67 N.C. 150 | N.C. | 1872
It was admitted that both parties claimed under one W. F. Taylor, who had title, and that the defendant, Martha Benson, was in possession under the title of said Taylor, claiming the entire property as his heir at law.
Linker, the lessor of the plaintiff, offered in evidence a deed dated 6 November, 1852, purporting to have been duly registered, made by said Taylor to Linker, for one-half the land described in the declaration. It was admitted that the deed was registered under the following circumstances: The deed was in the possession of the defendant, and claimed as her property, by virtue of an endorsement, signed by (151) Linker, in these words: "I transfer the within deed to W. F. Taylor again. 11 May, 1853." This deed was demanded by the plaintiff during the pendency of the suit, and the defendant refused to surrender the same. At Spring Term, 1868, his Honor, Judge Mitchell, *110 ordered its production under a rule of Court, and it was produced and filed by the Clerk among the papers in the cause. The said deed was afterwards recorded and registered.
The defendant objected to the admission of the deed in evidence, on the ground that the Court had no power, by rule, to require its production by the defendant, nor to order it to be recorded and registered. The Court admitted the evidence, and the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff having closed his case, the defendant asked the Court to charge, that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
1st. Because no ouster or demand had been proved, as was necessary in case of a tenancy in common.
2d. Because the defendant, and those under whom she claimed, having been in undisturbed possession of the premises for seven years and five months, from the date of the deed to the commencement of the action, the plaintiff was bound by the Statute of Limitation.
His Honor refused so to charge, but instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. A verdict was rendered accordingly.
Rule for a new trial discharged; judgment for plaintiff and appeal by the defendant.
When this case was before this Court before (
1. The defendant contends, that the deed should not have been allowed in evidence, because the Judge wrongfully compelled its production by the defendant, in order that it might be registered, and because, further, the registration, not having been made at the instance of the rightful owner, was irregular, and can not benefit the party claiming under it. The Revisal Code, ch. 31, sec. 80, gives to Courts of law the *111 same power to compel the production of writings which Courts of Equity had. To the extent of ordering the production of the deed, for inspection or any other legitimate use, there can be no question of the power of the Judge. And to that extent it was rightfully exercised here, for the writing in question was a document of the plaintiff's title. The terms of the Judge's order do not go further than this. It does not appear that he ever allowed the deed to be taken out of the possession of the Clerk for probate and registration. Such an order would have been beyond his jurisdiction. A Court of Equity would not have ordered the probate and registration of the deed; without previously deciding that the endorsement on it created no equity in the defendant to prevent such an order. But this decision the Judge of the Court of law was unable to make; and to have decided that the plaintiff was entitled to have possession of the deed, for the purpose of probate, would have been to decide in anticipation, and without trial, on the equitable rights of the defendant. 3 Dan. ch. pr. 2049, (153) citing Linger v. Simpson, from 6 Mad. 290.
2. The next question is, can the plaintiff take advantage of a probate and registration obtained through wrongful possession? The question is necessarily a general one, and can not be confined to the circumstances of this case. And so considering it, it occurs to us that a Probate Judge has no means of knowing whether a person presenting a deed for probate is rightfully in possession of it or not, and a Judge of a Court of law has no power of cancelling a registration once made, and he is obliged to give it its legal result. It seems to be a case where the rule applies, "Fieri nondebet sed factum valet." Moreover, it does not appear at whose instance the deed was offered for probate. It may have been by the defendant. The objection on this ground is untenable.
3. The defendant also contends, that the deed was not so proved as to be admissible in evidence, on its probate and registration merely, but that additional evidence was required on the trial. It is not necessary to decide this question, and we express no opinion of it.
4. The defendant contends, that being a tenant in common, the plaintiff can not recover without an admission of an ouster, by the consent rule, or proof of an actual ouster. This is admitted. And on the authority of Halfordv. Tetherow,
In this case the defendant had been in the sole possession for seven years and five months, and when the action was brought was in the sole possession, claiming the whole. What is an actual ouster, has been discussed since the time of Lyttleton. He says, "If one (154) tenant in common occupy all, and put the other out of possession, it is ejectment." Upon this Lord Coke says, "The reception of the whole profits is no ejectment. But if the tenant in possession drive out of the land any of the cattle of the other tenant, or not suffer him to enter or occupy the land, this is an ejectment." Co. Lit. 199, b., 1 Thomas Code 906. In Reading's case, 1 Salk, 392. One tenant in common may disseize the other; but it must be by actual disseizure, as turning him out, hindering him to enter, etc. But a bare perception of profits is not enough. In Hellings v. Byrd, 11 East. 50, per curiam, "One tenant in common in possession, claiming the whole and denying possession to the other, is beyond the mere act of receiving the whole rent, which is equivocal. This was certainly evidence of an ouster of his companion." In that case there was a demand and refusal. In Fisher v. Proper, 1 Cowp. 217, the question came before Lord Mansfield, who brought to it his usual freedom in putting a case on its reason. He says, "So in the case of tenants in common, the possession of one tenant in common; eo nomine, as tenant in common, can never bar his companion; because such possession is adverse to the right of his companion, but in support of their common title, and by paying him his share he acknowledges him cotenant. Nor, indeed, is a refusal to pay, of itself, sufficient, without denying his title. But if, upon demand by the cotenant of his moiety, the other declines to pay, and denies his title, saying he claims the whole and will not pay, and continues in possession, such possession is ouster enough."
It will be seen that none of these cases are precisely in point with the present.
In the absence of direct authority, we turn to analogies, and we find this decided: That where a bailee is put in possession of personal property, he can not change the nature of his possession by any mere words claiming the whole. He must do some act, as a refusal upon (155) demand, or the like, before his possession becomes adverse. Koonce v. Perry,
To apply the analogy: In this case, the defendant was in the sole reception of the profits for upwards of seven years; but her original entry must be understood to have been permissive, and under the assertion *113 of her own claim and that of her co-tenant. There is no evidence that it was otherwise. In such case no mere subsequent claim of hers to the whole could make her possession adverse. It required some act. We think, therefore, the possession of the defendant, at the time the action was brought, was not adverse, and consequently the action will not lie. This renders it unnecessary to consider any question supposed to arise out of the statute of limitations.
If the possession was not adverse from the beginning of the defendant's possession, there is no room for the statute under such interpretation.
PER CURIAM. — Judgment reversed; and judgment here for the defendant.
Cited: Neely v. Neely,
(156)