
    Edwin A. Barnes, App’lt, v. Harvey E. Light, Resp’t.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals, Second Division,
    
    
      Filed October 8, 1889.)
    
    1. Adverse possession.
    In an action of ejectment, brought to recover a strip of land which plaintiff claimed by adverse possession, plaintiff’s evidence showed an actual enjoyment thereof, as part of his farm, continuously for more than twenty years, but defendant’s evidence was that plaintiff’s fence was temporary and mainly used to keep his cattle from entering defendant’s woods. Held, that the court erred in refusing to submit to the jury the question as to whether the portion claimed was protected by an enclosure, and whether it had been usually cultivated or improved within the meaning of the statute.
    3. Same.
    • A claim of title may be made by acts alone quite as effectively as by the most emphatic assertions.
    Appeal from a judgment of the general term in the. fifth judicial department, affirming a judgment in favor of the defendant entered on a verdict directed by the court.
    This is an action of ejectment, brought to recover the possession of certain premises in the town of Pittsford, county of Monroe. The answer is, in substance, a general denial.
    The defendant’s farm of about sixty-eight acres lies directly east of a portion of plaintiff’s farm of one hundred acres. The land in controversy, embracing about one-third of an acre, is a triangular strip running from a point at the north end of the boundary line between the parties, to a base forty-eight links in length at the south end of said line. The origin of plaintiff’s title, as proved upon the trial, was a deed from Oliver Culver to Issac Barnes, dated January 3, 1823, in which the land conveyed is described by metes and bounds.
    
      The origin of defendant’s title, according to the evidence, was a, deed from William 1ST. to Sylvester Shepard,dated April 30th, 1840, which conveyed certain lands bounded as follows: Beginning in the center of the road leading from Pittsford to Rochester in the south line of Erastus Williams’ land; from thence running west in said south line forty chains to Isaac “Barnes’land; thence running south in the east line of Barnes’ land fifteen chains and twelve links; thence running south eighty-six degrees east, forty-four chains to the Blake tract, so called; thence running north in the west line of said Blake tract ten chains and eighty-two links to the center of the Rochester road; thence northwardly in said road to the place of beginning.”
    The several conveyances in the two chains of title from the original grantors down to the respective parties contain like descriptions, except that the north and west lines of defendant’s land in the final deed to him, dated February 8, 1881, are as follows: “ Thence on the south line of land now or lately owned by Erastus Williams, north 84£ degrees west, 40 chains 20 links to land of Isaac Barnes; thence south three degrees and a quarter west along said land 15 chains.”
    It is conceded “ that by following the courses and distances alone given in the deed from Culver to Barnes along the west and south sides of plaintiff's farm, the east line would be so drawn as to exclude the locus in quo."
    
    
      Henry W. Conklin, for app’lt; James B. Perkins, for resp’t.
    
      
       Reversing 2 N. Y. State Rep., 219.
    
   Vann, J.

The land in question is not covered by any deed in plaintiff’s chain of title, but he founds his right to recover (1) upon adverse possession, and, (2) upon a practical location of the boundary line between his farm and that of the defendant. Unless there was enough evidence to authorize the jury to find for the plaintiff upon one of these questions, the trial court was right in directing a verdict for the defendant. An action of ejectment, founded only upon adverse possession, can be maintained even against the true owner. Cahill v. Palmer, 45 N. Y., 479; Millard v. McMullin, 68 id., 345; Sherman v. Kane, 86 id., 57; Carleton v. Darcy, 90 id., 566; Mayor v. Carleton, 113 id., 284; 22 N. Y. State Rep., 625; Baker v. Oakwood, 49 Hun, 416; 22 N. Y. State Rep., 602; Buswell’s Limitations and Adverse Possession, 313-315. As the plaintiff’s claim of title was not founded upon a written instrument, judgment or decree, it was necessary for him to show an actual, continued occupation of the premises under a claim of title, not founded upon written evidence, exclusive of any other right. Code Civ. Pro., §§370, 371. Under such circumstances, land can be deemed to have been held adversely only where it has been protected by a substantial enclosure, or where it has been usually cultivated or improved. Id., § 372.

