Norris v. Dunn

Hall, Justice.

Dunn died, leaving a widow and five minor children; two of these children werp by a former marriage, and had been consigned by the father, in his lifetime, to the care and protection of their maternal grandfather. It is alleged that they belonged to the grandfather’s family at the death of the father, that he had provided out of his slender means for their support in that family, and had given up all parental authority and control over them, and conse-. quentty that they were not a portion of his family at the time of his death.

His estate, at his death, was not worth $500. His widow applied to the ordinary of Pike county, to set apart a year’s support for herself and three minor children. Upon this application, commissioners were appointed, who valued the entire estate at less than five hundred dollars, and it was set apart to the widow and her minor children. No schedule of the property thus set apart was returned, but notwithstanding this, the court of ordinary, by its judgment rendered upon this return, allowed it as a year’s support to the widow and her minor children. Under this judgment they took possession of it, used it exclusively as their own, receiving its income, paying taxes on it, and accounting to no one for it or its proceeds; they put improvements upon it, and continued in the exclusive use and enjoyment of it for about fourteen years without interruption or counter-claim, when the present bill was brought by the children of the former marriage for a partition of the land thus set apart, against the widow and her children. To this bill the defendants pleaded the statute, setting up their prescriptive title to the premises, claiming that the *798suit was not brought until more than seven years had elapsed from the date when the youngest of the complainants had attained her majority. The evidence fully sustained this latter fact; indeed it was not contested. Under the charge of the judge pro hao vice presiding in place of the judge of the circuit, a verdict was found in favor of the complainants, and the defendants moved to set it aside and asked for a new trial upon various grounds, which was refused, and exception was takgn to this judgment refusing the new trial, and brought here by writ of error.

In our view, it is not material to notice any other ground than that relating to the defendant’s claim of a prescriptive title. The charge excepted to will be found in the 12th and 13th grounds of the motion, and is as follows : • “ If the jury believed, from the evidence, that Catherine .Norris (formerly Dunn), one of the defendants in the case, and her thx-ee minor children went into possession of the laixd in dispute under a setting apart of the same as a year’s ■ support to them, whether the setting apart was legal or not, and believed they had a right and title to said land by reason of its having been set apart to them as a year’s .support, and remained in continxxous possession of the . same for seven years' after coxnplainants became of age next before the filing of the bill, and that complainants had, on arriving at age, express notice of such possession and claim of title of said Catherine and children, then complainants would be barred from a recovery, axid they should find for the defendants.” At the verbal request of complainants’ solicitor, made in the presence of the jury, who stated that “ he did not understand the latter part of the charge,” (as to express notice) “ and did not think the jury did,” the court repeated and emphasized the same, saying: “ I charge you again, gentlemen of the jury, that in order for the statute of limitations to ruxi in favor of defendants’ prescriptive title, complainants must have had express notice of the possession and claim of title by the defendants, and that the statute of limitations would only *799begin to run from the time of such express notice to complainants. It makes no difference how they receive notice, but complainants must have had express notice.”

Admitting that the complainants claimed to be tenants in common with the defendants, and that they were so in fact, at the death of Dunn, the husband of the widow and father of all the children, and were originally seized jointly with the defendants, and that the possession of the latter was that of the former, — that they held in subordination and not adversely to the true title, yet when there was a severance of this tenancy in common as between the widow and her children on the one side and the complainants on the other, as there unquestionably was by the setting apart of the premises to the said widow and her children as a year’s support to the exclusion of the complainants, then the prescriptive title of the defendants commenced; and if this claim of title was accompanied by the exclusive possession of the defendants and that claim accompanied by such possession was continuous, adverse, open and notorious for the statutory period, then it ripened into a perfect title, unless it originated in a fraud to which the claimants were parties and which was kept concealed from the adverse party, who were vigilant in their efforts to discover it but failed to do so.

If there were no question of a joint right of possession in the case, these positions would not be questioned for a single moment. But how stands the law in case of tenants in common ? The Code, §2303, will answer it. According to that, “ there can be no adverse possession against a co-tenant until actual ouster, or exclusive possession after demand, or express notice of adverse possession; in either of which events, the co-tenant may sue at law for his possession.”

