Den on Demise of Reed v. Earnhart

32 N.C. 516
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 32 N.C. 516 (Den on Demise of Reed v. Earnhart) 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 Reed v. Earnhart, 32 N.C. 516 (N.C. 1849).

Opinions

[518]*518Pearson, J.

ff’he single question is, was it the duty of the jury to presume title out of the State, from the fact that actual possession had been held of the land from 1S22 until 184(5, under a connected chain of registered deeds, with the exception of five years (from 1822 to 1821) during which [it was unoccupied ?

The presum'ption of a grant, from long possession, is not based upon the idea, that one actually issued ; but because public policy and “the quitting of titles” make it necessary to act upon thkt presumption. It is the duty of the Court to instruct the jury,-when land has been for a long time treated and enjoyed as private property, to presume that the State has parted wdth its title, unless the presumption is repélled by proof that such is not the fact. Long 'possession changes the truth of proof: and a grant is to be pursumed. not because the jury believe, as a fact, that one issued, but because there is no proof that it did not issue. So if one suffers water to be ponded upon his land for twenty years, the jury are told topresume a grant of the easement, not because they believe a deed was executed, (for, ifso. it would be seldom worth while to rely upon the presumption.) but because there is no proof that one was not executed: so if a bond has been standing for twenty years, (ten by Statute,) the jury are told to presume it has been paid, unless it be shown that it was not paid. So if a woman swears a child, under the bastardy act. the jury are told to presume the person charged to be the father, not because the evidence satisfies them that he is, but because he is to be so considered for the purpose of maintaining it,unlesshe can show that he is not the father.

These instances are stated to explain the nature of the presumption, upon which the defendants’ title rests. What will raise the presumption and what will repel it. are questions of law, about which it is the duty of the Court to direct the jury; whether the fact be proved or not is solely for the jury ; but whether there be a presumption, [519]*519or whether it be repelled, are not open questions, for the jury to decide, according to their belief of the fact, upon circumstantial evidence.

In England a possession of sixty years or more is required. The earlier cases in this State also required sixty years. But the necessity of the rule, and its manifest good policy, in a new settled country, induced our Courts to shorten the time ; and by successive decisions it has been reduced to fiftv, forty, thirty years, and an intimation is made that it might be supported by twenty-five years.

The necessity of the rule arises from the difficulty of making proof in relation to transactions of a remote date. The loss of papers, death of witnesses, treachery of memory, make it almost impossible to establish with legal precision, the existence of facts which occurred many years ago. Reasonable presumption must therefore be acted on. Long possession affords this reasonable presumption. To require proof of particulars and of detail, as to past occurrences, would be inconsistent with the necessity, which gives rise to the rule, and render its practical application impossible. For instance, it has been proved that for sixty years a tract of land has been occupied and treated as private property, first by A., then B., C. and D. This general fact can be proved. But, if, before the presumption of title out of the State can be made, it be necessary to go into particulars and show the connection between A., B., C. and D., and how one claimed and derived title from the other, &c„ these particular facts cannot be proved. This difficulty of making proof is the foundation of the rule. Hence to require such proof is inconsistent with the reason of the rule, prevents its practical application, and renders it illusory and useless, in the very cases where it is most needed. We find it therefore settled in Fitzrandolph v. Norman, N. C. Term Rep, 131, which is followed by the recent case of Chandler v. [520]*520Lunsford, 4 Dev. & Bat. 407, that a connection between the occupants need not be shown, but the general fact, that the State or its agents allowed first one and then another to use the land as private property for a long time, raises the presumption, that the State had granted the title to some one. It is not necessary to fix upon any one in particular as grantee, so the title is out of the State. These tw o cases, it seems to me, settle the question. For the very same reasons, which dispense with the necessity of showing a connection between the occupants, also show that it cannot be expected and is inconsistent with the reason of the rule, to require proof of a connection between the periods of time, when such possession was held, as that when A. quit the land, B. immediately entered ; so with C. and D.; for it is just as impossible, after the lapse of a great many years, to show the particulars, as whether it was a month, six months, a year, ten years, fyc., after A left before B. entered, and so as to C. and D., as it is to show by what title B., C. and D. came in ; and there is the same reason for dispensing with proof of the one as of the other. The substance of the rule is, that the land shall be held as private property, for a great many years, and as the occupants need not be connected, so the periods of time need not be, provided the time it is so occupied (for this is the essence of the rule) be for sixty years or more, as the rule at first stood. But it is said, since the time is reduced to thirty years, there is not the same difficulty of proof, as to the period of time, when one went out and the other came in. True, nor is there the same difficulty of proof as to the connection of the occupants. But as to this latter circumstance, it is not pretended that the rule is changed by shortening the time : why should it be so,.as to the former? There is no intimation, in any of the cases, that the timéis made shorter,upon condition, that there should be a compensating change by showing a connection between the persons and the periods of pos[521]*521session. On the contrary, the decisions are put upon the ground, that the rule remains the same in other respects. Its policy is so beneficial, that the time should be made shorter. So, if a connection between the periods of possession was not necessary, when the time was seventy years or more, there is no authority for making it necessary, now that the time is thirty years.

The course of the Courts in shortening the time has been concurred in by the Legislature. The Act of 1791, under certain circumstances, gives title from a possession of twenty one years. That act does not supersede the common law rule, but gives a new mode of acquiring title, leaving the common law presumption as it was. It gives a title against the State from twenty-one year’s possession, if these things concur, color of title, connection between the occupants, and continued possession. It is certain that the first two are not requirements of the common law rule, and the connection, in which the third is used, tends to confirm the conclusion that it was not. At all events the fact that the Act of 1791 requires a continued possession, furnishes no proof that the common law rule did so. The argument proves too much, for it ■would follow that color of title and connection between the occupants were requisite by common law, as they are required by the act. Care should be taken not to confound the common law rule, with this statute.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Candler v. . Lunsford
20 N.C. 542 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1838)
Holdfast on Demise of Shaw v. Shepard
28 N.C. 361 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1846)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.C. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-on-demise-of-reed-v-earnhart-nc-1849.