Thurston v. University of North Carolina

72 Tenn. 513
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 Tenn. 513 (Thurston v. University of North Carolina) 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
Thurston v. University of North Carolina, 72 Tenn. 513 (Tenn. 1880).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

The University of Uorth Carolina, on the 26th of May, 1869, brought an action of ejectment against the complainants for the land in controversy.

On the 13th of March, 1872, this bill was filed to set up a supposed lost deed for the land from [514]*514the University to Samuel Dickens, under whom the complainants claim, to have the right of the complainants to the land declared, and to perpetually enjoin the action at law.

On final hearing, the Chancellor gave a decree in favor of the complainants, and the defendant appealed.

Prior to the year 1824, the State of Tennessee,, on warrants of the State of North Carolina, had granted to the University of North Carolina, many thousand acres of land, in separate grants, in the district of "West Tennessee. Among other grants was a grant dated the 9th of October, 1821, for 640 acres in the 10th District, Range 2, Section 11 of Gribson County. The University had employed Samuel Dickens to take charge of the location of the warrants and sale of the lands, and prior to the year 1835 he seems to have sold and satisfactorily accounted for lands to the value of nearly $200,000.

In 1835, the University • appointed Charles Manly and Samuel Dickens its agents and attorneys in fact to sell- the residue of said lands, and it appears from a report of Charles Manly to the University, which is made an exhibit to the answer, that these agents did sell the residue of said lands on or before the 21st of November,- 1835. This report shows that Manly was authorized to ascertain “ the tracts of land sold and those remaining to be sold,” and to make a settlement with Samuel Dickens, and that he did make the settlement and [515]*515ascertain and report the lands unsold, which were afterwards sold under the power. The tract of 640 acres above mentioned is not included in the list of unsold lands. The land in controversy constitutes a part oi the land covered by this grant.

In the year 1840 Dickens died, leaving a will which was admitted to probate in September of that year. By that will, after making certain specific devises and legacies, he directs, “all the residue of his lands and real estate” to be equally divided between his children, they accounting for advancements, and he appointed three persons by name “to make all and every necessary division pursuant to the will,” and provided that “ their acts and doings, or the acts and doings of either two of them,” should be binding on all parties concerned. In pursuance of the will, the parties themselves agreed upon a division of the lands in writing, by which the • 640 acre tract of land, granted as above and treated as a part of the estate of Samuel Dickens, was allotted’ to Elizabeth R. Belote, one of his daughters. The testator had, by his will, appointed trustees to hold the lands devised to this daughter in trust for her “ and her children present and future.” Two of the persons authorized by the will to make the partition of the testator’s lands, on the 25th of December, 1841, ratified and confirmed the partition agreed upon by the heirs, the. share of Elizabeth R. Belote being given to the trustees named by [516]*516the will, “ in trust for the use and support of Elizabeth B. Belote and her children.”

The partition thus made was acknowledged by the two Commissioners who had made it under the powers conferred by the will, and registered in several counties' in West Tennessee, in which some of the lands lay, though not, it seems, in Gibson County.

Mrs. Belote went immediately into possession of the land by a tenant, who, as early as 1842, built a house upon a part of the land, and resided therein, and cultivated the cleared land, consisting of from fifteen to thirty acres, continuously for seven or eight years. He was succeeded without interruption of possession by other tenants from year to year for several years.

The testimony leaves no doubt that from 1842 to 1852, inclusive, the land was continuously occupied by a succession of tenants holding under Mrs. Belote and her children,, the land being known as the Belote land. There is evidence tending to show the continuous occupation of the same cleared land under the Belote children and those deriving title from them, down to the commencement of the action of ejectment, but there is more conflict in the testimony for the subsequent years, and the possession as proved would not have the importance of. prior possession, by reason of a new partition of the land among the Belote children. This partition was made on the 15th of September, 1852, by dividing the land into three [517]*517tracts, the improvements and cleared land being embraced in only one of these tracts.

The complainants claim two of these allotments under the children, to whom the allotments were made.

The fact that the agent of the University reported that he had ascertained in 1835 all the lands belonging to the University which remained unsold, and had sold the same, giving a detailed list of the lands, which did not include the tract in controversy, and the further fact that the tract was known as the Dickens land in the life time of Dickens, are pei’suasive of the truth of the complainants’ theory that Dickens held the land by a deed from the University, which has been lost.

The report of Manly shows what might well be presumed, that the Uniyerlyty had a list of all its warrants and grants, and if the grant of the land in controversy, or the warrant on which it was based, had been placed in the hands of Dickens and never accounted for, the fact could readily have been established. Conceding, however, that there is not sufficient in this record to prove that there ever was a conveyance from the University to Dickens, the rights of the parties tnrn upon the question whether the title of the University has been divested by the continuous adverse possession of the land by those under whom the complainants claim for the period, and under an assurance of title sufficient to produce that result under our statute of limitations.

[518]*518By the Code, sec. 2763: “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.”

If the will of Dickens had expressly designated the land in controversy, and devised it in fee as part of his estate, the devise would, by the very words of the section, have been an assurance of title sufficient to vest an indefeasible title, by an adverse possession of seven years: Cox v. Peck, 3 Yer., 435. The possession of any part of the land for the requisite period, under a sufficient assurance of title, gives an indefeasible title to the extent of the boundaries therein named. And, since 1784, it has been provided by statute that every devise shall convey the entire estate of the testator in the lands unless the contrary intent plainly appears from the words and context of the will: Code, sec. 2164.

A devise of all the testator’s lands, or of the residue of his lands would be good without naming them: Williams v.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Tenn. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurston-v-university-of-north-carolina-tenn-1880.