Kellogg v. Mullen
Kellogg v. Mullen
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The decision of the case turns upon the question of adverse possession. Both parties claim under a common grant-
It is plain that there could be no adverse possession of these premises until after the expiration of the lease for twenty years under which the possession was held. If the defendant had entered before that time he would have been considered as having entered under the tenant holding under that lease or as a mere intruder, and then as against the landlord and those holding under him he would have been treated as having got the possession from such tenant — Willi v. Peters, 11 Mo. 396; Shepard v. Martin, 31 Mo. 492. If he entered after the expiration of that lease, and under his lease from the grantee in the deed of 1851, then the statute of limitations had not run against the plaintiff for ten years before the suit commenced.
The instruction refused for the plaintiff should have been given. The instruction given for the defendant was not warranted by the evidence before the jury.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sanford B. Kellogg v. James Mullen
- Status
- Published