It is not pretended on the part of the defendants that they rely upon either of the two last conditions. They do not set up exclusive possession after demand; nor do they claim that they gave express notice to the complainants *800of adverse possession. They do insist, however, that the proceedings before the ordinary, coupled with exclusive possession, under the right thereby accruing to them, for the time required by law, was an actual ouster, and that) when the court charged that express notice was essential to the perfection of their claim, he charged upon a different case from that made by the pleadings and proof, and withdrew from the consideration of the jury the only question upon which they rested their right as against the complainants; that so far from assisting tbe_ jury to reach a correct conclusion, this charge misled and diverted them from the proper field of inquiry and investigation. Whether they are right of not, will depend upon what amounts to an actual ouster.

In Doe, ex dem. Horne, vs. Roe & Howell, 46 Ga., 9, this court held that “ where a tenant in common conveyed the whole lot to a third person, and the grantee took possession, claiming the entire lot as his own, this action constitutes a disseisin and ouster of the other tenants in common, and they are barred from asserting their right to such property after the expiration of seven years.” . See also Freeman’s Co-tenancy, '§224, and the numerous cases cited in note 2 there. In Prescott vs. Nevers, 4 Mason C. C., 330, the rule is thus laid down by Story, J.: “ I take the principle to be clear that, where a person enters into land under a claim of title thereto by a recorded deed, his entry and possession are referred to such title.”

In this case it may be said there is no recorded deed; but the defendants rely upon something equally as potent, viz.: the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, purporting to vest the title in them. In Clymer’s Lessee vs. Dawkins et al., 3 Howard, 688, the plaintiffs relied upon the fact that the defendants derived their title from a judgment of partition, which was alleged to be absolutely void; certainly the plaintiff in the suit (one of the original co-tenants) was no party to the proceeding for partitioning the land. The court, however, said in reply to this objection, that “ it was wholly unnecessary to decide *801whether those proceedings were absolutely void or not; for, assuming them to have been defective or invalid, still, as they were matter of public notoriety, of which OJymer, the plaintiff, was bound, at his .peril, to take notice, and as Lynch and Blanton (his original co-tenants) under those proceedings claimed an exclusive title to the land assigned to them, adversely to Clymer, if the defendants entered under that exclusive title, the possession must be deemed adverse, in point of law, to Clymer.” Again, Ib., p. 689, it is, said: “ When some notorious act of ouster or adverse possession, which is brought home to the notice or knowledge of the other co-tenants occurs, the possession is, from that period, treated as adverse to the other tenants, and it will afterwards be as operative against them, as if the party had entered under an adverse title. Now such a notorious ouster or adverse possession may be by any overt act in pais, of which the other tenants have due notice, or by the assertion, in any proceeding at law, of a several and distinct claim or title to an entirety of the whole land, or, as in the present case, of a several and distinct title to the entirety of the whole of the tenant’s property under a partition, which, in contemplation of law, is known to the other tenants.” The learned Judge Story, delivering this opinion, deems this doctrine so familiar that it seems scarcely necessary to cite any authorities. He does, however, cite- quite a number of cases, both English and American, in its support, beginning with Townsend and Pastor’s case, 4 Leonard’s R., 52, and continuing the list down to 1845, the time of the decision he was then rendering. These citations need not be repeated here, they are set out and commented upon in the opinion from which we have quoted. Since that’ time there have been others affirming and enforcing the same principle. Freeman’s Co-tenancy, §227.

If the foregoing cases lay down the law correctly, of which we entertain no doubt, they effectually dispose of the one at bar. Indeed §2303 of the Code announces, in *802a brief but accurate and comprehensive form, the,identical doctrine, and gives the rule by which we must be guided to our conclusion.

We cannot infer fraud from, the bare fact, that the names of the complainants do not appear in the proceedings before the ordinary to have the year’s support set apart. The court may have been apprised of all the facts, and may have deemed it unnecessary, under the circumstances of the case, to make provision for them, as that had been done in the lifetime of their father.

Judgment reversed.