Sharp v. VanWinkle

80 Tenn. 15
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 Tenn. 15 (Sharp v. VanWinkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. VanWinkle, 80 Tenn. 15 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action of ejectment by VanWinkle against Sharp, tried upon agreed statement of facts. The circuit judge rendered judgment in favor of VanWinkle, and Sharp appealed.

The land in controversy lies in the counties of Scott and Campbell, north of latitude 36° 30". VanWinkle claims title by regular assignment from the grantees, under a grant properly obtained and duly issued by the State of Kentucky. The grant, or patent as it is called in Kentucky, dated April 7, 1851, is for 16,000 acres, upon a survey made March 5, 1851, and describes the land by metes and bounds. It calls, in substance, omitting details, for a beginning corner in the boundary line between the States of Kentucky and Tennessee, thence with that line due west 4436 poles, thence south 20° west 1900 poles .to a stake in the line of latitude 36° 30", thence with that line as run and marked 4736 poles, thence north 20° east 1900 poles to the beginning, “platting out all the lands in said boundary heretofore surveyed, estimated at 35,200 acres, and 1275 acres of land entered in said boundary to be hereafter .surveyed, a list of which and the- names of the applicants is appended to the record of the survey.” It is agreed by the parties that the grantees proceeded according to Kentucky statutes in force in all respects in appropriating the land granted, paying a valuable money consideration [17]*17therefor. It is farther agreed that, at the date of ■making the survey of the 16,000 acres and issuance of the grant, there had been appropriated by other persons at least 35,200 acres of land, by legal surveys, lying inside of the external boundaries described in said survey and grant, and that said surveys were duly recorded in the proper office in Whitley county, Kentucky, and that the entries mentioned in and platted ■ out of said grant of 1275 acre's, were legally made and recorded in the same office, and that all of the various tracts so surveyed or entered could be, and were then ^capable of identification and ■' location by matter of record. It was also agreed that the legal title to the land thus granted had been vested by mesne conveyances for a valuable consideration in the plaintiff, "VanWinkle, but that no actual possession of the land had ever been taken under the grant. The land had been regularly assessed for taxes in Scott and Campbell counties since the issuance of the grant.

The defendant, Sharp, claims title under a grant from the State of Tennessee, younger than the plaintiff's grant, and adverse possession. In 1870, Sharp made an entry in the entry-taker’s office of Scott county of 5,000 acres of land, and obtained a grant therefor in 1873. The entry and grant lap over on the lands covered by the plaintiff’s grant, at the southwest corner, to the extent of 2,000 acres, of which, however, about 1,000 acres only were vacant and unappropriated when the grants of the litigants were obtained. The defendant, Sharp, through his tenants, had entered upon the land in the iuterlap not covered [18]*18by older claims than those of either of the parties, and enclosed three different parcels, amounting in all to 100 acres, claiming under his grant, and had held the same for more than seven years last past, and still so holds them. He made the settlements as owner of the whole of the vacant interlap, with the intention to hold it to the extent of the boundaries of his grant.

If the land lay anywhere else in the State than in the territory between the line of 36° 30", and the boundary line between the States of Tennessee and Kentucky, east of the Tennessee river, the defendant, Sharp, would be held to have acquired the better title by virtue of his adverse possession, under the statute of limitations: Code, sec. 2763. The doubt is whether the statute of limitations applies to the territory in question, and, if it does not, whether the plaintiff’s Kentucky grant is valid on its face.

The Code, sec. 2763, is: “Any person having had, ■by himself or those through whom he claims, seven years’ adverse possession of any lands, tenements, or hereditaments granted by this State or the State of North Carolina, holding by conveyance, devise, grant, or other assurance of title purporting to convey an estate in fee, without any claim by action at law or in equity commenced within that time, and effectually prosecuted against him, is vested with a good and indefeasible title in fee to the land described in his assurance of title.”

Section 2765 is: No person, or any one claiming under him, shall have any action, either at law or [19]*19in equity, for any lands, tenements or hereditaments, but within seven years after the right of action has accrued.”

The first of these sections was intended to perfect a defective title by adverse possession for seven years? under an assurance of title purporting to convey an estate in ^fee, whether it be in form a • conveyancer devise, grant, or other instrument, although the assurance may be invalid and void either at law or in equity: Thurston v. University, 4 Lea, 513, 519. The second section was intended to protect the adverse possession for seven years to the extent of the actual enclosures, if held under no title at all, and to the extent of the boundaries set out in the instrument, if the holding has been under an assurance of ütle not purporting to convey an estate in fee, as under an entry or title bond; Dunlap v. Gibbs, 4 Yer., 94; Brown v. Johnson, 1 Hum., 261.

The statute does not run until there is a valid grant of land from the sovereignty having title and jurisdiction, for the obvious reason that until there is a grant the title is in the sovereignty or State, and the statute does not sun against the sovereign: Singleton v. Ake, 3 Hum., 626; Cocke v. Dodson, 1 Tenn., 169; Calloway v. Hopkins, 11 Heis., 349; Code, sec. 2762, 2766. And inasmuch as the State of North Carolina had once owned the territory of the State of Tennessee, and exercised its sovereignty by granting the land, the Legislature intended, by the language of the act of 1819, brought into the Code, see. 2763, to recognize the grants of that State while sovereign in [20]*20the same way as the grants of Tennessee itself. No •other State was considered as ever having had similar sovereignty so that- its disposition of the soil should; in like manner, affect the rights of this State or its grantee. But it does not follow that the statute was intended to be limited in its operation to lands held under a particular class of titles. There were lands along our northern border’ claimed under titles derived from the States of Virginia and Kentucky, owing to the doubt which long existed touching the correct boundary between those States and this State. These titles had been validated by statutes expressly passed for the purpose. It was, we may safely say, never contemplated that lands held under these titles should not come within the provisions of a general law expressly passed to quiet titles by an adverse possession for a limited period of time. And it is only by adhering' to the letter of the statute, giving the words used a very restrictive meaning, that a different conclusion can be reached. The reason why the words “granted by this State or the State of North Carolina” were used was that the statute might not run against the State or its grantee. But the reason would not exist where the State had already parted with its interest in the laud,-granted it in fact, in any mode.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Tenn. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-vanwinkle-tenn-1883.