Lewis v. Pope

68 S.E. 680, 86 S.C. 285, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 13, 1910
Docket7614
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 680 (Lewis v. Pope) 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
Lewis v. Pope, 68 S.E. 680, 86 S.C. 285, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 75 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

This is an action to recover possession of a tract of land containing about one hundred acres. The defendants denied the plaintiffs’ title, and set up the defenses of adverse possession, presumption of a grant, estoppel and laches. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed upon exceptions which will be reported.

1 First Exception. In order to understand clearly the question presented by this exception, it will be necessary to refer to the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, which is thus summarized by the respondents' attorneys:

“In 1869 T. W. Pope — ancestor of defendants — was in possession. His son, N. K. Pope, says lie continued in possession till he, N. K. Pope, went west, 1871. The fenced-in portion, some 11 acres, he cultivated, and in winter pastured; the rest of the place, woodland, he used for firewood and cattle range.
“N. B. Pope says: He worked in this cultivated, fenced land for his father in 1871. The cattle were pastured there in winter. This continued till 1876, when the family scattered by deaths and marriages, leaving no one but himself with his father. They thereupon discontinued cultivating, and devoted the place to pasture till three years after the fence law was enacted, about 1884, and then hauled off *291 the rails and built a fence for the cattle, and let that farm grow up. The tract was used in the only other ways possible : clearing land by cutting timber and selling it off for wood, sawing and using it for firewood and: shingles. This continued until his father’s death in 1900. From the time his father went on the place till his death, he used it as his own, just like his other land, claiming it as his own, and no one interfered with his possession. After his death his children continued to use and occupy it, building houses upon it in 1901 and 1903. In 1904 it was divided amongst them by partition, and has since then been occupied and cultivated by those of the family to whom it was set off. During all the while — for thirty years — the plaintiff, Lewis-, lived in that neighborhood.
“J. D. Cooley says: That his first recollection was T. W. Pope cultivating some eight or ten acres of the- place, and getting wood and pine off it for his own use. He made no difference in the use of this land and his other lands. In 1876 witness helped pile up fodder and put it in an old house there, along with T. W. Pope’s children.
“Simon Moore says: That in 1888 he cut d-o-wn saw timber on the place for T. W. Pope, and sawed there for four or five months, about 200,000 feet.
“G. B. Morris says: That he was on the place in 1873, and T. W. Pope was then in possession, and he so continued till his death; using it just like he did his other lands, and claiming it as his own; and after his- death his heirs took charge of it, but -did not divide it up under the surveyor’s advice, because they could not find among his- papers a deed to the place. From 1873 to this time the land has not been in possession of any one but T. W. Pope and his heirs.
“Mrs. Laura Nance -says: That from her earliest recollection her father, T. W. Pope, was in possession of the land, cultivating and pasturing it, and the men bringing in firewood. She left and went west in 1880, returning in *292 1896, finding him still in possession. Never heard of anyone else claiming the land.
“T. E. Johnson, suveyor, says: That in 1900, after T. W. Pope’s death, he surveyed his lands and platted them for his heirs as shown by Exhibit T.’ In doing so he made use of -a plat made by J. B. Davis, surveyor, in 1879, for T. W. Pope of his lands, introduced as Exhibit ‘J.’ This plat ‘J’ includes the land in dispute. In T. W. Pope’s lifetime, Wm. Ramsay got him to survey a tract which lies just east of the tract in dispute, and he, witness, had to locate the line dividing them. In doing -so, he got T. W. Pope to help him. Pope told him that was his line and Ramsay’s. This was the eastern -line of the land in dispute.
“N. B. Pope says: That when Davis made the survey and plat, Exhibit ‘J,’ for his father, he and his father went along and his father showed Davis the lines by which the survey was made.”

There are two reasons why this exception can not be sustained'. In the first place, the request was in violation of art. V, sec. 26, of the Constitution, which provides that “Judges- shall not charge juries in respect to matters of fact,” in that it undertakes to say, as matter of law, that certain facts do not constitute adverse possession; whereas, the inference from such testimony presents a question of fact to be 'determined by the jury. 16 Enc. of Law (1st Ed.), 465 et seq.; Whaley v. Stevens, 27 S. C., 449, 4 S. E., 145; State v. Aughtry, 49 S. C., 305, 26 S. E., 619; Pickens v. Ry., 54 S. C., 498, 32 S. E., 567; Rinake v. Mfg. Co., 58 S. C., 179, 36 S. E., 700, 46 L. R. A., 517; Wood. v. Mfg. Co., 66 S. C., 482; Weaver v. Ry., 76 S. C., 49, 56 S. E., 657; Turbyfill v. Ry., 83 S. C., 325.

The case of Pickens v. Ry., supra, shows that this principle is specially applicable to the case under consideration, as there was testimony, other than that mentioned in the exception, touching the question of adverse possession.

*293 2 In the second place, actual residence is not essential to the defense of adverse possession. “Adverse possession, as applied to real estate, is an actual, visible and exclusive appropriation of land commenced and continued under a claim of right, with the intent to. assert such claim against the true owner, and accompanied by such an invasion of the rights of the opposite party, as to give him a cause of action.” 1 Enc. of Law, 789; 2 Enc. L. & P., 362.

“The usual test of entry and possession are actual occupation and residence, cultivation and improvement of the land. The evidence necessary to establish actual adverse possession varies in each particular case, depending upon the situation of the property, and the use to which it may be applied. The same rule will not apply equally to cultivated lands, town property and wild lands. Although there must be actual entry, neither actual occupation, cultivation nor residence is necessary, where the property is so situated, as not to admit of any permanent improvement or cultivation; but where acts of ownership have been done upon lands, which, from their nature, indicate a continuous claim of property, and are continued long enough, such acts are evidence of an adverse possession for the consideration of the jury.” 1 Enc. of Eaw, 822-823.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 680, 86 S.C. 285, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-pope-sc-1910.