Under the laws of Tennessee, where lands are sold by a summary
proceeding for the payment of taxes, it is essential to the
validity of the sale, and of the deed made thereon that every fact
necessary to give the court jurisdiction should appear upon the
record.
Under the statute of limitations of Tennessee, the running of
the statute can only be stopped by actual suit if the party
claiming under it has peaceable possession for seven years. But
such a possession cannot exist if the party having the better right
takes actual possession in pursuance of his right.
One tenant in common may oust his co-tenant, and hold in
severalty, but a silent possession, unaccompanied with any act
amounting to an ouster, or giving notice to the co-tenant that his
possession is adverse, cannot be construed into an adverse
possession.
Page 18 U. S. 117
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This is an action of ejectment brought by the lessee of David
Ross against Charles McClung for 5,000 acres of land lying in the
Distinct of East Tennessee.
At the trial of the cause, the plaintiff in the court below gave
in evidence two grants from the State of North Carolina for the
land in controversy, to Stockly Donalson and John Hackett, the one
dated 20 September, 1787, and the other dated 22 February, 1795. He
also gave in evidence a deed of conveyance of the said land,
purporting to be from Stockly Donalson and John Hackett, dated 29
September, 1793, and registered in Hawkins County, Tennessee, on 27
December, 1793. The regular registration of this deed, so far as
respected Stockly Donalson, was admitted by the defendant. Its
registration as to John Hackett was not admitted, and was proved
only by the following endorsements.
"December Sessions, 1793"
"This deed was proved in open court, and ordered to record."
"Test. RICHARD MITCHELL, C.H.C."
"This conveyance was registered 27 December, 1793, in liber G.
127. in the register's office of Hawkins County."
"THOMAS JACKSON, C.R."
It is stated in the bill of exceptions that the execution of the
deed on the part of Hackett was not proved.
The defendant also claimed under Stockly Donalson, but his
deeds, being of subsequent date, could confer no title while the
deed to Ross remained in force.
Page 18 U. S. 118
For the purpose of invalidating this deed, he offered in
evidence certain records of the County Court of Rhea, showing that
the land had been sold for the nonpayment of taxes, had been
conveyed by the sheriff to the purchaser, and by the purchaser to
the defendant. The regularity of this sale, and the validity of the
deeds made in consequence of it were contested, and the court
determined against their validity, to which opinion of the court
the counsel for the defendant excepted.
In the year 1803, the Legislature of Tennessee passed an act
subjecting all lands to which the Indian claim was extinguished,
held by deed, &c., to taxes. The 13th section of the act
provides that "in case there shall not be any goods or chattels on
which the sheriff can distress for public taxes, &c., he shall
report the same to the court of his county." The court is then
directed to make out certain lists, and to direct certain
publications, after which the court may enter up judgment, on which
execution may issue, and the lands be sold. In 1807, the
legislature passed a supplementary act, the 3d section of which
enacts that it shall be the duty of the collector of taxes in each
county, after the 1 January in each year, to make report to the
court in writing
"of all such tracts or parts of tracts of land as have, from his
own knowledge, or from the information of others, not been returned
for taxation for the said preceding year, and it shall be the duty
of the said court to cause said report to be recorded in books to
be kept for that purpose, and to cause judgment to be entered up
for double the tax due on the
Page 18 U. S. 119
said land not returned for taxation and so unpaid, and shall
order the same to be sold,"
&c.
In January, 1810, Miller Francis, collector of taxes in Rhea
County for the year 1809, reported to the court that the following
lands were not listed for taxation for the year 1809, to-wit,
&c. Then follows a list of several tracts of land, among which
is the tract in question, reported three several times in the
following terms:
Reputed owners Quantity No. of title Date of title Location
Tax
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Stockly Donalson 5000 209 20 Sept. 1787 Pleasant, &c.
S. Donalson and
John Hackett 5000 1347 22 Feb. 1795
David Ross 5000 209 20 Sept. 1787
Upon the return of which report the court entered up a judgment
for the sale of the said lands, and after the publication required
by law, an execution was directed under which the said land was
sold as being three distinct tracts, when Robert Farquharson became
the purchaser of the tracts reported to belong to Stockly Donalson,
and to Stockly Donalson and John Hackett, and the agent Of David
Ross became the purchaser of the tract reported to belong to David
Ross.
