Opinion
Argued October 28, 1912
Decided January 14, 1913
Marshall B. Clarke for appellant.
Leslie C. Ferguson and Edmond Huerstel for respondents.
The action is in ejectment. The trial court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment entered thereon. The lands involved are in the borough of The Bronx, New York city. The plaintiffs are the widow and the heirs at law of and claim the right to possess the lands involved, as the owners of them, through John B. Monnot, who died intestate in October, 1874. The defendant claims the right to possess them, as the owner, through Joseph Husson, who died intestate in October, 1896.
In March, 1874, it was adjudged in an action in the Supreme Court of this state in which John B. Monnot was the plaintiff and Joseph Husson was the defendant that Husson had no right or title to certain lands of which the plaintiffs claim the lands in question are a part and that Monnot, as the owner, recover them of the said Husson. This judgment was, immediately upon its rendition, enforced by an execution under which Husson was forcibly removed from and Monnot placed in possession of the lands. Husson duly appealed from the judgment. An application by him to the Supreme Court for restoration to the lands was denied. The appellant asserts that several months thereafter Husson took possession of the lands and subsequently he or his successors actually and continuously occupied them. In 1904 his heirs at law caused a partition among themselves of these and other lands and the appellant acquired her alleged right to possess the lands in question through a conveyance by her mother, who was a daughter of Husson. A defense at the trial was the adverse possession of the appellant and her predecessors in title.
Section 371 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: "Where there has been an actual continued occupation of premises, under a claim of title, exclusive of any other right, but not founded upon a written instrument, or a judgment or decree, the premises so actually occupied, and no others, are deemed to have been held adversely;" and section 372 thereof provides that land is deemed to have been thus occupied in the following cases only: "1. Where it has been protected by a substantial inclosure. 2. Where it has been usually cultivated or improved." The alleged occupation of Husson and his successors subsequent to 1874 was not founded upon a written instrument, or a judgment or decree. The evidence received upon the trial tended to prove and would have enabled the jury, upon its submission to them, to find that there was on the part of Husson and appellant's predecessors, within the limitations of those sections, an actual continuous occupation since 1875 or thereabouts. The trial court, following the decision of the Appellate Division in the first department in Monnot v. Rudd ( 139 App. Div. 651), held that the entry of Husson and the continued occupation thereunder were sufficient, standing alone, to raise the presumption that they were adverse under section 371, but that they, taken in connection with the judgment awarding possession to Monnot as the record owner, did not raise such presumption, and that the appellant could not assert that the occupation and possession had been adverse, in the absence of proof by her of some act of hostility towards Monnot's title on Husson's part other than those acts constituting the occupation. The decision of the trial court was affirmed by the Appellate Division on the authority of Monnot v. Rudd ( supra).
In Barnes v. Light ( 116 N.Y. 34, 39) this court said: "The actual possession and improvement of the premises, as owners are accustomed to possess and improve their estates, without any payment of rent, or recognition of title in another, or disavowal of title in himself, will, in the absence of all other evidence, be sufficient to raise a presumption of his entry and holding as absolute owner, and unless rebutted by other evidence, will establish the fact of a claim of title. Possession, accompanied by the usual acts of ownership, is presumed to be adverse until shown to be subservient to the title of another."
In the case at bar the judgment under which the possession of the premises was taken from Husson and delivered to Monnot did not tend to show that the subsequent possession of Husson, accompanied by the acts usually attending ownership, was subservient to the title of Monnot or another. In its rendition, nature or effects there was not any element which reasonably or naturally would cause Monnot or his heirs at law to think that the re-entry and occupation of Husson and his heirs at law were under or subordinate to Monnot's title. Husson had the same right after he was ejected to acquire or claim a title to the lands as he would have had in case he had never possessed or been ejected from them. Neither the judgment nor the ejectment affected the existence of such right or the opportunity to exercise it. The ultimate element in the rise of a title through adverse possession is the acquiescence of the real owner in the exercise of an obvious adverse or hostile ownership through the statutory period. The object of the statute defining the acts essential to constitute an adverse possession is that the real owner may, by unequivocal acts of the usurper, have notice of the hostile claim and be thereby called upon to assert his legal title. ( Trustees, etc., of Town of East Hampton v. Kirk, 84 N.Y. 215.) The judgment did not create any relation between Husson and Monnot or Husson and the premises which deprived those statutory acts, as and if performed by Husson and his successors, of their effectiveness as a notice to the holders of the real title that an adverse occupation existed. Husson, removed by virtue of and under it, was in no different standing or situation from that which would have been his if he had not possessed or claimed the lands prior to the removal. It established that Monnot's title was superior to that under which Husson was then claiming, but did not to any extent bar Husson from thereafter at any time claiming title, or prevent the entry and occupation thereunder from being adverse. To constitute them adverse the claim of title was not required to be valid. An invalid claim is as effectual, as a constituent of the notice to the rightful owner that the occupation under it is in defiance of his title, as a valid claim. ( Sands v. Hughes, 53 N.Y. 287; Humbert v. Rector, etc., of Trinity Church, 24 Wend. 587; Jackson v. Camp, 1 Cow. 605.) There was in the judgment no more assurance or security to Monnot against a subsequent adverse possession by Husson or another than there is to any landowner in the deed through which he obtained the title.
The purchase of tax leases of the premises by Husson subsequent to his alleged re-entry was not a recognition of the Monnot title. He had the right to strengthen his adverse possession by any instrument whether valid or invalid. His acquisition of Monnot's title would not tend to show that his possession was subservient to it.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
GRAY, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; CULLEN, Ch. J., absent.
Judgment reversed, etc.