Hamilton v. . Icard

19 S.E. 607, 114 N.C. 532
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 19 S.E. 607 (Hamilton v. . Icard) 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
Hamilton v. . Icard, 19 S.E. 607, 114 N.C. 532 (N.C. 1894).

Opinion

*536 Aveky, J.:

The action was brought on the 30th of November, 1892. The plaintiff proposed to show title under a Sheriff’s deed for 2,425 acres, executed May 22, 1869, and several mesne conveyances, for a tract containing 425 acres, included within the boundaries of the older deed. Plaintiff introduced no grant from the State, but defendant offered a patent for 152 acres bearing date September 21, 1892, which it was admitted embraced the whole of the locus in quo.

In order to raise a presumption of a grant from the State it is not necessary to show continuous and unceasing possession. Reed v. Earnhardt, 10 Ired., 516. A break of two or three years in the chain of possession on a failure to show the connection between successive occupants is not a fatal defect in the proof where in the aggregate the actual possession has extended over the statutory period. Mallett v. Simpson, 94 N. C., 37; Cowles v. Hall, 90 N. C., 330; Candler v. Lunsford, 4 Dev. & Bat., 407; Davis v. McArthur, 78 N. C., 357; Bryan v. Spivey, 109 N. C., 66. But where, as in the case at bar, written evidence of title is offered as color merely, the possession must be manifested by unequivocal acts of ownership, such as would have subjected the occupant not simply to an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, but to a possessory action at common law. Gudger v. Hensley, 82 N. C., 482; Logan v. Fitzgerald, 87 N. C., 308; Osborne v. Johnson, 65 N. C., 22; Williams v. Wallace, 78 N. C., 354; Bartlett v. Simmons, 4 Jones, 295 “The possession will not divest a superior title to any part outside the actual occupancy” (said the Courtin Scott v. Elkin, 83 N. C., 427) “for the reason that no action could be maintained by the true owner, and a constructive possession, not exposing one to an action, does not take away or impair an uninvaded legal right.” Ruffin v. Overby, 105 N. C., p. 78. Occasional entries upon different parts or even upon the *537 same portion of the land for the purpose of cutting timber may subject the trespasser to several actions for damage (3 Elk., 212), but are not considered' as assertions of right in the land. Ruffin v. Overby, supra; McLean v. Smith, 106 N. C., 179.

xlpplying the principles we have stated to the facts of this case, wo are of opinion that the planting of tobacco beds in different places not upon the same spot for more than two successive years, though continued for the statutory period, would not constitute an actual possession such as would mature title, since the occupancy does not divest title beyond its actual bounds (Scott v. Elkins, supra) and is therefore not continuous as to any one spot. If as to any particular portion of territory it is a continuous, open, notorious and unequivocal assertion of right, the law extends the benefit of such a possession of a spot, however small, by raising the presumption that it was held in the assertion of a claim to the limits of the occupant’s paper title. Ruffin v. Overby, 88 N. C., 369; McLean v. Smith, supra. The evidence of the witness Spencer does not show such a continuous occupancy of anjr- particular portion of the land for more than two years. Morris v. Hayes, 2 Jones, 93; Williams v. Wallace, 78 N. C., 354; Loftin v. Cobb, 1 Jones, 406 ; Bastlett v. Simmons, 4 Jones, 295. ITe sometimes used a part of an old tobacco bed a second year, but not oftener, before removing the rails entirely off it and ceasing to inclose it at all. The witness Prcswell testified, however, that between 1879 and 1885 (before the latter year) his father cleared a portion of the land, as the lessee of the plaintiff, and inclosed it. Taking the testimony of that witness with that of Palmer and Deal, the jury might have been warranted in finding that the land was kept inclosed and either cultivated or used as a pasture for more than seven years before the action was brought, on the 30th of November, 1892.

*538 Where a claimant subjects the land to some use of which it is susceptible in its present state and at such intervals as to indicate unmistakably that he means to be considered as claiming the ownership and not-to commit an occasional trespass simply, such occupancy is sufficient {Williams v. Buchanan, 1 Ired., 535; Bynum v. Collin, 4 Ired., 310), and especially if he subjects it to the only use of which it is susceptible. Tredwell v. Riddick, 1 Ired., 56. Where land is used for agricultural purposes it is not essential that the claimant should cultivate it constantly, but only in accordance with usages prevailing among husbandmen. It is not material whether a field is cultivated in grain or corn, or is kept inclosed for a pasture when needed, so that it be used every year in the ordinary wajr for some purpose connected with the business of tilling the soil. But there was no testimony tending to show a continued occupancy for twenty-one years, such as would mature title as against the claim of the State.

The statute (The Code, §139) provides that the State “will not sue any person for or in respect to any real property or the issues or profits thereof by reason of the right or title of the State to the same * * * when the person in possession or those under whom he claims have been in possession under colorable title for twenty-one years, such possession having been ascertained and identified under known and visible lines and boundaries.” Upon the principle that the plaintiff in an action for possession must show title good against the world, including the State under whom all lands are held, it has become a settled rule that where no grant is introduced the burden of proof cannot lie shifted to the defendant in such actions without prima facie proof of possession under colorable title for twenty-one years. But where either party exhibits a patent to the land in dispute, since the State can no longer assert *539 anjr claim, it is familiar learning that either the grantee or the party claiming adversely to it after its introduction may, as a general rule, use it to show that the State is no longer a claimant and make good his own claim by proof of possession under colorable title for seven years only. Gilchrist v. Middleton, 107 N. C., 680. And even where the plaintiff fails to make prima facie

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.E. 607, 114 N.C. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-icard-nc-1894.