Fleming v. . Sexton

90 S.E. 247, 172 N.C. 250, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 247 (Fleming v. . Sexton) 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
Fleming v. . Sexton, 90 S.E. 247, 172 N.C. 250, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 277 (N.C. 1916).

Opinion

AlljüN, J.

This action was commenced to recover possession of the land described in the complaint, rents and profits during occupancy by the defendants, and damages for trespass in cutting and selling timber from the land. ,

The plaintiffs proceed upon the theory that they are the owners in fee of the land through inheritance from Irene McCoy, who was the owner in fee and intermarried with the defendant Sexton, and that the possession of the defendants is wrongful.

The defendant filed answer denying the title of the plaintiffs, and on the trial offered evidence tending to prove that during his marriage with the said Irene McCoy a child was born alive of said marriage capable of inheriting, and, therefore, contended that he was the owner of a life estate in said land as tenant by curtesy.

If, therefore, the evidence offered by the defendant to prove the birth of issue was competent and sufficient to be submitted to the jury, it follows, as the four requisites to an* estate by curtesy — marriage, seizin of wife, birth of issue capable of inheriting, and death of the wife — would be present, that the plaintiffs would not be entitled to recover the possession of the land nor would they be entitled to the rents and profits.

*253 The words “capable of inheriting” are taken from the common law, and mean simply that the child shall be in the line of inheritance, and if the inheritance is in tail male the birth of a female child would not be sufficient to create the estate, and vice versa.

This would leave open for investigation only the question of the liability of the defendant, as life tenant, for waste.

It must be kept in mind, however, that when the evidence was offered by the defendant as to the condition of the land and the improvements made, that the question of the birth of issue was then pending before the jury and had not been settled, and if the evidence was competent either upon the theory that the plaintiffs were the owners in fee absolute or in remainder, there would be. no error in admitting it.

Let us, then, see if any evidence of the birth of a child alive was admissible on the issue raised by the pleadings, and whether the evidence offered was competent, and of sufficient probative force to be submitted to the jury.

The plaintiffs allege that they are the owners in fee, and entitled to immediate possession of the land described in the complaint, and the defendant denies both of these allegations.

This raised an issue of title and of the right to possession, and under it the defendant had the right to offer evidence tending to prove a legal as distinguished from an equitable defense (Farrior v. Houston, 95 N. C., 580; Locklear v. Bullard,, 133 N. C., 263), and the facts showing an estate by curtesy are legal and require no aid from a court of equity.

The case from New York, relied on by the plaintiffs, holding that a defendant cannot offer evidence of adverse possession under a general denial, is contrary to our decisions. Farrior v. Houston, 95 N. C., 578; Mfg. Co. v. Brooks, 106 N. C., 112; Cheatham v. Young, 113 N. C., 161; Shelton v. Wilson, 131 N. C., 501.

It has also been held, under certain conditions, that evidence of an estoppel may be offered by the defendant without pleading it (Weeks v. McPhail, 129 N. C., 73), and that it is competent, under a general denial, to show that any deed in the chain of title of the plaintiff is void because made contrary to statute, or by a grantor mentally incapable, or for fraud in the factum. Mobley v. Griffin, 104 N. C., 116; Averitt v. Elliott, 109 N. C., 564.

This rule prevails because the pleadings are general in actions to try title to land. The plaintiff alleges ownership and under this allegation is permitted to establish his title in any legitimate way, by a connected chain of title or by adverse possession with or without color, by proof of tenancy, etc.; and the same latitude is allowed the defendant in making his defense.

*254 “Under tbe plea of tbe general issue tbe plaintiff is required to prove a present right to tbe premises in dispute. And, consequently, whatever will operate as a bar to tbe plaintiff’s right of possession will cause him to fail in bis proof, and entitle tbe defendant to a verdict upon the general issue. ... So in those States which have adopted tbe code system it is usually held that tbe defendant may under tbe general denial prove any fact which will defeat tbe plaintiff’s cause of action.” 9 R. C. L., 897-898.

Tbe plaintiff carries tbe burden of proving bis legal right to possession, and the defendant is permitted to prove facts which show that bis possession is lawful.

Tbe witnesses who testified to tbe birth were tbe defendant and the nurse, both of whom were present and purported to testify to faces within their knowledge, and as neither was testifying to a transaction with a deceased person, there was no disqualification to either except interest, which goes to the weight of the evidence, and not to the competency of the witness to testify.

The defendant, who was corroborated by the nurse, testified: “During my married life there was a child born to me and my wife. That child was living at the time of its birth. I was present in the room with my wife at the time of the birth of the child. The midwife, Sue "Williams, was also present. She is here today. There was no one else there at the time of the birth but we three. The evidence of the new-born child, a little groan or noise, and some little blubber from nose and mouth and pulsation of the heart. I observed the little muscular tremor, blubber of the nostrils or mouth, pulsation of the heart, and a little noise, but not exactly a cry. I could not state exactly how long after birth the child lived. The pulsation of the heart continued for some minutes. After the birth of the child it was given by me to the midwife, Sue Williams. The child was bom on the morning of the 15th, I believe, and the mother died on the 17th.”

There was no evidence that the child wa.s born prematurely, and the presumption that all persons are normal so far as the-natural functions of the body or organs are concerned (10 R. C. L., 879; Harris v. Laundry Co., Anno. Cases, 1913 E. 99), was corroborated by the direct evidence of the defendant, who testified: “As to my wife’s lying-in condition, that was normal.” Was this evidence sufficient to be submitted to the jury?

All of the authorities "agree that if alive for only a moment of time the law is satisfied, but there" is some disagreement as to whether this life in the child must be independent of the mother after the cord is severed, or can exist before. The rule and the various views are stated *255 in 8 R. C. L., 393, as follows: “It will be observed that it is required that the issue be born alive, and' whether this condition has been fulfilled is sometimes a difficult question to decide, although there are particular signs which all agree show the fact indubitably one way or 'the other.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 247, 172 N.C. 250, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-sexton-nc-1916.