88 S.E. 862 | N.C. | 1916
This action was brought to recover land. Plaintiffs showed a complete chain of title from the State by grant and mesne conveyances. Defendant relied on adverse possession under color of title. The court charged the jury as follows: "If the defendant has satisfied you by the evidence in this case — he is not required to satisfy you by the greater weight of the evidence or beyond a reasonable doubt, but to satisfy you upon the evidence in this case; the burden being upon the plaintiff to satisfy you by the greater weight of the evidence of its right to recover. The burden is upon the defendant to satisfy you by the evidence — not by the greater weight, nor beyond a reasonable doubt, but to satisfy you; and if the defendant has satisfied you by the evidence in this case that George Thomas in 1872, under a deed from Solomon Jones, entered upon the land in controversy, and the deed covered the land, and that he held it in his possession openly, notoriously, adversely, and continuously for a period of seven years, then it would be your duty to answer the first issue `No.'" The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff appealed from the judgment thereon. See case on former appeal,
Plaintiff contends that the evidence shows that defendant occupied only a small strip of the land just across the line, and that possession of this small piece was not sufficient to extend the adverse possession by construction to the boundaries of the deed, which defendant claims as color of title.
This question was discussed by Chief Justice Ruffin in Green v. Harman, 15 N.C. at p. 162, where he said: "The operation of the statute of limitations depends upon two things: The one is possession continued for seven years, and the other the character of that possession — that it should be adverse. It has never been held that the owner should actually know of the fact of possession, nor have actual knowledge of the nature or extent of the possessor's claim. It is presumed, indeed, that he will acquire the knowledge, and it is intended that he should. Hence, nothing will bar him short of occupation, which is a thing notorious in its very nature, and that must be continued seven years in order to afford him, not that time to bring suit for redress of a known injury, but full opportunity to discover the wrong. To the extent of the occupation there is, primafacie, no hardship in holding that it is on a claim of title and adverse, and that the owner knew of it. Every man must be considered cognizant of his own title, the boundaries *614
of his land, and of all possessions on it, either by himself or others. Ordinarily, possession taken by one of another's land is of a part sufficient in quantity or value to show to the jury that the possession was taken adversely, and also to afford unequivocal evidence to the (547) other claimant of that intention. And as far as the actual occupation goes, it seems to furnish such evidence in almost all cases. If, indeed, two persons own adjoining lands, and one runs a fence so near the line as to induce the jury to believe that any slight encroachments were inadvertently made, and that it was the design to run on the line, the possession constituted by the inclosure might be regarded as permissive, and could not be treated as adverse, even for the land within the fence, except as it furnished evidence of the line in a case of disputed boundary. The line being admitted, it would not make a title, where a naked adverse possession will have that effect, because there was no intention to go beyond his deed, but an intention to keep within it, which by a mere mistake he has happened not to do." We followed this view of the law in Currie v. Gilchrist,
We have no doubt that at the next trial proper instructions will be given to the jury upon this matter, and according to the phase of the evidence then presented, so that the jury may determine whether the defendant has had adverse possession as the law defines it, under color of title for the requisite time.
For the error as to the degree of proof the defendant should adduce, another trial must be had.
New trial.
Cited: Hunter v. West,