An express order of court during the judgment term continuing a
cause for the purpose of settling, allowing, signing, and filing a
bill of exceptions, and the settlement and allowance and filing of
the bill, during the terms to which the continuance was made, takes
the exceptions out of the operation of the general rule that the
power to reduce exceptions to form and have them signed and filed
is, under ordinary circumstances, confined to the term at which the
judgment is rendered.
A bill of exceptions which, insofar as it relates to the charge,
specifies with distinctness the parts excepted to, and the legal
propositions to which exceptions are taken, is sufficient.
A defendant in ejectment who relies on adverse possession during
the statutory period as a defense must show actual possession --
not constructive -- and an exclusive possession -- not a possession
in participation with the owner or others.
When a special verdict is rendered, all the facts essential to
entitle a party to a judgment must be found.
A judgment rendered on a special verdict failing to find all the
essential facts is erroneous, and consequently a special verdict in
an action of ejectment which finds that the grantor of the
defendant entered into possession of the land in controversy under
a claim of ownership and that he remained in the open, continued,
notorious, and adverse possession thereof for the period of sixteen
years, when he sold and transferred the same to the defendant, who
remained in open, continuous, notorious, and adverse possession of
the same under claim of ownership down to the present time, is
defective in that it does not find that the adverse possession was
actual and exclusive.
This was an action of ejectment brought at November term, 1887,
in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Page 150 U. S. 598
District of Nebraska by Seth E. Ward, a citizen of the State of
Missouri, against Elmer G. Cochran, a citizen of the State of
Nebraska, to recover the possession of twenty acres of land
situated in the suburbs of the City of Omaha, and described as the
west one-half of the northeast one-quarter of section 4, township
15 north, range 13 east, in Douglas County, Nebraska.
In pursuance of the practice in that state under which two
trials in ejectment are necessary to a final determination of a
question of title, a trial was had before a judge, without a jury,
and a judgment was entered in favor of the defendant. This judgment
was forthwith, on motion of the plaintiff, set aside and a new
trial was awarded.
At this trial, the record discloses that the plaintiff sustained
his side of the issue by putting in evidence a chain of title from
the United States to himself consisting of a patent of the United
States to Alexander R. McCandlers dated March 13, 1861, for a tract
of land, including the piece in dispute; a deed of Alexander R.
McCandlers to Michael Thompson, dated May 2, 1861, for the same
tract; a deed of Michael Thompson and wife to Edward B. Taylor,
dated July 5, 1862, for said tract; a mortgage of Edward B. Taylor,
to Ward, the plaintiff, dated July 28, 1871, on the twenty-acre
tract in controversy, to secure the payment of certain promissory
notes; the record of proceedings in suit by Ward, the plaintiff,
against the heirs and legal representatives of Edward B. Taylor,
who had died in 1872, to foreclose said mortgage, and a sheriff's
deed, under decree in said suit, to Ward, the plaintiff, dated July
11, 1877; a deed of Edward A. Taylor (son and one of the heirs of
Edward B, Taylor, and the only heir who had not been made a party
to the foreclosure suit) to Ward, the plaintiff, dated June 25,
1885, for the twenty-acre tract in dispute. It was admitted that
the value of the land was $20,000 at the time of the bringing of
the suit.
The defendant adduced evidence tending to show that one John
Flanagan had entered on the tract in dispute in 1868 under a parol
sale of said tract to him by Edward B. Taylor; that Flanagan had
continued in possession of the tract until 1885, when, on November
25 of that year, Flanagan and wife
Page 150 U. S. 599
conveyed the tract to the defendant by deed of that date, who
entered into possession.
On December 9, 1889, the jury rendered a special verdict, in the
following words and figures:
"We, the jury impaneled and sworn to try the issues joined in
the above-entitled cause, do find and say that one John Flanagan,
in the year 1868, entered into the possession of the west one-half
of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 4, in
township 15 north, of range 13 east of the 6th principal meridian,
in Douglas County, Nebraska, being the land in controversy in this
case, under a claim of ownership thereto, and that he remained in
the open, continued, notorious, and adverse possession thereof for
the period of sixteen (16) years thereafter, and until he sold and
transferred the same to the defendant in this case."