Upon the trial evidence was given tending to show that the west end of the defendant’s farm had been cleared and cultivated for forty years or more. The adjoining land of the plaintiff was, for a distance of over eight chains, a forest, and for the remaining six chains and upwards cleared, enclosed and cultivated land. The ■entire forest comprised from sixty to one hundred acres, and although owned by several persons, had no division fences. The portion owned by the plaintiff, constituting the south end of his farm, was separated from his cleared land by a fence that had stood there for over thirty years, during which period all of his cleared land has been cultivated and enclosed, including the northerly part of the land, in question. It was plowed, planted and seeded; then used as a meadow until the grass ran out, when it was plowed, planted and seeded again, and was used, according to one of the witnesses, “as a general farm is used.” For over forty years crooked fence, made of rails, boards nailed upon posts and trees, brush and “ odds and ends,” ran between the east end of the woods and the rear of defendant’s farm and from the woods northerly, between the latter and the cultivated part of plaintiff’s farm. The north portion of this fence was better and was more carefully kept up than the part by the woods, and the land upon plaintiff’s side thereof was cultivated “ as close up to the rail fence as you could plow, or within three feet.” This fence was occasionlly Tepaired and partially renewed until shortly before the commence-, ment of the action, when it was torn down by the defendant and ■a new fence erected on the west side of the land in dispute. Several marked trees, the marks being apparently very old, were found on the line of the old fence. No use appears to have been made of the forest by the plaintiff or his grantors, except to cut wood and timber therefrom occasionally.

The evidence, when construed most favorably to the plaintiff, did not merely tend to show an occasional use of the cleared part of the locus in quo for particular purposes or upon special occasions, but an actual enjoyment thereof as part of a farm, year after year, for more than twenty years.

There was other evidence less favorable to the plaintiff’s contention. Several witnesses testified, in substance, that the fence was temporary and unsubstantial, and that it was erected upon the ■edge of the woods at the rear of defendant’s cleared land for the purpose of keeping cattle from going back into the woods, and that this was the object of the fence on the south of plaintiff’s cleared land also. The testimony of others was to the effect that no part of the land in question was either cultivated or improved. There was, however, evidence that would have warranted the jury in finding the facts as already stated By drawing permissible, although possibly extreme inferences, the jury might have found that the few rods of cleared land in controversy were for more than twenty years, a portion of a cultivated field, fenced on each ■of its four sides with a substantial fence and used as part of a farm in the ordinary course of husbandry. While the fence itself may have covered a large part of the cleared land, the jury would have been warranted in finding that it did not cover ail of it, and that the part not so covered belonged to 'the plaintiff through adverse possession for the period required by law. The land thus acquired may have been small in quantity and insignificant in value, but if it belongs to one party it should not be awarded to the other.

Whether the portion north of the woods was protected by a substantial enclosure, and whether it had. been usually cultivated or improved within the meaning of the statute, were questions of fact which the j ury should have been permitted to pass upon.

The defendant, however, contends that it does not appear that the plaintiff, or his grantors, ever claimed this strip of land or any part of it. There is no evidence that any claim of title was made by word of mouth, but it appears that each grantee, in taking possession of the farm under his deed, entered upon, actually occupied and improved the land in controversy, or a part of it, although it was not included in his conveyance. This, if done in good faith, was enough to satisfy the statute. A claim of title may be made by acts alone, quite as effectively as by the most emphatic assertions. As was said by the chancellor, when speaking for the court of errors in La Frombois v. Jackson, 8 Cow. 589, 603: “ 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.

We think that the refusal of the court to submit to the jury the question ‘‘ whether the plaintiff had not had such adverse possession of the premises claimed in the complaint, lying north of the woods, as to give him title thereto,” as requested by the counsel for plaintiff, was error and calls for a reversal of the judgment. This makes it unnecessary to consider the question of practical location.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide event.

All concur, except Bradley and Haight, J. J., not sitting, and Follett, Ch. J., not voting.  