Brown v. McKay
Brown v. McKay
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment brought by the assignee in insolvency against the defendant Angus McKay, who was also the insolvent debtor. The facts are these:
Mrs. Mary A. McKay, wife of David McKay, died in 1859, leaving two sons—this defendant Angus McKay, and David Me-*293 Kay, Jr., this defendant then being of the age of five years, and David being still younger. At the time of her death she was the owner of a piece of property in the city of San Francisco, described in this record as the “Dupont street property,” and she also possessed a community interest in the piece of property here designated as the “Davis street property.” As heirs-at-law of their mother an undivided one-third of the Dupont street property passed to each of the sons, and likewise an undivided one-fourth of the Davis street property. In 1883, defendant Angus McKay was adjudged an insolvent debtor, and his estate was administered upon; the debtor was discharged from his debts and thereafter the then assignee died. Ko part of the real estate here mentioned was included in the assets of the insolvent’s estate. In 1894 David McKay, the father, died, leaving a will. Upon his death it first came to the knowledge of the sons that, as heirs of their mother, they became the owners of the aforesaid interests in the two described tracts of land. Pending the administration upon the father’s estate, Angus McKay took out letters of administration upon his mother’s estate, and this property under such administration was finally distributed to the sons in the proportions aforesaid. Thereafter this plaintiff was appointed assignee in the insolvency proceedings to succeed his dead predecessor, and now seeks by ejectment to recover the possession of defendant’s interest in the land inherited by him from his mother.'
The only defense made to this action is the plea of the statute of limitations, defendant now claiming that his father, prior to his death, 'obtained title to the property here involved, by adverse possession. The trial court declared the facts in accordance with this claim and rendered judgment for defendant. This' appeal is taken from that judgment and also from the order denying a motion for a new trial.
Upon a careful examination of the record, the court has arrived at the conclusion that the facts to support the claim of adverse" possession in the father are too meager to accomplish that result. The case, in its facts upon the question of adverse possession, is a peculiar one, viewed from various standpoints. It is peculiar in "this": Defendant Angus McKay, during the period dating from his mother’s death, 1859, to his father’s
Eo inslanti upon the mother’s death, in 1859, the father and the sons became tenants in common of these two parcels of land. As has been stated, the defendant was then about five years of age, and his brother younger.' In 1861 the father, David McKay, filed a petition in the probate court setting forth that his two sons held undivided interests in these two parcels of land as heirs of their mother, and asked to be appointed guardian of their estates. The court made the order of appointment, and the record of the proceeding here ends. The defendant became of age in 1875, and prior to that time there is no't a particle of evidence tending to show any adverse claim to this property made by the father against his minor sons. He simply cared for the property, and that was all. He paid the taxes. He collected the rents. He insured the property and made the repairs. Ho one of these acts in any way or degree is inconsistent with his position as a tenant in common, especially in view of the fact that his .minor sons were his cotenants. As substantially settling the question in favor of the title of the minors during their minority, the father’s declaration in his petition for letters of guardianship may be cited.
After the arrival of the defendant at years of majority, we find hut a single additional circumstance tending in any way to support the theory of the defendant that the father’s intentions toward his title were hostile. And this is but a trifle. During the years from 1877 to 1883 the father leased to the de
There is a further consideration which strongly impresses the court with the conclusion that McKay, Sr., never claimed title to the interest of his sons in this property. By the inventory and appraisement filed in his estate his interest in the Dupont street lot is described as an undivided one-third thereof; and by
All presumptions of law, of fact, and of good morals are against an adverse holding in a case possessing the features of this ease; and to overcome those presumptions there must be a showing by the record of clear, direct and unequivocal acts upon the part of the adverse holder, indicating an intention to claim the property as his own. Such a case is not made out by this • record. It may be further suggested that the ease disclosed by the record is not one of conflicting evidence.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Van Dyke, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JAMES D. BROWN, Assignee, etc. v. ANGUS McKAY
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Tenancy in Common—Adverse Possession—Hostile Intent—In order to establish adverse possession by a tenant in common against his cotenants, clear and unequivocal proof is required of hostile intent on his part manifested to oust the cotenants. Id.—Presumptions—Father and Sons as Cotenants.—All presumptions of law, of fact, and of good morals are against an adverse holding by a father who became tenant in common with his sons as heirs of the deceased wife and mother, and who recognized their title by becoming guardian of their estate and maintained friendly relations with them until death, and devised his interest to them in one parcel of the inherited realty. Id.—Unsettled Guardianship—Lease—Insufficient Proof of Adverse Holding.—The mere facts, in such case, that the guardianship was never settled, and that the father executed a lease to one of the sons after he became of age, of another parcel of the inherited realty, which does not appear to have been devised by the father, are insufficient to evince a hostile intent as to such parcel, or to establish an adverse holding thereof by the father as against the sons.