
    BLALOCK, executrix, v. REDWINE et al., executors.
    
      No. 13451.
    November 14, 1940.
    
      Stephens Mitchell, A. S. Clay, and Hirsch, Smith & Kilpatrick, for plaintiff..
    
      
      O. J. Coogler, Crenshaw, Mansell & Cubby, and John M. Boman Jr., for defendants.
   Jenkins, Justice.

The executrix of the will of Alfred C. Blalock brought an action of ejectment, on June 30, 1937, against the executors of the will of Claude Hutcheson, for recovery of two lots containing an office building in Jonesboro. The plaintiff showed a paper title by virtue of recorded deeds, more than thirty years old, made to her predecessor in title. The defendants sought to show that this title had been superseded by a good prescriptive title from more than twenty years actual adverse possession of the property by themselves, the testator, and their predecessors in title or possession. They contend that such possession began, prior to the necessary twenty-year period, by virtue of the possession of Sims. It was shown that he was in possession of the property from 1903 until his death in 1913. The defendant sought to tack the possession of E. W. Hutcheson, their predecessor in title and possession, to the possession of Sims, but showed no sort of transfer of title or possession from Sims or the executors of his will. The testimony of a witness, merely that it was his “general understanding, . . with nothing to hang it on, . . just a general impression,” that E. W. Hutcheson had bought the property from the executors of Sims, was wholly insufficient. However, this absence of evidence, relating to the period prior to 1915, was wholly immaterial, if the requisite possession was shown during the twenty years immediately preceding the filing of the suit. As to this pertinent period, the evidence was undisputed, that E. ~W. Hutcheson took actual possession of the property, and built a tie house, vault, and office building upon it during 1915 and 1917; that he “chartered and . . formed the Jonesboro Investment Company, and this property was put in it as part of the property” of the corporation; that the corporation was organized on February 5, 1918, and since its organization has remained in actual possession of the property, collected rents, and paid its taxes. The combined periods of the possessions of E. W. Hutcheson and the company thus exceeded twenty years before the filing of the suit in 1937. The requisite privity and right to tack such possession appears, under an application of the rules of the syllabus to the facts stated.

Although only the executors of Claude Hutcheson are named as defendants, and the Jonesboro Investment Company is not a party, and although the only proved interest of the executors is that the testator had owned much stock in the company, and that the executors “have charge of the company,” and are “in possession now,” this is immaterial, since the outstanding prescriptive title, whether in the defendants or in the corporation, would defeat the action. Judgment affirmed.

All the Justices concur.  