A question of considerable difficulty arises on the validity of
these sales. Under the act of 1803, the power of the court to
render judgment in such cases for the sale of land is founded on
there being no personal property from which the tax might be made.
The jurisdiction of the court depends on that fact. Whether it is
necessary that its existence should be shown in the judgment of the
court is a question on which the state courts appear to have
decided differently at different times. But the last and we
Page 18 U. S. 120
believe the correct opinion, reported in 5 Haywood 394,
establishes the general principle that in these summary
proceedings, every fact which is necessary to give jurisdiction
ought to appear in the record of the court. The act of 1807 directs
the court to proceed on the return of the collector, that the taxes
of the preceding year are unpaid, or that the land has not been
returned for taxation. Whether this act, which is supplemental to
that of 1803, authorizes the court to give judgment for the sale of
land, although there may be personal property in the county
sufficient to pay the tax, or only varies the mode of proceeding
against the land, without varying the circumstances under which it
may become liable, is a question which does not appear to have been
decided in Tennessee, and which it is unnecessary to decide in this
case because we are all of opinion that if the sale was valid, Ross
is to be considered as the purchaser of his own title, and
Farquharson as the purchaser of the title of Donalson and Hackett.
The objection to this is that the agent of Ross stood by and
permitted Farquharson to bid. But this objection implies a
knowledge on the part of Ross or his agent that the land sold in
the name of Donalson and Hackett was his land. There is no evidence
that either of them possessed this knowledge, nor are the
circumstances such as would justify its being presumed. Were the
court required to presume fraud on this occasion, it is not to Ross
or to his agent that the evidence on this particular part of the
transaction would justify us in ascribing it. We think, then, that
the defendants in the court below
Page 18 U. S. 121
acquired no title to Ross' land by the sheriff's sale or deeds.
We think, then, that there was no error in rejecting these
deeds.
The defendant also claimed the benefit of the act of
limitations, which makes seven years' peaceable and adverse
possession a complete bar to the action.
Page 18 U. S. 122
In support of this claim, he relied on the testimony of John
Meriott, who swore that in pursuance of an agreement between him
and John Hackett, who informed him that the land belonged to him,
Hackette, and the defendant, McClung, he took possession of the
land in March, 1807, built a house, and cleared seven or eight
acres, and retained possession of the land until the contract was
rescinded. By a contract with McClung, he agreed to hold possession
for McClung and Hackett. It also appeared in evidence that Meriott
remained in possession until the autumn of 1808, when he
surrendered it to Hackett, who, in the succeeding spring, moved
with his family into the house Meriott had built, where he resided
until his death, since which event it has been occupied by his
widow and family.
The plaintiff then proved, that in 1795, John Hackett showed
this agent of Ross the land in controversy as the land sold to him;
that in the year 1813, the same agent agreed to lease a part of the
land to one Cox, who in pursuance of the said agreement entered
thereon and built a small house, but being threatened by McClung
with a suit, he abandoned it.
Upon this testimony, the defendant in the circuit court moved
the court to charge the jury 1st, that if they believed the
possession taken by Meriott to have been on behalf of Hackett and
McClung, and that Hackett continued said possession for himself and
McClung for seven years before suit, it was adverse and would bar
the claim of the lessor of the plaintiff. And further that the
possession of the land taken by Cox as tenant of Ross would not
suspend the statute of limitations, and that the effect of the said
statute could be defeated only by suit at law.
This instruction the judge refused to give, but did
Page 18 U. S. 123
charge the jury that Hackett was by law a tenant in common with
Ross, of which character he could not discharge himself by
agreement with a younger purchaser from Donalson, and that the
statute would not bar his right. With respect to the occupancy of
Cox, the judge said that merely going upon the land would not stop
the running of the statute, but that if an older adverse claimant
took actual possession by building houses, clearing land, &c.,
the operation of the statute of limitations might be thereby
suspended. To this opinion also the counsel for the defendant
excepted.
