McCune v. O'Fallon

Bay, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.'

. The main question presented by the record in this case is, whether there can be an adverse possession of a confirmation under the act of Congress of April 29,1816, until after a government survey thereof. The property in controversy is a narrow strip of land about fifteen feet in width, more or less, by fifteen arpens deep, and is in the northern part of a tract of one and a half by forty arpens in the Grand Prairie common fields of St. Louis, confirmed to the legal represen*18tatives of Francois Lesohappelles under the act of Congress of 1816. Plaintiffs claim title under this confirmation. The United States survey was made in 1838, and approved March 2,1857. This suit was instituted on the 29th December, 1856.

Defendants claim title under a confirmation to the legal representatives of Labbé under the act of 1816, and the question in controversy relates to the boundary line between the two confirmations. The defendants in their answer allege that they and the parties under whom they claim have been in the continued and uninterrupted adverse possession of the premises in dispute under a claim of title for more than twenty years next before the institution of this suit. Upon the trial below, defendants gave evidence tending to prove that they and the parties under whom they claim had been in open, notorious and uninterrupted possession of the land in dispute, claiming title thereto under Labbé for more than twenty years prior to the institution of the suit; that the land in dispute was enclosed by Henry M. Shreve (under whom defendants claim) as early as 1834; that there was an old ditch along the south side of the land, and along that ditch Shreve or Collet (from whom Shreve derived his title) put up a permanent fence, which extended to the west end of the field lots, and which was made more than twenty years before the commencement of this suit, and has ever since been kept up ; that locust, cotton-wood and other trees had grown up along said fence from twelve to eighteen inches in diameter. They also gave evidence further tending to prove that Messrs. Moore (under whom plaintiffs claim) possessed and cultivated the land ¿long on the south side and up to the said fence of Shreve as early as the year 1834, and continued so to possess and cultivate many years afterward. They also gave evidence tending to prove that the fence and possession of Shreve were conspicuous and readily seen, and that the land he claimed could be readily identified. Upon this state of facts, the court gave to the jury the following instructions:

*19“If the premises sued for are within the lines of the tract of one and one-half arpens' in front by forty arpens in depth, confirmed to Erangois Leschappelles, or his legal representatives, as surveyed by the United States, as shown by survey No! 1592, read in evidence by the plaintiffs, then the plaintiffs have shown a legal title to said premises and are entitled to recover, if the jury believe the defendants to have been in possession of said premises at the commencement of this suit, 29th December, 1856, unless the jury believe as in the instruction given for the defendants, numbered 3,” which instruction, No. 3, is as follows :
“If the jury finid from the evidence that the defendants, and those under whom they claim, have held uninterrupted possession of the land in question for twenty years prior to the institution of this suit, claiming title thereto, such possession is adverse, and the jury should find for the defendants, unless the plaintiffs have proved to the satisfaction of the jury that such possession was taken by mistake, or without design on the part of the defendants, or those under whom they claim, to hold said land against plaintiffs; if the true line between Labbé and Leschappelles’ tracts should, when ascertained, include the land so taken possession of within the Leschappelles tract, and the burden of proving such mistake or want of design rests upon the plaintiffs.”

The plaintiffs then asked for several instructions substantially declaring that the possession of defendants, and those under whom they claim, although continued for more than twenty years prior to the commencement of the suit, was not adverse to the plaintiffs and those under whom they claim, until after the United States survey (1592) made in 1838, which the court refused to give. In support of the proposition contended for by the appellants, we have been referred to several cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, and particularly to the case of West v. Cochran, reported in 17th Howard, 403, but we are unable to see the analogy between that case and this. In West v. Cochran, plaintiff claimed under Brazeau, who had a confirmation by *20the United States commissioners pursuant to the act of March 1807. It was an unsurveyed concession surrounded in part by public lands, and in other parts by the vague and unlocated claims of others, so that a government survey was indispensably necessary to fix and locate the grant. The act of 1807, moreover, required that those vague and indefinite concessions should be surveyed under the direction of the surveyor general, whose duty it was to transmit plats thereof to the recorder, and also to the secretary of the treasury, and thereupon the claimant received a patent certificate. The act furthermore provided that the claimant should be confirmed in what should be designated by a survey made under the authority of the United States, according to the direction of the board of commissioners, and the court held that until such survey was made the plaintiff’s title attached to no land, nor could a court of justice ascertain its boundaries, as this power was reserved to the executive department of the federal government.

The case under consideration is very different, for both the confirmations under Leschappelles and Labbé are under the act of 1816, an act totally different in its terms from the act of 1807. We have here, moreover, a fixed, certain and definite boundary line adopted and acquiesced in by both parties and those under whom they claim, since 1834, recognized by all parties, and possessed and cultivated by the respective claimants up to the fence, without any dispute or controversy respecting the coi’rectness of the line. But the same court immediately after, in Stanford v. Taylor, 18th Howard, 409, declared that the law was settled, that where there is a specific tract of land confirmed according to ascertained boundaries, the confirmee took a title on which he could sue in ejectment. • The same doctrine is laid down in Bissell v. Penrose, 8th Howard, 317. But when the claim has no certain limits and the judgment of confirmation car-' ries along with it the condition that the land shall be surveyed, then the title attaches to no land until such survey is made.

*21The question in this case, we think, has been definitely settled by this court in Aubuchon v. Ames, 27th Mo. 98, and St. Louis University v. McCune, 28th Mo., 481. In Aubuchon v. Ames, the court held that where a field lot, confirmed by the second section of the act of April 29,1816, has a definite and certain location, the statute of limitation will run in favor of an adverse possession prior to a survey by the United States.

In the -case of the St. Louis University v. McCune, the controversy was respecting a part of the narrow strip in dispute here.

We see no reason to depart from the doctrine laid down in these cases.

Judge Bates and Judge Dryden concurring,

the judgment of the court below will be affirmed.