Cochran v. Linville Improvement Co.

37 S.E. 496, 127 N.C. 386, 1900 N.C. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 S.E. 496 (Cochran v. Linville Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran v. Linville Improvement Co., 37 S.E. 496, 127 N.C. 386, 1900 N.C. LEXIS 89 (N.C. 1900).

Opinion

Fueches, J.

On the 14th day of July, 1795, the State of North Carolina granted to William Tate and William Cochran 100,640 acres of land, lying and being in the county of Burko. The plaintiffs are heirs-at-law of William Cochran, and claim under this grant, of July 14, 1795. The defendants admit that they are in possession of a part of the land covered by the grant to Tate and Cochran, but deny that, plaintiffs are the owners of said land, or that they are entitled to possession of same, or any part thereof. The defendants say that plaintiffs acquired and took no title under said grant, for the want of proper registration, but, if any title passed under said grant to the grantees therein named. *388 that said grantees, Tate and Cochran, soon thereafter, to-wit, on the 17th day of December, 1796, bargained, sold, and conveyed the same to William Constable, and that neither Tate nor Cochran, nor the plaintiffs, who claim as the heirs of Cochran, have owned any part or interest in said land since the date of said deed to William Constable. The defendants further allege and say that, while said grant was made to William Tate and William Cochran, in fact they were only the absolute owners of one-half thereof, and trustees of Thomas Buchell and Andrew Baird of the other undivided one-half of said land, and that on the 12th day of March, 1796, the said William Tate, William Cochran, and Thomas Buchell, made and executed their deed to Andrew Baird for one-fourth of said land, in which they set forth fully and in detail the fact that the money used to procure said grant was furnished in equal parts by the said Baird, Buchell, Cochran and Tate, and that, while the grant was issued to Tate and Cochran, Baird and Buchell were equally interested in said land with them, and that they held one undivided fourth thereof in trust for said Baird, and one undivided fourth thereof in trust for said Buchell. The defendants further allege and say that on the same day that Tate, Cochran, and Buchell conveyed the undivided one-fourth of said land to Andrew Baird, to-wit, on the 12th day of March, 1796, said Baird sold and conveyed the same to William Constable. The defendants further allege that on the 20th day of July, 1796, the State of North Carolina granted to William Cath-cart 59,000 acres of land in the county of Burke; that this grant was located on the land embraced within the boundaries of the grant to Tate and Cochran; that defendants are the owners of this Cathcart grant, and have been in possession of the same, through their lessees, bargainees, and tenants, for fifty years or more; and that their said title, though it *389 may have been once defective, is tbns ripened into' a good, perfect, and indefeasible title to all the lands covered by the Cathcart grant.

While there were a number of other questions raised by the exceptions of plaintiffs, the case depends upon the correctness of the findings and rulings of the referee and of the Court upon the admission of the deeds of Tate and Cochran to Constable, and the deed from Tate, Cochran, and Buchell, to Baird, and the possession of defendants, claiming under the Cathcart grant of 59,000 acres. The case, by consent of parties, was referred to Judge Burwell, who took and considered the evidence, and made a report, finding the facts, and declaring the law arising thereon. This report was in favor of the defendants upon the disputed facts, and upon the law based thereon, and plaintiffs excepted. The reference being by consent of the parties, the facts found by the referee are final, and we have no right to review these findings, unless they shall appear to have been found without any competent evidence to support them. Morrison v. Baker, 81 N. C., 76; Holt v. Couch, 125 N. C., 456. If found upon incompetent evidence, the finding would be erroneous ; and, if there is no competent evidence upon which to base the finding, such finding may be reversed by this Court, and such error pointed out.

We will consider first the Cathcart grant. It was contended by defendants, and not denied by plaintiffs, that there are now 500 (and probably more) settlements upon the land embraced in the Cathcart grant, holding and claiming their title under said grant and mesne conveyances from the defendants and those under whom they claim. The plaintiffs admit that many of these titles may have ripened by possession, as against them, but, if so, that their possession would not inure to the benefit of the defendants; that their posses^ *390 sion only extended to the boundary lines of suck purchases. This position of plaintiffs seems to be correct. Ruffin v. Overby, 105 N. C., 78; Worth v. Simmons, 121 N. C., 361. But tbe referee found that outside of these conveyances, which only extended possession to their own boundary line, the defendants had held adverse; possession of the land embraced in the Oathcart grant for more than seven years. We can not review this finding of fact, and it must stand as true, if there was any evidence to base such finding upon. For the purpose of showing adverse possession, the defendants offered in evidence a lease from them to Abram Johnson, dated September 7, 1838, of the whole 59,000 acres contained in the Oathcart, grant, lying in the county of Yancey. The defendants then offered evidence tending to show that said Johnson entered upon said land as the lessee and tenant of defendants, made a settlement thereon, and remained upon said land as such tenant for twenty years or more, and certainly for a longer time than seven years; that he settled upon said land under said lease, cleared land, built an iron' forge, dug ore at different points on said land, cleared land, and cut wood for coaling purposes at his forge. It was shown that defendants contracted to sell to said.Johnson 300 acres of land where he settled, which was never conveyed to him, but was afterwards sold and conveyed to a son of said Abram Johnson, but said Johnson still continued to hold under said lease as defendants’ lessee and tenant, and to dig ore, cut cord-wood, and to clear land. The plaintiffs contended that the point where Johnson dug ore was not on the Oathcart land, and, to determine this question, it became material to locate a former grant to Reuben White; plaintiffs contending that the Reuben White grant was west of the. Oathcart boundary, while defendants contended that it was within the Oathcart boundary. The referee found it to be *391 within the Cathcart boundary. And as this seemed to be considered a crucial point in the case, as to adverse possession, we have examined it with care, and agree with the commissioner that it is within the Cathcart boundary. How far from the outside boundary, we are unable to say, as these boundaries are so large, but a considerable distance — a mile or more.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 496, 127 N.C. 386, 1900 N.C. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-linville-improvement-co-nc-1900.