H. Swift, claimed to be one of the respondent’s immediate grantors, the issuance of an execution thereon, sale of the said premises by the then sheriff of said county to said R. Hendrie, and an order confirming the sale ; to the introduction of which the respondent’s counsel objected, and the court sustained the objection, and allowed an exception. This ruling is also claimed to have been erroneous.
After the evidence was closed, the appellants’ counsel requested the court to direct the jury to make certain special findings, which the court refused, and to which refusal an exception was allowed, and which is also relied on herein.
I think the court had power to allow the amendment of the complaint and reply at the time it did, and in the way permitted. Great liberality in amending pleadings under our system should be shown, when the justice of the case requires it. The court should always be careful that the opposite party be not misled to his prejudice, and this can be avoided in almost every case by granting a continuance. When a party comes into court in good faith with his action or suit, he should *64not be turned out on account of a technicality or mistake which an amendment will obviate, when it will do no substantial injury to the opposite party. It is the province of the courts to adjust controversies between litigants, and it should be done with as little delay and annoyance to them and the public as circumstances will permit. The parties in this case were before the court to try the case, and I think the court did right in not turning the respondent out, and compelling him to commence over again, when it could be done by a single amendment of his pleadings. It worked no injury to the appellants. They were there to try the merits of the case, and could not have been injured a particle.
The motion for a nonsuit was properly denied. The respondent proved title to the premises in himself, and that entitled him to the possession, unless the appellants could show a title in themselves, or an adverse possession for the period of ten years. The legal title draws after it the possession, and a right of entry is not barred, unless there has been a disseisin followed by an actual, open, notorious and continuous adverse possession for the period of ten years next prior to the commencement of the action. To be an adverse possession it must be an occupancy under a claim of ownership, though it need not be under color of title. It is sufficient if the party goes upon the land, and declares to the world by his acts and conduct that he is the owner of it, and maintains that attitude the requisite period. His occupancy, when he does not enter under color of title, must, however, extend to the entire tract of land claimed. He will gain no right to any part of it that he does not actually occupy, while the rule is different if the entry is made under a paper title. There his occupancy, if he actually occupy a part of it, will be extended by construction to the boundaries specified in the instrument under which he claims.
But the circuit court was mistaken in holding that a quit claim deed would not constitute color of title. Any instrument that purports upon its face to convey title to the grantee is sufficient to constitute color of title. A quit claim deed, it *65is true, only conveys what the grantor can rightfully convey; but it is as effectual to convey that as any other form of deed, and it has been held that an entry under a conveyance from the sheriff, though not sufficient Upon its face to convey the legal title, was an entry under color of title. (Jackson v. Newton, 18 Johns. 355.) A large number of cases are collected in Tyler on Ejectment and Adverse Enjoyment, at page 862 of that work, and they fully sustain the view here ex-px’essed.
The other exceptions in this case were not well taken ; the sale under the execution, as shown by the order of confn-mation, was too indefinite in its description of the land sold. It was described therein as a “ part of Sec. 29, T. 1 N., R. 2 E., containing 160 acres, more or less, and being a portion of the donation land claim of Henry and Jane Swift, and being described on plat as Notification No. 6165, lying and being in Multnomah County, Oregon.”
It appears that a donation claim, known as Notification No. 6165, was patented to H. Swift and Jane Swift, his wife, and that it included the premises in question. The claim included a larger portion than 160 acres, probably 320 acres, though that does not appear ixx the record. But it does appear that 160 acres was only a part of the donation claim. That must be infei-red from the descxdption set out in the order of confirmation. But it does not appear, nor can it be ascertained from the record, which pox'tion of the donation claim was sold by the sheriff. He doubtless intended to sell 160 acres thereof, but it would be impossible to ascertain which part of the claixxx it was intended to be. There is nothing in the description to identify it.
The refusal of the court to direct special findings, as requested by the appellant’s counsel, was wholly discretionary. This court will not undertake to review any such ruling of a cix-cuit court. The x-espondent’s counsel contended, upon the hearing, that the appellant’s possession of the px-emises, as shown by the cross-examination of one of the appellants when on the stand as a witness, was not such an occupancy as would *66constitute an adverse possession, within the meaning of the law, and that therefore the exclusion of the deed from Hendrie to appellants, when offered in evidence, if erroneous, did not injure appellants. If all the evidence in the case were shown to be contained in this bill of exceptions, we might properly pass upon that question ; but as it stands, we do not think we have the right to do so. The case was submitted to the jury to pass upon, and the statement in the bill of exceptions, showing the character of testimony given upon the part of the appellants, entitled them to have it so submitted.
I do not think the testimony returned here shows any such adverse holding as would bar the action; but this court cannot determine that it was all the testimony in the case, and is compelled, therefore, to reverse the judgment, and remand the case for a new trial.