"We further find that said John Flanagan and Julia, his wife, by
good and lawful deed of conveyance, conveyed said premises to the
defendant in this suit in 1885, and surrendered his possession to
this defendant, and that said defendant has remained in the open,
continuous, notorious, and adverse possession of the same under
claim of ownership down to the present time. We therefore find that
at the commencement of this suit, the defendant was the owner of
and entitled to the possession of the said premises, and upon the
issues joined in this case we find for said defendant."
On December 9, 1887, the plaintiff, by his counsel, moved for a
new trial for reasons filed, and on the same day moved the court
for judgment in his behalf notwithstanding the verdict.
On December 5, 1889, the motion for a new trial was overruled,
and judgment was entered in favor of the defendant in pursuance of
the verdict, and to said judgment a writ of error to this Court was
sued out and allowed.
Page 150 U. S. 602
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Objection is made that the bills of exception were not allowed
and signed either at the trial or the judgment term, and the case
of
Mueller v. Ehlers, 91 U. S. 249, is
cited to show that we cannot consider them for that reason.
From the record, it does indeed appear that the bills of
exception were not allowed and signed during the term at which the
judgment was rendered, but it also appears that at said term an
order was entered stating that, inasmuch as the bills of exception
could not be completed at that term, the time for preparing and
presenting them was extended till February 1, 1890, at which time
bills of exception might be allowed and signed with the same force
and effect as if said action had been had within the usual time,
and it also appears that on January 18, 1890, plaintiff's counsel
served defendant's counsel with a copy of the bills of exception
proposed, with notice that they should be presented for the judge's
consideration on January 27, 1890. On that day, defendant's counsel
did not appear, and thereupon the court entered an order reciting
the foregoing facts, and directing that the bills of exception be
filed with the clerk of the court, and that defendant should have
thirty days in which to file suggestions of amendment thereto, and
continuing the cause till the further order of the court for the
purpose of settling, allowing, and signing the bills, and it
further appears that on March 1, 1890, the bills of exception were
finally signed by the judge and filed. The record also discloses
that the defendant protested against the action of the court in
extending the time, and in allowing and signing the bill of
exceptions after the expiration of the term at which the judgment
was rendered.
In the case of
Mueller v. Ehlers, relied on by the
defendant in error, this Court did hold that, because the bill of
exceptions had not been signed at or during the term at which the
judgment
Page 150 U. S. 603
was rendered, it could not be considered, and expressed itself
as follows:
"As early as
Walton v. United States, 9
Wheat. 651, the power to reduce exceptions taken at the trial to
form, and to have them signed and filed, was under ordinary
circumstances confined to a time not later than the term at which
the judgment was rendered. This, we think, is the true rule, and
one to which there should be no exceptions without an express order
of the court during the term or consent of the parties, save under
very extraordinary circumstances. Here we find no order of the
court, no consent of the parties, and no such circumstances as will
justify a departure from the rule. A judge cannot act judicially
upon the rights of parties after the parties, in due course of
proceedings, have both in law and in fact been dismissed from the
court."
As we have seen, the present record discloses
"an express order of the court during the judgment term,
continuing the cause for the purpose of settling, allowing,
signing, and filing the bills of exception,"
and this case is thus brought within the ruling in
Mueller
v. Ehlers.
Our most recent utterance on this subject was in
Morse v.
Anderson, 150 U. S. 156,
where it was held that this Court would not review bills of
exception signed after the time fixed by a special order of the
court had expired.
As this record discloses that the exceptions relied on were
taken at the trial, and that the delay was in reliance on an
express order of the court postponing the act of allowing and
signing the bills, we think that we are not precluded from a
consideration of the errors assigned.
A further preliminary objection is urged to the form of the bill
of exceptions, which is said to be a mere transcript of the entire
testimony and of the charge, and the case of
Hanna v.
Maas, 122 U. S. 24, is
cited.
