| N.C. | Dec 5, 1852

It appeared on the trial, that in 1765 the land in controversy was granted to one Richard Harrison, who died during the Revolution, when one Robert McRee entered thereon, and occupied the same until his death, which took place before the year 1795. Upon the death of Robt. McRee, his son William entered and continued in possession, living thereon, and clearing and cultivating a part thereof, until his death, in the year 1818. The boundaries of the land, and the facts of William McRee's claiming the same, and of clearing and cultivating a part of it, were established in evidence. After his death, the creditors of William McRee instituted proceedings to subject the same to the payment of his debts, and at a sale thereof by the sheriff in 1825, the plaintiff became the purchaser, and on the trial exhibited a judgment, execution, levy, etc., and the deed of the sheriff. It also appeared that the defendant entered upon the said land in the year 1846, and cultivated a part of it, and in 1847 cultivated other parts. It did not appear that the part cultivated by the defendant was the same as that actually cultivated by William McRee in his lifetime; and it was therefore insisted by the defendant, that as McRee had entered and occupied the said land without color of title, his possession was confined to hispossessio pedis; and, as it did not appear that the defendant had cultivated any part of the possessio pedis, the plaintiff could not recover.

His Honor charged the jury, that if William McRee had lived on, and cleared and cultivated the land in question for upwards of twenty years, as testified to by the witness, they ought to presume a conveyance to him; it appearing that said land had been granted, and that William McRee had such an interest in it, as could be sold to pay his debts. There was a verdict for the plaintiff — venire de novo moved for, and refused — judgment in accordance with the verdict, and the defendant appealed. There is no error in the charge of his Honor, (182) before whom the case was tried below; or none, of which the defendant had a right to complain.

William McRee, under whom the lessor of the plaintiff claimed, had lived on the land for upwards of twenty years, claiming and exercising acts of ownership, up to known and visible boundaries. The land had been granted to one Richard Harrison in 1765, and prior to 1795 was in the possession of Robert McRee, who died before that year, and was succeeded in the possession by his son, William McRee, who continued the possession to his death, in 1818. The land was subsequently sold under due process of law, to satisfy a creditor of William McRee, and the lessor of the plaintiff became the purchaser. The defendant entered on the land without any claim of title, was a mere trespasses, but not upon the part which had been cultivated by the McRees. His Honor instructed the jury, that as the land had been granted, if the McRees had been in possession for twenty years, as testified by the witnesses, they ought to presume a conveyance to him. The deposition of a witness, S. N. Richardson, accompanies the case as part of it. He testifies that William McRee was in possession of the Harrison tract prior to 1795, and that he died in the possession, in the fall of 1818; and that he occupied and exercised acts of ownership upon it up to the time of his death. He states further, that John Harrison gave to his brother, Richard, a strip of the land on the lower side, and that William McRee cleared and cultivated land from the upper part of the slip given to Richard, down to Lyon's line, now Bryan's line; and that he continued to do it (that is, to clear and cultivate from the one line to the other, as we understand it), to the time of his death. The case then discloses a continued possession of the land in dispute, by William McRee to the lines of the Harrison patent for upwards of twenty-three years. This possession did not rest in verbal declarations, but in repeated acts of ownership, by clearing and cultivating to those lines, in several and distinct parts — a possession which, if believed by the jury, justified the judge's charge.

Our attention has been called by the defendant's counsel to the case ofBynum v. Thompson, 25 N.C. 578" court="N.C." date_filed="1843-06-05" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/bynum-v--thompson-3647557?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3647557">25 N.C. 578. We do not, upon examination, find that it conflicts with this. In that case, the plaintiff claimed under a grant to one Braswell, which it was alleged covered the locus in quo, and mesne conveyances from some men by the name of Lane to himself; and then proved that one of the Lanes had been in (183) possession of land within the Braswell patent for sixty years, but failed to prove any conveyance from the patentee to him; and in order to ground a presumption of such conveyance, the plaintiff was permitted *180 to give in evidence the declarations of the tenants in possession, that they claimed up to the Braswell lines. The defendant claimed under a grant to Dewry and Baker, of a date subsequent to that of the Braswell grant, and mesne conveyances. These grants overlapped, and the case states that neither party was in the actual possession of the lap, and the declarations of the Lanes were relied on to show that their possession extended to the Braswell lines. The Court said, those declarations were not competent to prove title, or raise a presumption that Braswell had ever conveyed the land to Lane, because it was making a title by parol. The Court says, "When one enters on land without any conveyance, or other thing to show what he does claim, how can the possession, by any presumption or implication, be extended beyond his occupation de facto? To allow him to say he claims to certain boundaries, beyond his occupation, and by construction, to hold his possession to be commensurate with his claim, would be to hold the ouster of the owner without giving him an action therefor." The latter clause is a key to the opinion of the Court; a verbal declaration cannot be an ouster. Where A. and B. are patentees of contiguous tracts of land which overlap, and neither is in the actual occupation of the lappage, the law carries the possession to the elder title; and though each is in possession of other portions of their respective tracts, neither can bring an action against the other, until some act be done upon the disputed part, amounting to a trespass; after such an act done, an action may be brought. But suppose neither A. nor B. be in the actual possession of their respective tracts, and a stranger without any title or right from A., the younger grantee, enters on his land and makes a clearing on it, but not on the lappage — to permit him, by his simple declaration, to extend his possession to the lines of the patent, would be ousting B. without his having it in his power to assert his title. To such a state of facts, we understand the opinion of the Court to extend, in Bynum v. Thompson. The case before (184) us is essentially different. Continued acts of William McRee, by clearing and cultivating the land up to the boundaries of the Harrison patent for upwards of twenty-three years, were proved, during all which time he was exposed to the action of the heirs of Harrison.

There is no error in his Honor's charge, and the judgment is affirmed.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.

Cited: Brown v. Potter, post, 464; Seawell v. Bunch, 51 N.C. 196;McMillan v. Turner, 52 N.C. 437; Rhodes v. Chandler, 55 N.C. 4;Hamilton v. Icard, 114 N.C. 540; May v. Manufacturing Co., 164 N.C. 266. *181

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