v.
THODE
Judge of the Seventh Judicial District, sitting in place of the Chief Justice, delivered the opinion of the court.
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover the possession of lot 3 in block 359 of the town site of Great Falls, which lot plaintiff alleges the defendants possess and are wrongfully withholding from her.
The defendant Mary J. Thode answered, and denied each and every allegation in plaintiff’s complaint, and alleged as an affirmative defense that she has been in possession of the north 110 feet of said lot since April, 1902; that she has held the same openly, actually, notoriously, continuously, exclusively, adversely and uninterruptedly for that time, and has continuously used said premises as a home, residing thereon, and cultivated and improved the same; and that she claims the same as [*409] her own, adversely and hostile to the claim of the plaintiff or any person or persons whomsoever. Upon the trial of the case it was stipulated in open court that the title to the lot in question was in the Great Falls Townsite Company until August, 1902, and was transferred to the plaintiff on the nineteenth day of August, 1902. The plaintiff then rested, and the defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was overruled.
The defendant Mary J. Thode then testified that she is a sister of the plaintiff; that she has occupied the north 110 feet of the lot in question since 1902, and has resided thereon continuously and exclusively, and has never shared the same with anyone else; that she has maintained her home thereon since April, 1902, and intends to continue; that she learned in 1902 that either the plaintiff or her husband owned the lot; that plaintiff’s husband owed the defendant money and would not pay it, and she determined to go on the lot in question for the purpose of holding possession of it against everybody, including Mr. and Mrs. Collins, and live on the lot for the purpose of getting title by adverse possession; that she had been advised at that time that she could obtain title by adverse possession; that she did not have anybody’s consent or permission to go on the lot; that since April, 1902, she has cultivated and improved the lot, by cutting the grass on the front and on the side, grown vegetables in the back of the lot, kept a hotbed, driveway and clothesline, and a house and barn upon the lot in question; that she cultivated the full 110 feet of such lot each and every year, except that portion upon which the house was located; that she raked up and burned the rubbish off of the full 110 feet of said lot twice a year; that the house has been upon the lot in question since 1902, and the bam was moved upon the same two years later; that the front part of the said lot was never fenced, but the other three sides were fenced, sometimes with one strand of wire and sometimes with two; that her possession of the land in question has not been interrupted since 1902; that her possession has been open and aboveboard, and has never been questioned until this action was instituted; that she did not know [*410] whether the lot in question was owned by Mr. or Mrs. Collins until after Mr. Collins’ death; that she thought Mr. Collins would give her the north 110 feet of the lot before he died, for the reason that he owed her some money; that she always believed that he would either deed the lot to her, or will it to her, and was disappointed when he did not; that she never told anyone of her claim to the lot; that she has lived upon the lot with her son, who is forty years old; that previous to moving upon.the lot she and her son resided in a house located upon other land, which house had been built by her son; that she had no income of her own, and her son provides the means for supplying the house; that the house was moved upon the land in question by a person employed and paid by her son; that she has never paid any taxes upon the land or the house in question, and if there were any taxes paid upon the house they were paid by her son; that the barn which was moved upon the premises belonged to her son; that she never “opened her head” to plaintiff, or gave her any intimation that she intended to claim the lot; that she had no talk with her about it, and never let the plaintiff know that she intended to claim the lot; that she did not know why she did not tell her about it; that she did not happen to say anything about it — “Why should I say anything to her?” that she never gave plaintiff any reason to suppose defendant intended to claim the lot, in any talk; that she never gave the plaintiff any reason to suspect that she had a secret intention to obtain the lot; that neither she nor her son ever paid any taxes on the lot; that she did not know who built the sidewalk in front of the lot, or who paid for it; that she never gave herself any concern about that.
The defendant Mary J. Thode was the only witness who testified in this case. At the conclusion of her testimony the court directed a verdict for the -plaintiff, and judgment was entered accordingly. This appeal is from that judgment.
Two questions are presented for determination, viz.:
(1) Did the court err in overruling defendant’s motion for a nonsuit?
[*411] (2) Was the evidence offered by the defendant sufficient to show prima, fade that the defendant had possession of the ground in question under such circumstances as would give her title by adverse possession?
1. It is admitted that the plaintiff obtained title to the
2. “Adverse possession, generally speaking, is a possession of another’s land, which, when accompanied by certain acts and circumstances, will vest title in the possessor. No matter in what jurisdiction the determination of what constitutes adverse
In 2 Corpus Juris, 75, it is said: “It is in general true that title by adverse possession cannot be acquired, unless the possession is open and notorious, but the rule must be understood with some qualification. A more correct statement of the rule is: In order to make good a claim of title by adverse holding, the true owner must have actual knowledge of the hostile claim, or the possession must be so open, visible, and notorious as to raise the presumption of notice to the world that the right of the true owner is invaded intentionally, and with a purpose to assert a claim of title adversely to his, or so patent that the owner could not be deceived, and such that if he remains in ignorance it is his own fault. ‘The claimant must exercise such acts of ownership and occupancy as are sufficient to “hoist his flag” over the lands, so that all may observe it.’ A clandestine entry or possession will not set the statute in motion, and mere declarations as to title in himself by the claimant, where the possession is not visible or actual, amount to nothing. The owner will not be condemned to lose his land because he has failed to sue for its recovery, when he had no notice that it was held or claimed adversely.”
Hostile possession is defined in 2 Corpus Juris, p. 122, as follows: “The term ‘hostile’ is used in the sense that the claimant must be in possession as owner, in contradistinction to holding in recognition of or in subordination to the true owner. Every possession is adverse which is not in subservience to the title of another, either by a direct acknowledgment or by an open or tacit disavowal of right on the part of the occupant, and it is in the latter case only that the law adjudges the possession of one to the benefit of another. The term ‘hostile,’ ‘when applied to the possession of an occupant of real estate holding adversely, is not to be construed as showing ill will, or that [the claimant] is an enemy of the person holding the legal title, but means an occupant who holds, and is in possession, as owner, and therefore against all other claimants of the land.’ ”
[*413] Under these rules, is the evidence offered by the defendant sufficient to show prima facie that she had acquired the land in question by adverse possession? We think not.
The defendant admits that she never asserted to anyone
When the defendant’s son had his house moved upon the
In this case, the rights of the answering defendant can be such only as would accrue if Henry E. Thode occupied the premises in question under authority of the owner. If she occupied the premises pursuant to permission of Henry E. Thode, such possession would be equivalent to permission from the owner of the premises, and subservient to the owner’s rights, and she could never acquire any right under such possession, greater than the rights of Henry E. Thode. Such possession could not be hostile to that of the owner of the premises.
In our opinion, the evidence offered by the defendant fails absolutely to show that she ever at any time had such possession of the premises in question as could ripen into title.
We find no error in this case. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.