In that case, it was held that when a bill of exceptions is so
framed as not to present any question of law in a form to be
revised by this Court, the judgment must be affirmed, but the facts
of the case were thus stated:
"This bill of exceptions has been framed and allowed in
disregard of the settled rules of law upon the subject. No ruling
upon the evidence is
Page 150 U. S. 604
open to revision, because none appears to have been excepted to,
and the overruling of a motion for a new trial is not a subject of
exception. The bill of exceptions, instead of stating distinctly,
as required by law and by the fourth rule of this Court, those
matters of law in the charge which are excepted to, and those only,
does not contain any part of the charge or any exception to it, and
undertakes to supply the want by referring to exhibits annexed,
containing all the evidence introduced at the trial, the whole
charge to the jury, and notes of a desultory conversation which
followed between the judge and counsel on both sides, leaving it to
this Court to pick out from those notes, if possible, a sufficient
statement of some ruling in matter of law."
The present record presents a very different condition of facts,
as the bill of exceptions, insofar as it relates to the charge,
specifies with distinctness the parts of the charge excepted to and
the legal propositions to which exceptions are taken. The view we
take of the case does not compel us to consider the objections
taken to the admission or rejection of evidence, and we are
therefore not called upon to determine whether such objections are
properly presented for review.
This was an action of ejectment for the recovery of a tract of
land of which the boundaries and situation were not matters of
dispute. It was conceded that both parties claimed to derive title
from one E. B. Taylor, and that the plaintiff's evidence sufficed
to entitle him to recover unless such right of recovery was
overcome by the defendant's claim of an adverse possession of a
character and duration sufficient, under the laws of Nebraska, to
create a good title.
The record discloses that the judge instructed the jury to make
a finding of special facts, that the jury did so, that the
plaintiff moved for judgment in his favor upon the verdict, that
the defendant did likewise, and that the court sustained the
defendant's motion, and entered judgment in his favor.
The following are the statutory provisions of Nebraska relating
to verdicts:
"SEC. 292. The verdict of a jury is either general or special. A
general verdict is that by which they pronounce
Page 150 U. S. 605
generally upon all or any of the issues, either in favor of the
plaintiff or defendant. A special verdict is that by which the jury
finds the facts only. It must present the facts as established by
the evidence, and not the evidence to prove them, and they must be
so presented as that nothing remains to the court but to draw from
them conclusions of law."
"SEC. 293. In every action for the recovery of money only, or
specific real property, the jury, in their discretion, may render a
general or special verdict. In all other cases, the court may
direct the jury to find a special verdict in writing, upon all or
any of the issues, and in all cases may instruct them, if they
render a general verdict, to find upon particular questions of fact
to be stated in writing, and may direct a written finding thereon.
The special verdict or finding must be filed with the clerk and
entered on the journal."
"SEC. 294. When the special finding of facts is inconsistent
with the general verdict, the former controls the latter, and the
court may give judgment accordingly."
Compiled Statutes of Nebraska, 1887. Code of Civil
Procedure.
The action of the court below in rendering judgment on the
special verdict in favor of the defendant forms the subject of the
first assignment of error. The plaintiff's contention is that the
special verdict did not warrant a judgment in favor of the
defendant because it did not find that the possession on which the
defendant relied was actual and exclusive.
No state statute has been referred to as regulating or defining
title by adverse possession, and indeed it is stated in the brief
of defendant in error that there is no such statute; but there is a
statutory provision that an action for the recovery of the title or
possession of lands, tenements, or hereditaments can only be
brought within ten years after the cause of such action shall have
accrued.
Our investigation, therefore, into the sufficiency of the
special verdict, must be controlled by the principles established
in this branch of the law by the decisions of the courts,
particularly those of the Supreme Court of the State of Nebraska
and of this Court.
Page 150 U. S. 606
In
French v. Pearce, 8 Conn. 440, it was said that
"it is the fact of exclusive occupancy, using and enjoying the
land as his own, in hostility to the true owner, for the full
statutory period which enables the occupant to acquire an absolute
right to the land."
