Den on Demise of Pierce v. Wanett

32 N.C. 446
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 N.C. 446 (Den on Demise of Pierce v. Wanett) 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 on Demise of Pierce v. Wanett, 32 N.C. 446 (N.C. 1849).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

Upon the plaintiff’s own evidence his lessor was, at the trial, a tenant in common with her aunt, Ann Pierce, and also, at the date of the demise, with her brother, William Henry, then living ; and therefore the Court holds it erroneous to say, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the whole lot. It is true, that a general mode of declaring upon a demise of a tenant in common for the whole has been tolerated, and upon it a recovery for the share allowed. It has been also held not to be necessary, that, in such a case, the verdict should find the precise share, to which the lessor of the plaintiff was enti • tied ; butihat it may find the defendant guilty in general terms and then leave the parly to take possession at the *452 risk,should he take more than belongs to him, of being answerable therefor to the action of the other party, and also liable to a summary order of the Court for restoration of possession. But it is not the absolute right of the plaintiff to have such a verdict. The jury may find according to the title ; and, when the extent of it can be seen with reasonable certainty, it is recommended as the more correct, and it isusual,toset forth in the verdict the undivided share, to which the title appeared, and to enter the judgment accordingly. Godfrey v. Cartwright, 4 Dev. 487. Arch Forms 380. Lenoir v. South, 9 Ire. 237. McArthur v. Porter, 6 Peters 205. By that method questions are settled at once, which might otherwise produce troublesome controversy in other forms. The propriety of that course is more particularly exhibited in an action by one of the tenants in common against another ; in which case it is clear, the plaintiff cannot he entitled toa verdict in such a form, as would enable him to take judgment and execution authorising him, on their face, to turn the co-tenant out of the whole. That was admitted at the bar to be proper in the case last supposed. But it was argued and it seems to have been the ground of the decision below, that it is otherwise, when the parties are not tenants in common, as was supposed to be the fact in this case. It was not,indeed, the fact, since, as will be presently mentioned, the defendant has the title of Mrs. Garret, at least. But if it wTere true, it could make no difference. For the question is not, what the tenant has a right to hold ; but it is, what part the plaintiff has a right to recover. Now, that is what the lessor of the plaintiff hada right to demise ; namely, the undivided share, and no more. For, although the demise laid is for the whole, the very point of the dispute is, whether the lessor could make such a demise, or, if not, for any and what part; and the recovery must be for the share the lessor might rightfully have demised. For, tenants in common have several titles, and *453 therefore each of them had to bring his several assize against a disseisor, as he was obliged to count truly on his title, and the recovery of one could not be for more than he demanded or could legally demand. Hence, necessarily, under the judgment, he entered into his share only and became seised with the disseisor. In like manner,,no more can be' rightfully recovered in ejectment, even against a wrong doer, than the share of the plaintiff’s lessor ; for, the demise of a tenant in common, whether in the form of a lease for the whole, or for a share, is really effectual for the share only, and, by a necessary consequence, the law cannot adjudge to a plaintiff more than the right, thus derived from the lessor, invests him with. The jury might, according to the modern practice, have omitted to find the quantum of interest of the lessor, which would have left that to be determined in proceedings consequent upon the plaintiff’s taking possession of too much — since that course seems to be established. But that will not entitle the plaintiff to call on the jury to go further than to say, he has some interest in the land, and, agreeably to the direction here, require them to find expressly, that the defendant was guilty as to the whole premises, when the lessor’s title, and, of course, his lease, is for less. For, against an affirmative verdict, that the plaintiff was entitled to the whole or to a certain part of the premises and a judgment accordingly, the Court would not be at liberty, in a summary way, to re-examine the title and control the execution of the writ of possession, or in an action for the mesne profits limit the amount of damages to the true interest of the lessor of the plaintiff, as was done in Holdfast v. Shepard, 9 Ire. 222.

Although the decision of the foregoing point disposes of the case in this Court, yet it is deemed proper to consider of the others, as most or all of them will probably arise on another trial. -

*454 Then, in the next place, the Court holds, that the deed from Garret and wife was duly executed to pass her inheritance. The objection urged against it is, that the feme was a resident in Maryland, and her examination and acknowledgment were taken on a commission from the Court of this State ; whereas, it is alleged, a commission only goes when the woman is a resident of another “County” in this State, and the deed ought to have been acknowledged before a Judge in Maryland, or under a commission from some Court of record in that State. But the objection isinno part tenable. The act of 1751 directed a commission from the Court of the County in which the land lies, when the wife is a resident of any other “Country.” By a misprint the word is changed in the Revised Statutes of 1836 to “County.” But that cannot affect this case, because this proceeding was in 1817 under the act of 1751. But, if it had been after 1836, the Court would still hold the deed good; for the change from “Country” to “County” does not alter the sense of the act. In the next section the act retains the form of the commission given in 1751, and the words of it are, that the wife “is not an inhabitant of our said State.” Indeed, upon referring to the manuscript original intheSecre' tary’s office, the word appears to be “Country.” It is therefore clear, that, in respect to residence merely, the act does not intend to form a commission on its being in the same County in which the land lies or in a different County in this State; but that it is to go, only when the maker of the deed lives out of the State. The other branch of the objection, that, the deed ought to have been acknowledged before a judicial officer of Maryland, is also mistaken. The act of 1810, which authorises that course, is cumulative. It has never been supposed to supersede thatof 1751; but eithermethod has been practised, as it suited the convenience of parties. The act. of .183.6, *455 indeed, preserves in it- both the act of 1751 and that of 1810 — thus clearly giving an election between them.

With respect to the deed from Pierce and wife, the facts do not appear with sufficient distinctness, to authorise the Court to form a satisfactory or positive opinion. But, as they are supposed to be, the Court would concur in holding it ineffectual as the deed of the wife, for want of a due acknowledgment and privy examination.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.C. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-on-demise-of-pierce-v-wanett-nc-1849.