Den Ex Dem. Carson v. Mills

18 N.C. 546
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 18 N.C. 546 (Den Ex Dem. Carson v. Mills) 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
Den Ex Dem. Carson v. Mills, 18 N.C. 546 (N.C. 1836).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice.

— Several exceptions are taken to the instructions in this case. Those principally discussed and relied on relate to the opinions expressed by the Court on the extent and effect of the defendant’s possession. Having refused to give certain instructions prayed for by the defendant’s counsel, the court laid it down to the jury, that' “ when two persons were in possession of parts of their lands, covered by paper titles which lop, neither having any actual possession within the loppage, the law adjudged the possession in him who had the elder title; but where the holder of the elder title was in possession of no part of the land covered by his title, and he who had the younger title was in possession of any part of the land covered thereby, although such possession might not be within the loppage, the law adjudged his possession co-extensive with his title, notwithstanding its loppage upon an elder title, of which there was no possession.” The materiality of this instruction to the rights of the parties, upon the facts stated in the record, is not perceived. For if the two tracts conveyed by Murray to Mills are to be regarded as one, so that the entry by Mills into either portion is an entry into the other portion of the entire tract, then Mills had made such an entry, within the admission of the plaintiff’s counsel, for he was actually possessed of that part of the French patent which the patent to Burnett also covered. If, on the other hand, the two tracts continued several after the conveyance to Mills, then the possession on the one could not embrace the other, unless the other instruction, which will be hereafter noticed, be correct: which would render the one now under consideration un- *552 neeessary and immaterial. We might, therefore, be relieved from passing on this, without omitting any duty to the parties. But we conceive the doctrine involved in the instruction to be of such importance as to entitle it to notice; and since the opinion of this Court upon one part of it is to be contrary, that we are not at liberty to give to it the sanction of our silence.

To the former of those positions we fully subscribe. If a part of a tract of land be covered by two deeds, and he who has the better title be in possession, not of that, but of another part of his tract, he has, by legal intendment, the actual possession of the whole, unless the other have a possession within the intersecting lines. Why ? For the plain reason, that both parties cannot, at the same time, be seized of the same land, under their respective deeds; and therefore, he who has the title is deemed in the exclusive possession, since he can have no action against the other for any possession by him.

The same reason applies with equal force to the case supposed in the latter branch of the instructions; from which this Court dissents. The error, as it is esteemed by us, has its root in an assumption of fact, which is not warranted by the law, and is contrary to a legal presumption. It assumes that the true owner is not in possession. Now that cannot be, unless another have the actual possession ; for, by force of his title, he has constructively the possession until it be destroyed by an adverse possession; and there can be no adverse possession, against which the owner cannot have an action to recover the possession. The question is, what sort of possession in another will terminate that which the owner has by construction, so as to enable him to say, that he is out of possession, and to demand it from the other ? Certainly, as we think, it must be an actual possession of some part of his land. If the possession be outside the interference, he cannot maintain ejectment; for that can be done only by showing a trespass on the premises, described in the declaration, that is, within the boundaries of his own deed. In the case supposed there is no such trespass ; for the actual possession of him who is considered the wrong doer, is admitted not *553 to be within the land of the other. It is not correct to state, therefore, that the owner is out of possession, because he is not actually seated on any part of his land. His possession exists in his whole tract, until some part of that be, usurped by another, so as to oust him from that part, and there can be no such usurpation but _ by occupation within the better title. In Fitzrandolph v. Norman, N. C. Term Reports, 132, it is laid down, that “ persons owning adjoining tracts of land, which lop upon each other, neither being in the actual possession of the part covered by both conveyances, will'be deemed in possession according to the title.” Here it will be perceived, that as being an immaterial circumstance, no notice is taken of possession, on either side, of those parts of the tracts not covered by both deeds. In the recent case of Green v. Harman, 4 Dev. 158, the Court took the rule as settled, “■ that if there be two patentees, the entry of the younger on his own land does not oust the other, unless it be on that part of the land covered by both titles,” In Dobbins v. Stephens, ante 5, it was repeated in these words: “ if neither claimant be in actual possession of the land covered by both deeds, the seisin is in the.owner, but if one of them be on that part, and the other not, then the possession of the whole interference is in the former,”' Why?. Because he can then be sued for the whole. We find the same doctrine established in.other states situated like our own. In Kentucky it was thus held, in Frimble v. Smith,4 Bibb, 257, and in Smith v. Mitchell, 1 Marshall, 207. In Talbot v. M‘Gavock, 1 Yerger,262, the Judges of the Supreme Court of Tennessee admit it to be clearly so.at common law, and under our act of 1715; and the majority of the Court, in able opinions, maintained it as applicable to a new statute of that state, which enacted that “ any person holding seven years peaceable possession of land under a grant or deed, shall be entitled to hold possession, in preference to all other claimants, of such quantity of land as shall be specified in his or her grant or deed.”' Notwithstanding these last words, it was adjudged, that a possession of “ the disputed land” was meant; and, therefore, that where the part actually occupied is not within the *554 bounds of the elder title, the owner is not barred. Indeed it would be strange, if the law were against the fact, to construe an entry into part to which the party had right, to be also an entry into another part to which he had no right; a construction the more harsh and unjust, because the sole effect of it is to put out him who has the right, without giving him any remedy therefor.

The Court further instructed the jury, that, under the circumstances stated in the exception, Mills was in 1817, in the adverse possession of the tract granted to Cook, so as to prevent the deed then made by Burnett, from passing any title in that tract to the lessor of the plaintiff. To this instruction several objections are taken.

It is urged, first, that the entry of Burnett into any part of the land, covered both by his.

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18 N.C. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-ex-dem-carson-v-mills-nc-1836.