Ellis v. . Harris

11 S.E. 248, 106 N.C. 395
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 248 (Ellis v. . Harris) 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
Ellis v. . Harris, 11 S.E. 248, 106 N.C. 395 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Avery, J.:

The plaintiff claimed through a deed from Bennett Gay, administrator of James Burgess, to William Crowder, dated January 17th, 1859, and immediately under a deed dated June 5th, 1869, from E. A. Gupton, Sheriff of Franklin County, to the plaintiff, reciting a sale by virtue of executions against Willie Crowder. The defendant insisted that plaintiff’s deed did not cover the land in controversy, and as evidence of title in himself, offered the record of a special proceeding and a deed from W. H. Spencer, administrator of J. B. Mann, reciting a sale to make assets, in accordance with a decree in said special proceeding, and also introduced evidence tending to show that the calls of said deed included the land in dispute.

The plaintiff testifies that he was present at the sale of the land of Willie Crowder by the Sheriff, in the year 1869, and bought the land of said Crowder, including the rever-sionary interest in the portion occupied as dower by the widow of James Burgess, who remained in possession of that portion of the land till her death in the year 1884, when he took and retained possession of it till the defendant entered by force and expelled him, in the year 1884.

On the cross-examination of the plaintiff, the defendant’s counsel were permitted-to ask him how many acres of land were conveyed by the deed of the Sheriff', and he answered, 828. He then stated, in response to a question (plaintiff objecting), that he gave in for taxation 1,100 acres of land, after his purchase at Sheriff’s sale, and before- he sold 172 acres off his tract. The plaintiff excepted. At a subsequent stage of the trial, plaintiff was recalled, and explained that he listed the dower land for taxation first in 1885, the widow having paid lax on it previously, and that he had listed for *397 taxation in 1871, 922 acres, including 90 acres bought from Spencer, administrator.

It is true that in Thornburg v. Mastin, 93 N. C., 258, the Court said: “Any one, supposing he has a claim .upon the land of another, may list it and pay the tax upon it, but that would be very slight, if any, evidence tending to establish his title.”

In the case of Ruffin v. Overby, 88 N. C., 369, it had been previously held that paying tax on land, without actual possession, would not perfect a colorable title. But in the case of Austin v. King, 97 N. C., 339, Justice Davis delivering the opinion of the Court, settles the question by laying down the rule that the payment of taxes by a party ante litem, motam is his act as distinguished from his declaration in reference to the land, and is some evidence to be weighed by the jury in passing upon the issue involving title. This principle disposes of the first, third, seventh and ninth exceptions.

The plaintiff then offered in evidence a deed from N. Patterson to James Burgess, executed in 1845, and a deed from Alfred Burgess to James Burgess, executed in the year 1846, in which the lands conveyed are described by metes and bounds, and as 419 acres on Tar River. The plaintiff also introduced the record of the petition of the widow of James Burgess for dower, showing a decree making an allotment to her by metes and bounds.

W. N. Fuller then testified, on behalf of the plaintiff, that he surveyed the Burgess tract of land and very nearly located it by the deeds, and that he also had the survey made when the dower was allotted. The plaintiff then “proved (as set forth in the statement) that James Burgess owned this land and resided on it from 1845 until his death, and owned no other land in Franklin County, and that Willie Crowder died in 1870-71, and was plaintiff’s brother-in-law.” This statement comprehends all of the material *398 evidence for plaintiff, and, as instruction was asked predicated upon all of the testimony, it is necessary to know what it was.

The land conveyed in the Sheriff’s deed to plaintiff (executed 1869) was described therein as “eight hundred and twenty seven acres of land adjoining the lands of J. B. Mann (deceased), Mrs. Jane Wilder, Gaston Wilder and others, containing, by estimation, eight hundred and twenty-seven acres, more or less.” The descriptive clause in the administrator’s deed to Crowder in 1859 is as follows, to-wit: “All that tract or parcel of land belonging to the estate of James Burgess, deceased, lying on Tar River, adjoining lands of the said Willie Crowder, Dr. Joseph B. Mann and others, and supposed to contain four hundred and nineteen acres, except the life-estate of Lucy Ann Burgess, the widow of James Burgess, in that portion of said land assigned to her as dower, the meaning and intent of this deed being to convey to the said Willie Crowder absolutely the whole of the said land not covered by the widow’s dower, to vest in possession immediately, and to eonvey that portion covered by the widow’s dower, to vest in possession at the death of said widow.”

The Sheriff (Gupton) testified that he levied on and sold Crowder’s land under a description given by him in 1869, and also referred to the tax-list for description; that he sold all of the interest of Crowder in the land described in the deed, but said nothing at the time about dower.

Calvin Benton testified for the defendant that the dower tract did not adjoin the lands of Mrs. Jane Wilder or Gaston Wilder, nor did it join the Mann land till Mann bought the Burgess land.

The defendant offered to prove the declarations of Crowder while in possession of the land conveyed to him by Gray, administrator of Burgess, characterizing his possession, but stated that he did not know whether it was before or after *399 the sale by the Sheriff; that it was after Mann’s death, in 1865 (he thought it was in 1870 or 1871), but that at the time Ellis, the plaintiff, was not living on the land, but was living somewhere else. The Court then admitted the declaration, and the plaintiff excepted.

The witness testified as follows: “Crowder showed me a pine near a hog-pen; I saw the chopped line; he said it ran from a hedge-row in a straight line to the river. The land was worth five or six dollars per acre. I heard plaintiff (Ellis) say that he owned all of the interest Willie Crowder had in the land that he (Crowder) owned. I have lived in that neighborhood forty-five years. I knew Dr. Mann. I helped to lay off the dower. Mann had possession of all the Burgess land, except the dower, from the time of the sale by Gray, the administrator. Dr. Perry had possession of part after Mann’s death.”

On cross-examination, witness said: “Dr. Mann was not in possession of the widow’s dower. I do not mean that Dr. Mann was in possession of all of it. The large part was in possession of Crowder.”

It is evident, therefore, that his Honor found that the declarations were made by Crowder, while he was in possession, before the sale by the Sheriff, and when it was against his interest to admit that he held less land than the plaintiff now claims under a deed for all of his interest. So that if it be conceded that, by locating the line as marked, from the hedge-row to the river, and adopting the pine as a corner, it would have been against his (Crowder’s) interest to surrender all outsideof that line, the testimony was not incompetent.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 248, 106 N.C. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-harris-nc-1890.