In
Sparrow v. Hovey, 44 Mich. 63, a refusal of the
court to charge that when the title is claimed by an adverse
possession, it should appear that the possession had been "actual,
continued, visible, notorious, distinct, and hostile," but merely
charging the jury that the possession "must be actual, continued,
and visible" was held erroneous. In Pennsylvania, it has been
repeatedly held that to give a title under the statute of
limitations, the possession must be "actual, visible, exclusive,
notorious, and uninterrupted."
Johnston v. Irwin, 3 S.
& R. 291;
Mercer v. Watson, 1 Watts 338;
Overfield
v. Christie, 7 S. & R. 173.
In
Jackson v. Berner, 48 Ill. 128, it was held that an
adverse possession sufficient to defeat the legal title, where
there is no paper title, must be hostile in its inception, and is
not to be made out by inference, but by clear and positive proof,
and further that the possession must be such as to show clearly
that the party claims the land as his own openly and
exclusively.
In
Foulke v. Bond, 41 N.J.Law 527, it was said:
"The principles on which the doctrine of title by adverse
possession rests are well settled. The possession must be actual
and exclusive, adverse and hostile, visible and notorious,
continued and uninterrupted."
It was held in
Cook v. Babcock, 11 Cush. 208, that
"when a party claims by a disseisin ripened into a good title by
the lapse of time as against the legal owner, he must show actual,
open, exclusive, and adverse possession of the land. All these
elements are essential to be proved, and failure to establish any
one of them is fatal to the validity of the claim."
In
Armstrong v.
Morrill, 14 Wall. 120, this Court, speaking through
Mr. Justice Clifford, said:
"It is well settled law that the possession, in order that it
may bar the recovery, must
Page 150 U. S. 607
be continuous and uninterrupted, as well as open, notorious,
actual, exclusive, and adverse. Such a possession, it is conceded,
if continued without interruption for the whole period which is
prescribed by the statute for the enforcement of the right of
entry, is evidence of a fee, and bars the right of recovery.
Independently of positive statute law, such a possession affords a
presumption that the claimants to the land acquiesce in the claim
so evidenced."
Hogan v. Kurtz, 94 U. S. 773, is to
the same effect.
The authorities in Nebraska are substantially to the same effect
on questions of title by adverse possession.
A leading case is
Horbach v. Miller, 4 Neb. 31, in
which it was said that
"the elements of all title are possession, the right of
possession, and the right of property; hence if the adverse
occupant has maintained an exclusive adverse possession for the
full extent of the statutory limit, the statute then vests him with
the right of property, which carries with it the right of
possession, and therefore the title becomes complete in him. . . .
The submission of the case to the jury correctly was that if they
believed from the evidence that the plaintiff in error, for ten
years next before the commencement of the action, was in the
actual, continued, and notorious possession of the land in
controversy, claiming the same as his own against all persons, they
must find for the plaintiff in error."
In
Gatling v. Lane, 17 Neb. 77, the language used
was:
"A person who enters upon the land of another with the intention
of occupying the same as his own, and carries that intention into
effect by open, notorious, exclusive, adverse possession for ten
years, thereby disseises the owner."
In
Parker v. Starr, 21 Neb. 680, a recovery was
sustained where the testimony clearly showed that
"the defendant and those under whom he claims have been in the
open, notorious, and exclusive possession for ten years next before
the suit was brought."
In
Ballard v. Hansen, 33 Neb. 861, the following
instructions, which had been given in the trial court, were
approved by the supreme court:
"The jury are instructed that adverse possession, as relied upon
by the plaintiffs in this action, is the open, actual, exclusive,
notorious, and hostile
Page 150 U. S. 608
occupancy of the land and claim of right, with the intention to
hold it as against the true owner and all other parties. Such
occupancy, if continuous for ten years, ripens into a perfect
title, after which it is immaterial whether the possession be
continued or not. . . . If you find from a preponderance of the
testimony in this case that the plaintiff was in the actual, open,
notorious, exclusive, continuous possession of any of the lots in
controversy for ten years, claiming to own and hold them as against
all others, as to such lots he is entitled to recover."
