30 S.E. 4 | N.C. | 1898
The facts submitted for the judgment of his Honor show that Edward, Mary, and Margaret Whitesides, Isabella Carson, and Annie Carson, were tenants in common in a tract of land by descent from their brother, who died in the summer of 1849. On 21 September, 1849, the said Isabella Carson executed to Robert Carson, then the husband of said Annie Carson, a deed for her one-fifth undivided interest in the tract of land. On 22 September, 1849, there was a consent *404 partition of the said tract of land by deeds with metes and bounds, and seventy-one acres were allotted to Mary and Margaret Whitesides, which was two-fifths in value of the entire tract; seventeen acres were allotted to Edward Whitesides, which was one-fifth in value of the entire tract; sixty acres, or the remainder, was allotted to Robert Carson, which was two-fifths in value of said tract. Annie Carson joined in the deeds of release to the Whitesides but not to Robert Carson, her husband; and nothing was deeded to her in return. Immediately after the partition of the tract of land as aforesaid, Robert Carson entered upon the said sixty-acre lot, and he and his wife, the said Annie Carson, lived on the same until her death, which occurred about sixteen years before the commencement of this action, and Robert Carson continued to (647) hold possession of the same until his death in 189.., all the while receiving the rents and profits, without claim from any one. The defendants other than Sarah Jane Carson, who are the children of Isabella Carson, and the said Edward Whitesides, and the only heirs at law of Annie Carson, deny that Robert Carson died having title to all of the sixty-acre lot, and allege that in the partition of the tract of land as aforesaid the name of Annie Carson, by mistake, was omitted from the deed for the sixty-acre lot.
The plaintiffs reply and plead the statute of limitations to any action reforming or correcting said deed.
His Honor held that Annie Carson was a tenant in common with her husband, Robert Carson, in one-half of said sixty-acre lot, and plaintiffs appealed.
Upon the foregoing facts we are of opinion that the judgment should be affirmed. Annie Carson was a feme covert at the time of the partition and remained so until her death. Therefore no statute of limitation ever began to run against her, even if she had not been in unity of possession with her husband. As she was tenant in common with her husband, her heirs also became tenants in common at her death, and are barred by the exclusive possession of their co-tenant only after the lapse of twenty years. As she apparently never had any children, her husband had no curtesy, and hence the statute began to run against her heirs at her death. But there is no proof of ouster, nor presumption thereof, as she had not been dead for twenty years when this suit was brought, and therefore the statute had not matured. Linker v. Benson,
It is contended by the plaintiffs that the share of Annie Carson was conveyed to her husband by the deed of the Whitesides, and that an *405
abandonment of all equitable interests by her heirs is presumed from lapse of time. This contention cannot be sustained, as the title to an undivided one-fifth of the estate was already vested in her by descent, and therefore needed no conveyance to her. It was never divested, as she did not join in the deed to her husband, and her deed to her other co-tenants was, in effect, a mere consent that they might take a certain part of the land as their share in the partition. It was held in Harrisonv. Ray,
The doctrine of estoppel cannot be invoked in this case, as it has no application. It is true that the defendants could not set up after-acquired title in derogation of their deed of release to Robert Carson, but that deed did not profess to convey or release any claim that Annie Carson might have to the land, nor did it profess to convey the land itself, but only to release their interest therein as tenants in common. As heirs of Annie Carson, they now claim a share which in effect was set aside for her in the partition, and which during her lifetime they never pretended to own or dispose of in any way. The judgment is
Affirmed.
Cited: Harrington v. Rawls,
(650)