Scott v. Hereell
Scott v. Hereell
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
No question was raised by the defendants as to the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ title, and the court, without objection, instructed the jury, in substance, that the record title to said lots was in the plaintiffs. We, therefore, proceed to a consideration of plaintiffs’ assignment of errors.
The first assignment of error relates to the ruling of the court in admitting tax deeds from Bartow L. Walker to Paul J. Brant and from Brant to the Virginia Alabama Company. The first of these deeds is dated in 1894. The court granted defendants’ eighth prayer, which the record discloses “was conceded by plaintiffs,” and which instructed the jury “that the defendants have shown that Frances FL Ball had color of title to the land in question,” and “defendants’ twelfth prayer, which was conceded by the plaintiffs,” and which .reads as follows:
“If the jury finds from the evidence that Frances FL Ball, under color and claim of title to the lots in controversy, leased the same to a tenant as early as the year 1868, and remained in possession of said lots through tenants for the full and uninterrupted period of more than twenty years from that date, and that such possession was open, continuous, notorious, adverse, actual, and exclusive under claim of ownership, then they are instructed, as a matter of law, that, if they should find from the evidence that the plaintiffs have established a record title to said' lots, the possession of said Frances H. Ball, if found by the jury in the manner hereinbefore set forth, destroyed the title of the plaintiffs, and it passed to said Frances FL Ball; and their verdict must be for the defendants, unless you find from the evidence that the defendants entered upon the lots in controversy as mere trespassers.”
Inasmuch as defendants relied solely upon the adverse posses
The second assignment of error specifies that the court erred
The third assignment of error relates to the admission of the records of the assessor’s office, but is not predicated upon an exception, and therefore, must be passed.
In the fourth assignment of error it is contended that the receipt from R. L. Stanton to James Jones should not have been admitted in evidence. No objection was offered to the admission of this paper because it was a copy, the objection being that it did not in terms refer to the lots in controversy, and that it was incompetent and immaterial. The witness, who identified the paper, testified that R. L. Stanton was the agent of Mrs. Ball at the time the receipt was given, and that James Jones, to whom it was given, occupied lots 7 and 8, and did in fact pay rent for the use of said lots to his aunt. Mrs. Ball, Mr. Stanton, and James Jones were dead. Clearly, had the original receipt been produced, it would have been admissible in connection with evidence identifying the lots. As no objection was offered because the paper was a copy, it is too late now to make the point.
The assignment of error involving the proof of the execution of the will of Frances H. Ball by the testimony of one subscribing witness, the second witness being dead, and the third being a nonresident, is without merit. Section 132 of the Code specifically provides that, if the testimony of the resident witness is taken and any other witness resides out of the District, it shall be sufficient to prove the signature of such nonresident witness; and that the will shall thereupon be admitted to probate.
The next assignment of error necessary to be noticed relates to the granting of defendants’ seventh prayer, which as amended
The ground for this objection is that it permitted the defendants to select for the jury detached and inconclusive facts and circumstances favorable to the defendants. We do not think the charge is subject to this objection. It is a fair synopsis of the testimony. Inasmuch as the plaintiffs rely solely upon their record title, it is obvious that there were no facts and circumstances put in evidence in their behalf to which the attention of the jury might have been directed in this charge.
Other exceptions were noted, but they are not of sufficient importance to merit consideration here.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SCOTT v. HEREELL
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- Syllabus
- Ejectment; Adverse Possession; Evidence; Claim: and Color oe Title; Appeals; Objections and Exceptions; Wills; Witnesses; Instructions to Jury. 1. Where the conceded question in an action of ejectment is whether the adverse possession of the person under whom defendants claim is sufficient to defeat the plaintiffs record title, the admission in evidence of a tax deed offered by the plaintiff, of a date subsequent to the ripening of such adverse possession, is not error prejudicial to the plaintiffs. 2. The plaintiff in ejectment may he defeated by proof of an outstanding title by adverse possession in another person; and it is unnecessary for the defendant to trace title from such other person, or to show in what right he claims, or any right whatever in himself. (Following Reeves v. Low, 8 App. D. C. 105.) 3. Title to land by adverse possession is as perfect as title acquired by deed from the record owner. 4. A lease of the land in controversy by the party under whom the defendants claim in an action of ejectment, and who they claim had title by adverse possession, is admissible in evidence as tending to show claim of title by such party. (Following Briel v. Jordan, 27 App. D. C. 202.) 5. Where the plaintiffs in ejectment concede that a deed to the party-claimed by the defendants to have title by adverse possession constituted color of title, it is not error prejudicial to the plaintiffs for the trial court, in its charge, in referring to a lease properly admitted in evidence as showing claim of title by such party, to use the terms, “color of title” and “claim of title” indiscriminately. 6. An assignment of error relating to the admission of certain evidence in an action at law, but not based upon an exception, will not be considered. 7. A copy of a receipt to a tenant for rent, given by the agent of the party who, the defendants in ejectment claim, had title by adverse possession, is admissible in connection with evidence identifying the lots described in it as those in controversy, where the objection to its admissibility is not because the paper is a copy, but because it does not in terms refer to the lots in controversy; and is incompetent and immaterial. 8. Where one of the three witnesses of a will is dead, and another is a nonresident, the execution of the will and the signature of the nonresident witness may be provided by the remaining witness. (Construing see. 132, D. C. Code.) 9. In an action of ejectment, in which it is conceded that the plaintiff has the record title to the land in controversy, and the defense, is adverse possession, a prayer for instruction offered by the defendant, containing a fair synopsis of the testimony relating to the facts claimed to constitute adverse possession, but not referring to the plaintiff’s claim, is not open to the objection that it selects for the jury detached and inconclusive facts and circumstances favorable to-, the defendants.