Hunter v. Ayres
Hunter v. Ayres
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court—
This action of ejectment was brought upon the demise of Hunter and others, as heirs of Robert Hare, the grantee of a patent forten thousand acres of land, issued in 1788, to recover nine tenements in the possession of as many tenants, in the county of Owen. The plaintiff having adduced evidence conducing to prove all the facts necessary to authorize a recovery, the defendants on their part introduced evidence intended to make out a defense under the seven years limitation act of 1809. The jury, under instructions from the court, directed particularly to the question as to the facts which would entitle the defendants to the benefit of the seven years limitation, found two of the defendants guilty and the others not guilty of the trespass and ejectment charged. A judgment was rendered according to the verdict, and a new trial having been granted on the plaintiffs’ motion as to two only of the defendants found not guilty, and the motion as to the others having been overruled, the plaintiff has brought the case to this court.
It appears that the land sued for is covered by the junior patent of Bodley and Connelly, under which most of the defendants claim protection, as well as by that of Hare, under which the plaintiffs derive title. It seems, however, that one of the defendants, Sallee, obtained in 1827 a patent to himself on a Kentucky land office treasury warrant, for eighty acres, of which he has* been in possession ever since the date of the patent, claiming under it. The instruction of the court with respect to him was correct, and the verdict of the jury in his favor being clearly authorized and, indeed, required by the evidence, there was no ground for a new trial as to him-; and it will be understood ' that his case is not included or referred to in our further remarks upon the questions of law or fact involved in the case.
The court correctly instructed the jury that they should find for the defendant Jump, so far as the
In the case of Poage’s heirs vs. Chinn’s heirs, 4 Dana, 54, it was decided, and it has been so held ever since, that the relation of landlord and tenant is asufficient connection of the possession with the title of the landlord, and that, as that relation may be created and maintained for a succession of years by parol, so it may be proved by parol. And in the same case, page 58, it was also decided that the bare claim to be in possession under the title of another, without any contract, express or implied, is not evidence of such a connection between the possession and the title as is requisite to constitute a bar under the statute.
As the written contracts by which most of the defendants connect themselves with the patent of Bodley and Connelly, bear date in the year 1842, within seven years before the commencement of this action, and were made by an agent whose authority, as exhibited in this case, was also given in 1842, and as the defendants’ witnesses state in general terms that such and such persons, the defendants or those from whom they derived their possession, were in possession prior to the date of these contracts, claiming under Bodley and Connelly, it was essential to a correct finding of the facts on which the application of the statute depended, that the court, in instructing the jury on that subject, should have informed them distinctly and explicitly, that the statute did not begin to operate so as to protect the possession until there was a contract, express or implied, written or parol, with the patentees or their agent, or with one of them, or the agent of one, or the heirs or alienee of one or both, or his or their agent, by which the tenant in possession at the time obtained or held the possession under that patent, and that the subsequent recognition by a party so entitled or authorized, of a possession previously taken avowedly under that claim, but without any such contract, did not carry back the statute to the commencement of such possession, or of the claim to hold under that title. The instruction given on this subject is not only not explicit in stating the law as above declared, but it is, in our opinion, open to the inference by the jury, which, under the evidence in the case, was pro
With regard to the lease from Scott, claiming to act for Bodley, &c., to Beard, under which it is contended that possession was acquired to the whole extent of the patent of Bodley and Connelly, which being made twenty years before the commencement of the action, brought the whole patent within the protection of the seven years limitation, its efficacy depended first upon the authority of Scott, which is not shown, and further upon the question whether it was accepted as a lease of more than fifty acres, which is at least doubtful upon the evidence of Beard himself; and third, whether the possession to that extent, if ever acquired, was not lost or abandoned; as to which, reference is made to the case of Simon vs. Gouge, 12 B. Monroe, 162-3.
For the error which has been pointed out in the instructions, the judgment in favor of the defendants, except Sallee, is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, as to all the defendants who were found not guilty, except Sallee. But the judgment as against the two defendants found guilty, and also as to Sallee, is not disturbed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.