Ruffin v. . Overby

88 N.C. 369
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 88 N.C. 369 (Ruffin v. . Overby) 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
Ruffin v. . Overby, 88 N.C. 369 (N.C. 1883).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiffs, asserting their ownership of the large territory described and defined in their complaint, seek in this suit to recover possession of the portion alleged to be wrongfully withheld by the defendant. In his answer, the defendant, not controverting the claim of the plaintiffs to other parts, about which he professes not to know, sets up title in himself to three several tracts which may be within the plaintiffs' boundaries, and the lines of which are specified with precision.

*370 Three separate issues as to the plaintiffs’ ownership of the separate tracts were submitted to the jury, and they respond in the affirmative to each.

Upon the trial and in support of their title to the entire area claimed, the plaintiffs produced and read in evidence a deed from Charles Banner, sheriff of stokes county, to Archibald D. Murphy, dated on December 13th, 1815, conveying the land to him in pursuance of a sale for taxes, and wherein it is recited as belonging to Timothy Pickering, of Massachusetts, and also a deed for the same from the said A. D. Murphy to Thomas Ruffin, executed on June 8th, 1822. The plaintiffs exhibited no other deeds.

The proofs offered of possession were as follows: Joel Hill, who, for the ten years preceding 1850, was a deputy of the sheriff* testified to the fact that the Ruffin land was'entered on the tax-lists, but of its situation he was ignorant.

William King proved that his brother, Alex. King, now deceased, was the agent of Thomas Ruffin for many years, and resided on his own adjoining farm, but never occupied any part of the Ruffin land; that some twenty-five years before, Thomas Ruffin, Jr., came to the house of the brother of witness and furnished one hundred dollars, which was expended in prospecting for minerals on the land; that on one occasion witness applied to one Banner, another agent, for the purchase of a site for a school-house upon it; that Banner made sale of some of the land, acting for his principal and not as disposing of his own property, and that neither King nor Banner occupied any part of the land.

The tax-lists of Stokes county were produced, and showed that in 1824 the Murphy tract of 2,488 acres was given in, and in 1827 the same number of acres were given in under the name of “Ruffin land.”

William J. Moore testified to his becoming an agent for Thomas Ruffin in 1872, and as such, taking possession of the tract described in the plot, except the parts now in controversy; *371 that he sold some and leased and rented other portions and paid the tases on 2,400 acres; that Thomas Ruffin, Jr. let King have a portion of the land after his father’s death and during his mother’s life-time, and that King had, as agent, made sale of a part as before stated; that one Isham Banner claimed some of land under a contract with Banuer, the agent, but never entered upon it; that part of the disputed land was in possession of one John Sisemore when witness first knew it, more than twenty years since; that the place occupied by him, known as the “Green Place,” and now claimed by the defendant, was apparently an old settlement, and that he (witness), when assuming his agency, took possession of all the territory included in the surveyor’s plats, except that then in defendant’s possession and claimed as his own property.

The surveyor, George, testified to his running the red lines on the north of the plat, including in his survey the tract of fifty acres designated as the “Green Place” by a deed to John Sise-more, and to his running the boundaries of the other disputed land by a grant from the state to the defendant, issued in 1869, and stated that no other deeds were produced before him.

It was shown that the surface of the territory described in the deeds, from which the plaintiffs claim and in their complaint, is broken wild mountain land on the north, extending up on the Saura Town mountain.

There was no evidence that the plaintiffs, their ancestors, or the agents of either, ever built on, cultivated, or fenced in any portion of it, or exercised acts of ownership other than those already detailed.

The inquires put to the jury, in the form of three separate issues as to the plaintiffs’ ownership of each of the tracts claimed by the defendant, received an affirmative answer in their verdict.

Of the series of instructions given to the jury at the instance of the plaintiffs, and to which the defendant excepts, it becomes necessary to notice only those numbered 4, 6 and 8 in disposing of the appeal.

*372 The court charged that:

4. There is no evidence of any possession adverse to the plaintiffs;

6. The jury may consider such acts of ownership, as are in evidence, exercised by the plaintiffs (including, as we understand, those under whom they claim) in making up their verdict upon the question of actual possession;

8. If the plaintiffs (embracing preceding claimants with whom they are in privity of estate) have had actual possession of a part of the land included in the boundary of their deed, such possession would in law extend to the whole, unless some other part was held adversely by another person.

There is error, we think, in the first two of these directions, and while there is none in the other as an abstract legal proposition, in its relations to the two others and the proofs before the jury, it was calculated to mislead them, and may have misled them, in applying it to the evidence, to an erroneous conclusion.

IV. There was evidence of an adversary possession, since every possession is deemed to be such, until its qualified or subservient character is shown and the presumption disproved.

“ Every possession is taken to be on the possessor’s own title,” remarks Ruffin, C. J., “until the contrary appears, as the possession is in itself the strongest evidence of the claim of title, and, when long continued, of the title also.” Jackson v. Com’rs of Hillsboro, 1 Dev. & Bat., 177. It was shown in the testimony of the agent, Moore, that when he first became acquainted with the land, more than twenty years back, the said John Sisemore was in possession of that in dispute and occupied the “Green Place,” which then bore the marks of being “an old settled place”; and when the witness took possession in 1872, three years before the bringing the suit, he found the defendant in possession of the part which is now in contest and was then claimed by him, and did not interfere with it.

Again it was proved by one of the surveyors that he ran the lines of red color on the map, including the “Green Place,” *373 under a deed to Sisemore, and the other disputed land by the boundaries given in a grant from the state to the defendant, issued in 1869. This brief recapitulation is sufficient to show the error in the charge upon this point.

VI. The instruction numbered 6 is, in our opinion, not warranted by the evidence, and the jury ought not to have been left at liberty to infer, from the facts proved, such continuous possession as is required to perfect a colorable title under a deed.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.C. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruffin-v-overby-nc-1883.