Tested by these definitions, it is obvious that if the title
relied on in this case by the defendant below was fully described
and characterized by the special verdict, it was defective in two
very essential particulars in that it was not found to have been
actual and exclusive. A possession not actual, but constructive;
not exclusive, but in participation with the owner or others, falls
very far short of that kind of adverse possession which deprives
the true owner of his title.
Where a special verdict is rendered, all the facts essential to
entitle a party to a judgment must be found, and a judgment
rendered on a special verdict failing to find all the essential
facts is erroneous.
In
Prentice v. Zane's
Administrator, 8 How. 470, it was said:
"In
Chesapeake Ins. Co. v.
Stark, 6 Cranch 268, and
Barnes v.
Williams, 11 Wheat. 415, this Court has decided
that where, in a special verdict, the essential facts are not
distinctly found by the jury, although there is sufficient evidence
to establish them, the court will not render a judgment upon such
an imperfect special verdict, but will remand the cause to the
court below, with directions to award a venire
de
novo."
In
Hodges v. Easton, 106 U. S. 408,
where it was contended that an imperfect special verdict might be
pieced out and the missing facts be supplied by reference to the
other parts of the record, the same conclusion was reached, and the
court below was directed to award a new trial.
In the present case, even if the verdict were regarded as a
general one, and therefore entitled to be supported by the
Page 150 U. S. 609
presumption that sufficient facts existed to sustain it, yet we
should feel constrained to reverse the judgment, because of the
errors complained of in the eighth, ninth, and tenth
assignments.
The plaintiff's counsel requested the court to charge the jury
that, in order that possession of land may overcome the title of
the true owner,
"there must be a concurrence of the following elements: such
possession must be actual, hostile, exclusive, open, notorious, and
continuous for the whole period of ten years. Every element in this
enumeration is absolutely essential, and if one of these elements
does not exist, there can be no adverse title acquired,"
and the court did so charge, but the court then proceeded to say
that, after having disposed of the written instructions, "I propose
to go outside of what is there stated, and give one on my own
motion." Those voluntary instructions given by the learned judge,
though correct in most respects, were imperfect in the very
particulars in which we have found the special verdict defective.
The jury were not told that, to make out the defense, the
possession, in addition to certain other features properly
specified, must be shown to have been actual and exclusive. This
clearly appears in the final instruction, which was in the
following terms:
"But if you take the other view, and find that defendant has a
good title, and that he is entitled to recover, then I think you
ought to go further and find the fact that he entered into the
possession of the premises at a certain time, or as near as you can
fix it from the testimony; that he occupied the premises; that he
continued in possession for more than ten years prior to the
commencement of this suit, which was December 4, 1886. You ought to
find, if you can, from the testimony, about the time that he went
into possession, whether he continued in possession, and whether
his possession was adverse, continuous, and hostile prior to the
commencement of this suit, or whether Flanagan and his grantees,
defendants in this suit, continued in possession that long; it is
the same as if Flanagan was in possession that long himself."
"If you find for the defendant, find when he took
possession,
Page 150 U. S. 610
if you can, and, as near as you can, how long he remained in
possession before the commencement of this suit. Then your verdict
will be, in addition to that"
"We therefore find that at the commencement of this suit the
defendant was the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of
the premises in dispute."
"That disposes of the whole controversy as far as the verdict of
the jury is concerned."
Nor do we think that this is one of those cases in which
erroneous or insufficient instructions in one part of a charge are
corrected or supplied by unobjectionable instructions on the same
questions appearing in another part. It is evident that the
attention of the jury must have been withdrawn from the
instructions formally given, as requested, to those announced by
the judge as given on his own motion, and it seems evident that
this action of the court misguided the jury, and led them to
overlook essential questions involved in the issue they were
trying.
Smith v.
Shoemaker, 17 Wall. 630;
Moores v. National
Bank, 104 U. S. 625;
Gilmer v. Higley, 110 U. S. 47;
Vicksburg & Meridian Railroad Co. v. O'Brien,
119 U. S.
103.
Whether, then, we regard the verdict as a special one, not
containing findings sufficient to support the judgment, or as a
general one, rendered in pursuance of imperfect instructions, we
reach the conclusion that the judgment of the court below must
be
Reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to award
a venire de novo.