On examining the whole testimony stated in the bill of
exceptions, it appears that the contract with Hackett, which is
stated by Meriott in his deposition, was a contract for the sale
and purchase of a part of the tract of 5,000 acres sold by Donalson
to Ross, and that his contract with McClung was a sale of McClung's
part of the same land on condition that he would hold the whole
tract for McClung and Hackett. The actual possession of Meriott,
then, does not appear to have extended beyond his purchase. He does
not allege that Hackett put him in possession of more land than was
sold to him, nor does it appear that McClung put him in possession
of any land further than the virtual possession which was to be
implied from the agreement which has been stated. The possession of
Meriott, then, was an actual possession of a part of the land under
a purchase. It was his own possession in his own right, and not the
possession of Hackett and McClung. His agreement with McClung to
hold
Page 18 U. S. 124
the residue of the land for Hackett and McClung, never having
been followed, so far as is shown to the court, by actual
occupation of any part of that residue, cannot, we think, be
construed into such a possession by Hackett and McClung as to
affect the title of Ross. If the defendant cannot avail himself of
the possession of Meriott, then it is not shown that the bar was
complete when this suit was brought. The contract of sale with
Meriott was rescinded in the autumn or winter of 1808, and Hackett
entered into the land in the spring of 1809. This suit was
instituted on 27 March, 1816. The testimony does not show that the
entry of Hackett was anterior to 27 March, 1809. This, however,
ought to be left to the jury. But the judge was of opinion that the
possession of Hackett was not adverse to that of Ross, because they
were tenants in common.
That one tenant in common may oust his co-tenant and hold in
severalty, is not to be questioned. But a silent possession,
accompanied with no act which can amount to an ouster, or give
notice to his co-tenant that his possession is adverse, ought not,
we think, to be construed into an adverse possession. The
principles laid down in
Barr v. Gratz,
4 Wheat. 213, apply to this case.
Neither does it appear to this Court that there is error in that
part of the charge which respects the occupation of Cox on the part
of Ross. It is that merely going upon the land will not stop the
running of the statute, but that if an older adverse claimant took
actual possession by building houses, clearing
Page 18 U. S. 125
land, &c., the operation of the statute of limitations might
be thereby suspended. It has been contended that the statute of
Tennessee can be stopped only by actual suit. This is true when the
possession is such as by its continuance to constitute a bar. But
to make it such, it must be peaceable for seven years. This is the
fact which creates the bar. This fact cannot exist if the person
having the better title takes actual possession in pursuance of his
right. It is unnecessary to inquire whether the subsequent
abandonment of this possession rendered it in this case a nullity,
because the point is rendered unimportant by the circumstances that
Ross and Hackett were tenants in common. There is, then, no error
in the charge so far as respects the statute of limitations.
But the counsel also requested the judge to charge the jury that
the name of Hackett being signed to the deed from Stockly and
Donalson to Ross, since the delivery of said deed amounts to such
an alteration or addition as will vitiate such deed unless
accounted for by the plaintiff. This charge also the judge refused
to give, but did instruct the jury that the title was vested in
Ross by the deed from Donalson, and could not be divested, although
there might be an alteration or addition in a material part of the
said deed, such as the name of Hackett being put to the deed and
not proved.
There is some ambiguity in this instruction, and there is some
doubt in the state of the fact. The counsel for the defendant
assumes the fact that the signature of Hackett was affixed to the
deed after its
Page 18 U. S. 126
delivery. This does not appear in the evidence as stated. Nor
does it appear whether the signature of Hackett was affixed, before
or after the deed was registered. It was not proved or registered
as to Hackett, and is void as to him. The Court is not, however,
prepared to say that it is void as to Donalson. But the instruction
given by the judge is in terms which might mislead the jury, and
which appear in fact to have misled them. He says that the title
was vested in Ross by the deed from Donalson, and could not be
divested by the addition of the name of Hackett. Now this suit was
instituted for the whole tract, and the title asserted by Ross was
a title to the whole tract. The instruction of the judge might have
been understood as informing the jury that the title vested by the
deed conformed to the title claimed by Ross. In fact, it was so
understood; for the jury found a verdict for the whole tract, and
the court gave its judgment for the whole. Now Ross had no title to
more than a moiety, and the judge ought so to have instructed the
jury. For this reason, the judgment is to be reversed and the cause
remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
JUDGMENT. This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of
the record of the Circuit Court for East Tennessee, and was argued
by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this
Court that the circuit court erred in instructing the jury that the
title to the whole tract of land in the proceedings mentioned, and
for which judgment was
Page 18 U. S. 127
rendered in the said circuit court was vested in David Ross,
whereas the said court ought to have instructed the jury that only
a moiety of the said land was vested in him. It is therefore
ADJUDGED and ORDERED that the judgment of the said circuit court in
this case be, and the same is, hereby reversed and annulled. And it
is further ordered that the said cause be remanded to the said
circuit court with directions to issue a
venire facias de
novo.