53 S.E. 870 | N.C. | 1906
Proceeding for partition of land, which was transferred from the clerk, upon the issue of sole seizin raised by the pleadings. The land, which consisted of two tracts, the "Home" and "Holman" tracts, was originally owned by Milas Dobbins, who died in 1863, leaving two sons, Alfred and Augustus Dobbins. Alfred died 25 September, 1878, leaving three children by his first marriage, George, Fannie and John, and two by his second marriage, David (one of the plaintiffs), born 22 January, 1875, and Una May, born 12 April, 1878, and married to R. E. Stafford, 9 April, 1901. She died in August, 1905, leaving a child, R. E. Stafford, Jr., then 3 or 4 years old, who is the other plaintiff. Augustus Dobbins, the other son of Milas Dobbins, took possession of the land when his father died, and has remained in possession until his death in 1901, when his widow, the defendant Sarah Dobbins, continued in possession of the Home tract to the bringing of this suit, and of the Holman tract until 3 September, 1903, her husband having devised all of the land to her by his will, which was duly admitted to probate and introduced in evidence. On 3 September, 1903, she conveyed the Holman tract to the defendant, George B. Nicholson, trustee, for the use and benefit of the other defendants, B. F. Long, D. M. Furches, and A. L. Coble. The trustee took possession on that day and has held it ever since. The court admitted the evidence of the probate of a paper-writing purporting to be the will of Milas Dobbins, the appointment of the administrator with the will annexed and his qualification. The will was not put in *184 (212) evidence, nor did the nature of its contents in any way appear. Plaintiff objected to this testimony.
At the conclusion of the testimony "the court instructed the jury that, upon the evidence, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, and they should answer the issue `No.'" Plaintiffs excepted. There was a verdict and judgment accordingly, and the plaintiffs appealed.
When the plaintiffs had rested, there was no evidence of any possession of the lands by the defendants. The only testimony in regard to it came from the defendant's witnesses, and the court could not properly give a peremptory instruction to find for the defendants, when the burden of proof had shifted to them by the plaintiff's proof of title in Milas Dobbins and the descent from him to the plaintiffs and his other heirs mentioned in the case. When there is a disputed fact depending for its proof upon the testimony of witnesses, the credibility of the witnesses is always an open question for the jury, and this is so, though the testimony may be all on one side and all tend one way. In the latter case the judge may charge the jury, if they find the facts to be as testified by the witnesses, to answer the issue in a certain way, but not, upon the evidence, so to answer it, as by such a charge he passes upon the credibility of the witnesses. We disapproved a similar instruction in Smith v. Lumber Co.,
This question has been before this Court so often that it ought not now to be difficult of solution. We undertook at the last term, as our predecessors had frequently done before, to state the principle of law by which such cases are governed. Some misunderstanding has arisen by failing to distinguish between the doctrine of adverse possession as applied to the relation of tenants in common, and as applied in ordinary cases, where there is no such relation, and consequently (214) no privity or fealty as between the parties. The distinction between an actual and a presumed ouster has, perhaps, not been sufficiently taken into account. We will endeavor again to "run and mark the line," and to restate the principle of adverse possession as applicable to tenants in common. Such tenants hold their estates by several and distinct titles, but by unity of possession, because none of them can know his own severalty or, as Littleton puts it, no one of them can tell which part is his own and, for this reason, they occupy promiscuously, the only unity being that of possession. 2 Blk., 192. An entry or possession by one of the tenants inures to the benefit of his cotenants, not only as concerns themselves, but also as to strangers. Locklear v.Bullard,
The proof in this case showed an exclusive, quiet, and peaceable possession by the defendants and those under whom they claim for more than 20 years — indeed, for more than 40 years — and the law presumes that there was an actual ouster, not at the end of that period, but at the beginning, and that the subsequent possession was adverse to the cotenants who were out of possession. This converted the estate in common, as between the former cotenants, into one in severalty, in the defendants, and defeated plaintiffs' right to partition or to an ejectment.
The disability of some of the parties during the period when the possession was held by the defendants and those under whom they claim cannot be permitted to rebut the presumption of the law as to the ouster, for the possession commenced in the lifetime of their ancestor, from whom they claim and who was at the time under no disability. Seawell v.Bunch,
The view we have taken of the case makes it unnecessary to consider the question presented by counsel in their argument as to what is ordinarily necessary to render a possession sufficiently adverse to bar a right if continued for the requisite time, and as to whether any change in this respect has been wrought by The Code, sec. 146, Rev., sec. 386. Too many cases have been decided by the court since that section was enacted as law, in which the rule we have stated as to a presumed ouster has been recognized and applied, for us to hold at this time that (220) the rule has been changed by it, at least where the eviction or ouster took place prior to 1868. Bryan v. Spivey, 109 N.C. at p. 70. In that case the ouster was in the same year as in this case, 1863. See, also, Monk v. Wilmington, 137 N.C. at p. 327, and Ruffin v. Overby,
The court correctly charged the jury as to the effect of the facts proved in this case upon the plaintiffs' right to recover.
No error.
Cited: Rhea v. Craig, post, 611; Church v. Bragaw,