Harlock v. Jackson

5 S.C.L. 254
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 S.C.L. 254 (Harlock v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlock v. Jackson, 5 S.C.L. 254 (S.C. 1812).

Opinion

Nott, J.

The land had been granted to one Allison, who died b . . without heirs. The plaintiff produced no title, but relied on their possessory right. It appears that their ancestor had been about ten or eleven years in possession, and then died intostate, leaving them in possession. After two or three years, they moved off, and the defendant came into possession. It is contended on the part of the defendant, that the plaintiffs could not gain a right by possession, because it requires five 'years adverse possession to give a right. That, although the plaintiffs were more than five years in possession, it does not appear that they held adversely to the defendant. But I take it that where a person is in possession, he holds adversely to all the world, except those who shew that it is concurrent with their title. Lapse of time will never bar one out of possession, except.where there is one holding adversely. But when a person is in actual possession, the more quiet that possession is, the stronger is the presumption of title. It is also further contended that the act of 1787, regulating escheats, &c., exempts escheated lands from the operation of the statute of limitations. But that act has only a retrospective operation, and exempts only such lands as had escheated before that time.

But the defendant has a better claim than- arises from either of these grounds. On the death of old Allison, the land vested in the State, by operation of law ; and although this right may be unavailable, until an inquest of office, yet no individual can acquire a right to it by possession, unless the act of limitation runs against the State ; and I am of opinion it does not. The nullum tempus principle, as it has been called, is not derived from feudal or royal principles, as has been supposed. It has much stronger reasons for its support; reasons peculiarly applicable to a republican form of government. The State cannot be disseized. The ubiquity of the sovereign power, particularly when the sovereignty is in the people, protects it from any such principle. The citizen cannot' be presumed to hold adversely to the State, except when the State has parted with its rights. See Hill and M’Clure, Const. Rep. I admit that such alienation may be presumed from lapse of time and other circumstances ; but there is no room for such a presumption in this case ; besides, none of the limitation acts appear either expressly, or by implication, to relate to the State, but always speak of persons in their individual capacities. The present plaintiffs, therefore, having acquired no right, must be considered as having abandoned the possession to the first occupant. With regard to the hardship of the case, the defendant had, the same right, when the [256]*256p0ssess¡0n became vacant, to enter and enjoy it, as the plaintiffs had';. and having got the possession, ought not to have been disturbed. It is incorrect to say, that where the equity is equal, the verdict ought to stiuK* ’ ^or> w5ere the equity is equal, the defendant ought to be protected in his possession. It is an old and correct maxim, that possession is good against all the world, except him who. has the right. I am of opinion, therefore, that the verdict ought to be set aside, and a nonsuit granted.

But it is made a question whether the land can be considered as belonging to the State, until office found. On this point, 1 have no doubt, a case directly in point, is decided in I Plowden, 223, Willion v. Berkly and Knight. It is said by the whole court, that the freehold was presently cast upon the king ; and that an office was not necessary. Do. 230. 4 Co. Rep. 58. A difference is made between lands which escheat for want of an heir, and those which escheat by reason of a forfeiture. In the first case, they go to the king immediately. In the last, they do not until office found. Lands cannot be in abeyance, and therefore when there is no heir, they must be in the State. But when they escheat by reason of forfeiture, they remain in the former owner until office found, or until his death, and even in that case,-at his death, they go to the king, in England, for-want of heirs, for the heirs cannot inherit, by reason of the corruption of blood of the ancestor. The lands, therefore, go to the king, for want of heirs, until office found ; and then they are vested in him by the inquest. 2 Plowden, 486. So that in any point of view, the plaintiffs in this case- cannot recover* But admitting that the State does not even acquire an inchoate right, still the plaintiffs cannot recover, for they have none ; and a plaintiff must always recover on the strength of his own title.

Brevard, J.

This was an action to try the titles to land, in which a verdict was obtained for the plaintiffs, and the motion is for a new trial.

The land in question, was originally granted to one Allison, a-German, who died intestate, prior to the American revolution, leaving no descendant or other person, who is known, entitled to succeed to his estate. Some time before his death, he intermarried with the widow of one Harlock, but there was no issue of that mar-rage. By her former marriage with Harlock, she had issue, Vincent Harlock, the husband of the plaintiff, Mary Harlock, and father of the other plaintiffs. After Allison’s death, his widow had possession of the land, and continued to reside thereon till, her death. After her death, Vincent Harlock, was in possession eleven [257]*257Or twelve years, when he died, and .the' plaintiffs continued in possession, until about three years before the trial of this case. The defendant afterwards entered, and keeps possession. At the trial, the plaintiffs produced in evidence, the original grant to Allison, and relied on the possession which has been stated, as sufficient to entitle them to* recover and possess the land under the act of limitations.

On the part of the defendant, several old witnesses were examined, who testified that Allison Was a foreigner by birth, and had no relations known in this country ; and it was contended that the land escheated upon his death.

This is all Í have been able to collect concerning this case, from the report of the judge before whom the case was tried, and the brief with which I have been served.

- The counsel for the plaintiffs, in the argument on this motion, contended chiefly for the equity of the plaintiff’s claim, and seemed to acquiesce in the assertion of the defendant’s counsel, that the plaintiffs had, in strictness no legal right to recover. But this court cannot decide in favor of the equity of the case, in contradiction to the law of the case; equity must follow the law.

The plaintiffs, it seems, rested their right of action on the pos. session of Vincent Harlock, and pretended that he held an adverse possession, claiming as heir at law of Allison ; or else the plaintiffs rel.ied on the long possession of Allison’s widow and her son, who died in quiet possession, leaving them in possession, as strong presumptive evidence of a title from Allison;

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345 S.E.2d 724 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.C.L. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlock-v-jackson-sc-1812.