Den on Demise of Toole v. Peterson

31 N.C. 180
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 N.C. 180 (Den on Demise of Toole v. Peterson) 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 Toole v. Peterson, 31 N.C. 180 (N.C. 1848).

Opinions

This was an action of ejectment for lot No. 30, in the town of Wilmington.

The lessors of the plaintiff claimed under a grant to JohnWhatson made in 1735, and a deed from John Watson to Joshua Grainger, executed in 1737. The lessors of the plaintiff alleged that John Whatson and John Watson were the same person, and to prove the identity they introduced, after objection to it on the part of the defendant, the register's books, and exhibited nineteen deeds from J. Watson and J. Wattson to different persons in the town of Wilmington, and then proved that the descendants of Joshua Grainger, Jr., the grandson of Joshua Grainger, Sr., claimed and occupied lots on Market Street, alleged to have been conveyed by the same deed as that under which the lessors of the plaintiff claimed. They also proved that no such person or family as that of John Whatson ever was living within the knowledge of the witnesses in Wilmington. They, then, after objection to it, introduced (181) Iredell's Revisal, and showed therein the title of an act passed in 1739 to change the name of Newton into that of Wilmington. They then contended that, from these facts, and especially from its not being shown by the defendant, from the production of the register's books or otherwise, that there ever were any deeds to or from John Whatson, the jury ought to presume the identity of John Whatson and John Watson, and after the lapse of one hundred years the jury should be instructed that aprima facie case of identity was made out. The court instructed the jury upon this point that they must inquire into the fact of the identity; that the lessors must prove it to their satisfaction, and that, if they had not so proved it, they could not recover; but that if it were established to their satisfaction that John Whatson, the grantee, was the same person who, under the name of John Watson, sold to Joshua Grainger, the difference of names would make no difference in the title.

The lessors of the plaintiff, in order to locate the grant under which they claimed, after having shown that from lapse of time no corner or line tree could be found, and that no person could be found who had ever heard of a line tree or corner of the grant, offered to prove by Dr. DeRosset, who had lived in the town of Wilmington eighty years, that for sixty or seventy years — ever since the witness was able to recollect — it was a matter of common reputation and notoriety in Wilmington that the town of Wilmington, including the lot now sued for, was covered by the grant under which they claimed. This evidence was objected to by the defendant and rejected by the court. *Page 136

After a verdict for the defendant the lessors of the plaintiff moved for a new trial, upon the ground that the court had misdirected the jury upon the question of identity, and had (182) improperly rejected the evidence of Dr. DeRosset. The motion was overruled, and judgment given, from which the lessors of the plaintiff appealed. The first exception to the judge's charge is upon the evidence as to the identity of John Whatson and John Watson. The plaintiffs claimed title to the land in question under a grant issued in 1735 to one John Whatson. The deed of conveyance to his ancestor, Joshua Grainger, in 1737, was executed by John Watson. To show that these two names belonged to one and the same person — that is, the identity of John Whatson and John Watson — the plaintiffs proved that no such person or family as Whatson ever was living in the town of Wilmington, within the knowledge of the witnesses. They offered in evidence the register's books, which, after objection by the defendant, were received by the court, and from them showed nineteen deeds from John Watson and Wattson to different persons in the town of Wilmington; and they further proved that the descendants of Joshua Grainger, Jr., the grandson of Joshua Grainger, Sr., claimed and occupied lots on Market Street, alleged to have been conveyed by the same deed as that under which the plaintiffs claimed. The lessors of the plaintiff then introduced Iredell's Revisal, and showed therein the title of an act, passed in 1739, to changed the name of Newton into that of Wilmington. This latter evidence was also objected to. The counsel for the plaintiffs moved the court to instruct the jury that from the foregoing evidence and the entire absence of any testimony showing any deed whatever from John Whatson, and after the lapse of so long a time a prima facie case of (183) identity was made out. His Honor refused so to charge, but instructed the jury that the lessors of the plaintiff must prove it to their satisfaction, and if they had not so proved it they could not recover. I concur with his Honor, both in receiving in evidence the books of the register and in his instruction to the jury upon the question of identity. The books were offered, not to prove title in the lessors of the plaintiff, but to show that such deeds had been made and memorials of them preserved among the public records, and that they contained no copy of a deed executed by John Whatson, as circumstances *Page 137 which, taken in connection with others, might assist the jury on the question of identity. The fact that a man by the name of John Watson had conveyed portions of the same land to several persons, though collateral, was connected with the transaction, from which an inference might be reasonably drawn as to the disputed fact, particularly after the lapse of so long a time. But it was an inference which the jury alone could draw, and it was properly left to them.

In connection with the above exception was the reception of the title of the act of 1739 in evidence. It became important to the plaintiffs to prove that the name of the town of Newton had been changed to that of Wilmington, for the conveyance to Joshua Grainger, the ancestor of the lessors of the plaintiffs and under whom he claimed, was of lots in the former. For this purpose he offered in evidence the title of the act in question. This was admitted by the court, though objected to by the defendant. The act, from the title, appeared to be a private one, of which the court could not, judicially, take notice, and the title was no evidence of its existence or contents. But upon referring to Davis' Revisal we find that the change of name was effected by an act passed in 1756, and which was public in its nature. The act of 1739, passed for that purpose, was, with many others, repealed by an order in council of the King. Afterwards, yielding to the representations of the (184) colonial authorities, his Majesty authorized and directed "the Governor of the Province to give his assent to any act which shall be passed by the Council and Assembly for re-establishing the several towns, precincts and counties," etc. In consequence of the permission thus given, the act of 1756 was passed. It enacts "that the several divisions, precincts and districts of this Province, which heretofore have belonged to the several and respective counties and towns, aforesaid, before the repeal of the before-enacted act of Assembly, shall and they are hereby directed to be re-established in counties and towns, by the several and respective names by which each division, etc., was known and denominated at the time of the repeal of said acts." Davis' Revisal, ch. 9. This act not only changed the name of Newton into that of Wilmington, but enacted and established the boundaries of several counties. It was, therefore, a public law, of which the court was bound to take judicial notice. The error into which his Honor fell was unimportant, and, in a measure, unavoidable.

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

Related

State v. Johnson
690 S.E.2d 707 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2010)
Aultman v. Hodge
104 S.E. 1 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1920)
McAfee v. Newberry
87 S.E. 392 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1915)
Locklear v. . Paul
79 S.E. 617 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1913)
Rowe v. . Lumber Co.
50 S.E. 848 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1905)
Yow v. Hamilton.
48 S.E. 782 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1904)
Scanlan v. Grimmer
74 N.W. 146 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.C. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-on-demise-of-toole-v-peterson-nc-1848.