Vanderbilt v. . Chapman

90 S.E. 993, 172 N.C. 809, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 993 (Vanderbilt v. . Chapman) 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
Vanderbilt v. . Chapman, 90 S.E. 993, 172 N.C. 809, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 402 (N.C. 1916).

Opinion

Hoke, J.

On .the trial it was admitted of record that tbe plaintiff bad a proper paper title tailing its rise in a grant to David Allison for 250 acres of land bearing date 28 November, 1796.

In support of defendant’s claim, they offered in evidence a deed from W. E. Lance and wife to Richard Ledbetter, covering tbe land in controversy and bearing date 18 May, 1893.

2. Tbe will of said Richard Ledbetter, probated and registered 22 January, 1903, tbe portions of which, material to tbe questions presented and involved in this appeal, are as follows:

“I do hereby nominate and appoint my son, Z. T. Ledbetter, my son-in-law, M. L. Sumner, my executors of this my last will and testament, earnestly requesting them- to act as such; and for tbe purpose of enabling them to carry out the provisions of this, my said will and testament, they are hereby vested with such parts of my estate, real and personal, as it may be necessary should be vested in them for such purpose.”

And further : “It is my will and desire that my executors, as early as it may be practicable after my death, collect in all moneys due me, and that they sell off all my real and personal estate not herein devised or bequeathed, and from' said moneys and proceeds pay off and discharge the legacies herein required to be paid therefrom, and any sum then remaining, after paying all costs' and charges of administration and all debts due and owing by me, they shall divide. ...” etc.

*811 And: “In disposing of my said property, real and personal, my executors may sell at public or private sale for cash or on time, or in such way and manner as in tbeir judgment will be best for my estate, and I do hereby invest them with authority and empower them to make all deeds and conveyances necessary to be made to complete such disposal.”

3. Deed from Z. T. Ledbetter, executor of the last will and testament of Eichard, to defendants, covering the land in controversy, bearing-date 10 February, 1914, and registered same day.

It was shown that Z. T. Ledbetter alone qualified as executor of his father, and there was evidence on part of defendants tending to show adverse, continuous occupation of the property, asserting ownership under said deed from its date by Eichard Ledbetter till his death in 1903; by Z. T. Ledbetter, his executor, claiming also under the will of his father till his own conveyance to defendants and by them till the bringing of the suit.

There was evidence on the part of plaintiffs tending to show breaks in the continuity of defendants’ possession, sufficient, if established, to destroy their claim, and also that Z. T. Ledbetter, at the time he occupied after the death of his father till the sale and conveyance by himself, claimed the same as his father’s- executor, under the terms and provisions of the will.

Speaking to the occupation of himself and father and as to how he claimed while in possession as executor, Ledbetter, as witness for defendant, testified, among other things, as follows: That in 1893 his father, who owned the Clapp tract of land lying just north of this in controversy, had cleared and cultivated an acre or an acre and a half over the line. On that date his father bought and took a conveyance of the land in controversy from W. E. Lance who had taken a grant for it a short time before, and in making a survey for the Lance deed they ascertained that they had gone over the line and cleared an acre or an acre and a half of land on this land; that witness and father had continuously occupied and worked this clearing, through their tenants, year by year, from the date of the deed until witness, as executor, sold and conveyed to defendants. “The possession, that is, the field about which I spoke, is on both sides of this line. My father had possession on both sides of it. I was attending to a great deal of my father’s business after the deed of 1893, and his instructions were to hold possession on the part of that clearing inside the W. E. Lance deed. After the date of the deed in 1893 my father’s tenants held possession on until his death, and then I as executor held possession until I sold to Mr. Chapman. My father has been dead thirteen years the 19th day of January. He died 19 January, 1903. We held possession from that time until I made Mr. Chapman and Mr. Eeynolds a deed. We *812 held possession by tenants in cultivation and bad some little peacb trees set out on tbe land. I don’t think there was a year but what there was some growing crop on part of' the cultivation. I instructed the tenants after I took possession to put something on each year. I was up there once a year,” etc.

Upon this, the testimony chiefLy relevant to the question presented, his Honor, among other things, in effect charged the jury that the will in itself was not color of title, as it did not purport to convey title to the executors, but only contained a power of sale, and that if Z. T. Ledbetter entered and held the land as executor and not as heir, such occupation by him and his tenants could not be added or tacked to the occupation by his father or referred to his claim under the Lance deed as color. “Rut if he took possession, as the heir at law of Richard Ledbetter, his possession as heir at law would be deemed a continuation of the color of title acquired by his ancestor, and his possession, so held, would be deemed possession under color,” etc., and to this and other portions of the charge, substantially embodying the same positions, defendants duly excepted and assigned the same for error.

In order to establish title by adverse occupation there must be continuity of possession for the requisite statutory period, and, in case of successive occupants, there must be some recognized connection between them. This connection may be effected by deed or will or other writing, or it may be shown by parol. It is said that there must be a privity between the successive occupants, but this does not at all mean that there must be a privity of title. The ownership asserted is one dependent on adverse physical possession, in this instance under color. The privity referred to is only that of possession and may be said to exist whenever one holds the property under or for another or in subordination to his claim and under an agreement or arrangement recognized as valid between themselves. • When the continuity and identity of possession is established between a subsequent and next preceding and prior occupant, shutting out all opportunity of interruption in favor of the true title, in such case the claimant or subsequent holder may, in connection with his own, avail himself of the adverse occupation of his predecessors and refer the .same to the original entry and the color of title under which it was made.

These positions are supported by authoritative cases in other States, and our own decisions are in approval of the same general principle. Illinois Steel Co. v. Paczocha, 139 Wis., 23; Clithers v. Fenner, 122 Wis., 356; Montague v. Marunda, 71 Neb., 805; Rowland v. Williams, 23 Ore., 516; Vance v. Wood, 22 Ore., 77; Iron and Coal Co. v. Bayles, 95 Tenn., 612; McNeely v. Langhan, 22 Ohio St., 32; Weber v. Anderson, 73 Ill., 439; Shevin v. Brackett, 36 Minn., 152;

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 993, 172 N.C. 809, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderbilt-v-chapman-nc-1916.