Cowles v. . Ferguson

90 N.C. 308
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 N.C. 308 (Cowles v. . Ferguson) 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
Cowles v. . Ferguson, 90 N.C. 308 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

Sjiith, C. J.,

after stating the case. The plaintiffs on the trial showed in evidence a grant from the state tp tire original plaintiff, their ancestor, his death and the descent to them as his heirs of the tract of land described in the complaint.

The defendant introduced nq paper title, but proved by two witnesses facts which tended to show that the defendant and those under whom he claimed had been in possession of a small part included in the boundaries of the grant, consisting of three or four acres, for thirty years next before the commencement of the action.

The court intimated an opinion that upon the state of the pleadings, the defendant not having specified the part occupied by him nor disclaimed as to the residue, the plaintiffs would be entitled to the verdict of the jury if the evidence introduced by them was believed, and directed defendant’s .counsel to proceed. This he declined, stating that upon the view of the law entertained by the court, he supposed the cause was terminated. The jury returned a verdict for t.he plaintiffs.

The defendant’s answer may bear the construction put upon it by the court as not only denying the plaintiffs’ and asserting his own'title to all the land comprised in the grant, and admitting a possession commensurate with those .limits, but an equally consistent interpretation may confine the admission of occupation to-the undefined part of it. Xh? plaintiffs do not allege the *311 defendant’s possession to be commensurate with the territory covered by the grant and set out in the -complaint, but to be only of a pari, without describing that part. The answer admits, that is, does not deny, the plaintiffs’ averment that the defendant “ is in possession of said land,” and the admission should have the .same restriction as the averment to which it is a response. Beyond this it would not be an admission, but the statement of an independent fact. If this comprehensive impo.rt be given to the answer, it is met by the plaintiffs’ allegation restricting the possession to a part only, and as a general rule the plaintiff recovers according to his own allegations and the ease made in the complaint.

But- we do not attach the same significance to the form of the answer, however interpreted, as the court has in its bearing upon the rights of the defendant. Assuming that the defendant claims title and possession as following it to the whole tract, and upon the proof is unable to make good his claim, shall he for this reason be denied the right to retain the part to which he does show title and possession? Conceding as we must, in reviewing the ruling of the court, that by a long adverse -possession the defendant has acquired title to the part so occupied, and it is the same if his evidence would warrant the jury in so finding,.the plaintiffs will not fail in their action, because they do not show themselves entitled to the whole area claimed in the complaint They will recover so much as they show title to, though less than the whole; and this, because the claim to all is a claim to nil the parts which make the whole, the greater including the less.

The same principle applies to the defence with equal if not greater force. The defendant cannot be denied the right to retain so much of the land in dispute as he proves himself to be the owner of, because his assertion of title and possession to all could not be sustained. He is not to'be deprived of what- in his own because he claimed more than belongs to him. Indeed.Ids case is stronger, for he retains all to which the plaintiffs cannot show' title in themselves, because, though the defendant’s posse— *312 .«ion may be-wrongful as to the true owners, it is not wrongful to the plaintiffs whoso recovery is confined to what is proved to belong to them.

The true and governing rule applicable to conflicting claims set up to the same Land by the parties to the action is, and must be, that they recover and retain respectively what each shows himself entitled to upon the evidence, unaffected by the fact that both set up claims to the whole, with this qualification, that so much as does not belong to either remains undisturbed with the one in possession. This rule, just in itself, seems to have been subordinated to some technical principle of pleading which refused to the .defendant his right to hold what was his own, because he did not disclaim as to the residue of the tract; in other words, he claimed too much, and therefore cannot keep what' is his own. .

The court was perhaps misled by what is said by Pearsok, _C. J., in McKay v. Glover, 7 Jones, 41, that “if a plaintiff succeeds in showing title to any part of the land contained in the demise, of which the defendant is in possession, the jury may return a general verdict; although, as to the other part, the plaintiff- failed to show- title.” But, he adds: “The court may, in its discretion, direct the jury to find specially, so as to run the line between the plaintiff and the defendant; but the usual course is not to complicate the enquiry, and to allow a general verdict, if the plaintiff makes out his case as to any part of the land held by the defendant, and the plaintiff then takes out a writ of possession at his peril.” This is said about the old form of the action of ejectment, whose object is to get possession for the lessor of the plaintiff, and the determination affects no right of property in either. Its results are unlike the result of the action under the Code of "Civil Procedure, Avhich may, as in other actions, conclude and settle the title Avhen that is put in issue, and such is the effect of the judgment rendered in this case, if allowed to stand-.

But we think the question is disposed of by former adjudica-' *313 tions under the old system of practice, to some of which we will advert.

In Carson v. Burnett, 1 Dev. & Bat., 546, the declaration covered several tracts, and the defendant proved title in himself to those which were-in his tenant’s possession. The lessor in..sisted upon a verdict for that to which he had shown title, and it was held that he vras not entitled to a verdict, although the de-fence was general.

In Atwell v. McLure, 4 Jones, 371, Pearson, J., in the opinion, for the purpose of illustration, puts this case: Suppose the declaration is for a tract of land, setting out the metes and boundaries; the party upon whom the declaration is served makes himself defendant; on the trial it turns out that the defendant has title to so much of this tract as he is in possession of; the plaintiff has title to the remainder, but the defendant never was in possession of that part. The defendant is entitled to judgment because the plaintiff has failed to prove that he (the defendant was in possession of any land to which he (the plaintiff) had title. ;

But the very question now before us was considered and answered by the court, Battle, J., delivering the opinion in Hipp v. Forester, 7 Jones, 599.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.C. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-v-ferguson-nc-1884.