Clary v. Bonnett
Clary v. Bonnett
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action of trespass to try title to 3.6 acres of land. Defendant, C. C. Bonnett, disclaimed any interest, and justified his trespass under the claim of his codefendant. Plaintiff and L. P. Bonnett both claimed the land in dispute under paper title and by adverse possession. The jury found for plaintiff.
The parties own adjacent tracts, and the issue was: Which of two marked lines on the ground is the true boundary between them? The existence of the two lines was explained by Mr. Norris, one of the Court surveyors, in this way: In 1805 the State granted to James Hughes a tract of 963 acres. The eastern boundary of this grant was a north and south line, which was marked on the ground at the date of the survey. In 1836 the State granted to *455 Jonathan Foutz a tract of 1,877 acres, part of which was east of aiyi adjacent to the tract previously granted to Hughes, which, in the meantime, had come to be known as the “lands of Staley,” and these lands were put down on the Foutz plat as the western 'boundary of the grant to' Foutz, along a north and south line.
Mr. Norris thinks, and his opinion appears to be in accord with the evidence, that in locating the Foutz grant the surveyor did not find and follow the line of the older grant to Hughes, as he should have done (Atkinson v. Anderson, 3 McCord 223), but began at a corner or station on that line and followed the course indicated by his compass, without making proper allowance for the variation of the magnetic needle, in consequence of which he ran and marked a new line, which gradually diverged to the west from the Hughes line, and caused the Foutz grant to overlap the- Hughes grant.
Previous to plaintiff’s acquisition of title to the tract owned by him, there had been no clearing of the land between the two lines, or up to either of them, except at the northern end, where Vianna Staley had cleared and cultivated the land up to the Plughes line for a time beyond the memory of the oldest witnesses. There was testimony that one of the corners of the Foutz grant was found in her field; but *456 it does not appear whether it was put there before or after she cleared the land.
Plaintiff tookpossessionof his tract about 1900. He began to clear at the southeast corner of the tract, and cleared up to the Foutz line for about half the distance across the tract, until he came to a public road that runs through the tract, and north of that road he cleared up to the line of the Hughes grant, so as to make his clearing conform to that of Vianna Staley, and he has cultivated thé land up to that line without interruption from the date of his clearing it, which was about 1902, until the present time. About 1912 a surveyor was employed to subdivide, for the purpose of partition, a tract known as the Posey tract, which was part of'the Foutz grant, and in following the line of that grant it was discovered that plaintiff had cleared and was cultivating the land east of the Foutz line, as above indicated. Thereupon this dispute arose.
Defendant tried to get plaintiff to agree to the Foutz line and to pay rent for so much of the land in dispute as he had been cultivating, but he refused to do so, claiming that the land was his. In 1913, and also in 1914, in settling with plaintiff for some ginning and sawing for which they owed him, defendants deducted $1.50 or $2.50 from what they owed him, as rent for the land. Both admitted, however, that he never agreed to pay rent for the land, and that in both instances the deductions were made without his con- ' sent. After he had steadfastly refused to pay rent, .one of the defendants plowed up some oats that he had planted on the land, whereupon plaintiff brought this action for damages for the trespass.
2 The foregoing testimony with reference to the payment of rent is stated because, based upon it, defendants preferred a request to charge to the effect that a tenant cannot dispute the title of his landlord, etc., and the refusal of that request is made a ground of appeal. We need only say the testimony is not sufficient to war *457 rant the inference that the relation of landlord and tenant existed between these parties. That relation arises out of contract, express or implied, and both defendants admit that plaintiff would not agree to pay rent, and because he would not they undertook to take possession of the land, and committed the trespass for which this action was brought. The request was properly refused.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Public Lands — Title to Holder Under Prior Grant prom State Prevails.- — Title of a successor of prior grantee from the State must prevail as against title of the successor of a subsequent grantee from the State, unless the parties holding under the subsequent grant acquired title by adverse possession. 2. (Trial — Facts Held Insufficient to Justify Charge on Relation of Landlord and Tenant. — Where plaintiff would not agree to pay defendants rent for a disputed strip, and because he would not they undertook to take possession of the land and to commit the trespass for which plaintiff brought action, the refusal of defendants’ requested charge that a tenant cannot dispute the title of his landlord was proper; the evidence that the relation of landlord and tenant existed between plaintiff and defendants being insufficient. 3. Deeds — Plats and Grants of Adjacent Land Admissible in Determining Description.- — -In an action of trespass to try title, grants and plats of adjacent land were admissible as aiding in identifying and locating the land. 4. Evidence — Copies of Grants from State Admissible, Where There Was Evidence of Loss of Originals. — Copies of grants from the State to the predecessors of pláintiff and defendants in an action of trespass to try title were admissible, where there was sufficient evidence of the loss or destruction of the originals. o. Appeal and Error — Failure to Give Reouest Held Harmless to Defendants. — In trespass to try title, where the giving of defendants’ requested charge correctly stating the general rule as to the relative importance of natural objects, identification marks, etc., in locating a disputed boundary, would not have aided the jury in deciding the issue which of two lines plainly marked on the ground should control, the failure to give it was not prejudicial to defendants. 6. Adverse Possession — Paper Title and Possession Raise Presumption of Grant from State. — If a claimant of land in trespass to try title proves a paper title and 20 years’ adverse possession thereunder, he has proved enough to raise the presumption of a grant from the State. 7. Appeal and Error — Charge on Title by Adverse Possession Held Not Prejudicial in Trespass to Try Title.- — In an action of trespass to try title between parties each claiming under a grant from the State, charge as to the ways in which a party might prove title in himself, first, by tracing his title back to grant from the State, and, second, by paper title and adverse possession for 20 years, presuming a grant, held' not prejudicial to either party, particularly in view of undisputed evidence as to possession of the land. 8. Adverse Possession — No Constructive Possession Without Actual Possession. — There can be no constructive adverse possession of land against the owner, where there has been no actual possession which he could treat as a trespass and bring action for.