Mooring v. Campbell
Mooring v. Campbell
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of trespass to try title to land, and there are two questions in the case.
1st. Was the verdict of the jury, awarding to the plaintiff, Campbell, two hundred and fifty dollars damages, authorized by the evidence on the trial ? The court directed the jury, on that subject, to find “what damage, if any, has been proved to have been sustained to the land by the act of the defendant in the -way of cutting or using timber.”
The number of trees shown to have been cut,«and rails split on the land of plaintiff, -would render it probable that damages to that amount had been sustained, and it was suf
2d. Was the charge of the court correct upon the statute of limitations, under which the jury found against the defendant, notwithstanding he proved that he had inclosed and used for a pasture a part of the plaintiff’s land, adjoining bis own farm, which was on his own land, for more than ten years, during which the statute”of limitations was running?
The charge was as follows: “If the defendant, Mooring, has satisfactorily shown that he has been in peaceable, adverse, and continuous possession of any part of the land in controversy, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same, and such possession was actual, visible, and notorious, and of such actual notoriety as that the owner might be presumed to know that there was a possession of the land, and held in possession for ten years or more, excluding the time between January 28,1861, and March 80,1870, then so state in your verdict. If no such notorious possession for ten years or more has been satisfactorily proved by the defendant, then find for the plaintiff on this issue.”
The point of this charge is, that the possession of the land should be such as, that under the surrounding circumstances, it could be seen and recognized as an intrusion upon and occupation of the land of Campbell. If it.should be held that this is a correct view of the law, (which is not now decided,) tile evidence in this case is too uncertain and indefinite to enable this court to see its application to the facts.
The land claimed by Campbell was the south half of a league; whether prairie or timbered is not'shown. The size
For the error committed by the court, in not setting aside the verdict of the jury as to damages, upon the motion for a new trial, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- L. S. Mooring v. Cyrus Campbell
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Damages—Verdict.—In an action for the recovery of damages for an alleged trespass on property, the unlawful conversion of the property by the defendant was proved; but there was no evidence of its value. The jury estimated its value from their judgment alone, and returned a verdict accordingly: Held, That this was error; the evidence must furnish the standard for the value of the property converted. 2. Limitation.—Though it is manifest that one who has been in adverse possession, with all of his improvements, on a large tract of land belonging to another, for the period of ten years, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same, (Paschal’s Dig., art. 4623,) thereby acquires title to six hundred and forty acres, including his improvements, yet, the statute which confers this right is so meagre in its provisions, that it will receive no construction beyond this, except as directly applicable to pertinent facts arising in a case. Questions which may arise, under that statute, not yet decided, are the following t 1. If a person, while improving his own land, should by accident or design place a fence a few yards over his own line, on the land of another, so as to include a strip which he cultivates for ten years with his own field, shall this result in fixing a boundary between the two tracts, or in the acquisition of six hundred and forty acres of land belonging to another, when the fence was placed there? Must the six hundred and forty acres, if he be entitled to it under the statute, include all of liis improvements, or only such portion as extends over on the adjoining tract? 2. If one should settle, and improve without title, near the corners of four sections of land, belonging to different parties, and, after inclosing, retain possession of adversely, and cultivate for ten years, in one field, a few acres on each section, does he thereby acquire, if suits should be brought for the trespass by the four owners of the tracts, six hundred and forty acres from each?