32 N.C. 237 | N.C. | 1849
It may seem, at first view, a hardship on the owner of the wild land, situate as this is, and perhaps at a distance from him, to lose his title by reason of a possession of which he, probably, would not, and here, certainly, had not early knowledge. But the law cannot suppose that an owner will not look to the condition of his property, at least so far as to discover an intruder within the period of seven years, and take the necessary steps to assert his own right; and (240) therefore an omission to do so must amount to the laches
for which the law deprives him of his entry and vests the title in the possessor. It follows from these observations that the instructions given to the jury were as favorable to the plaintiff as they could well be. Indeed, it is not easy to comprehend *180
what is meant by a clandestine possession of seven years. One may enter clandestinely or by a trick; but when he is once in and continues there, claiming to hold the land as his own, the possession, it would seem, cannot, in its nature, be secret, but is necessarily visible. The furthest the Court has gone in laying down a doctrine at all applicable to this question was in Green v. Harman,
It seems proper to notice an objection taken in this Court, that a plaintiff could not appeal from a judgment in his own favor, as we have no doubt he may. The inquiry to him is of the same nature, whether the error be in not giving him all or a part of what he is entitled to; and he has a right to the judgment of this Court, whether he ought not to have had a verdict and judgment for all he claimed instead of the small part he got. Hence it is settled at common law that a plaintiff may bring a writ of error on his own judgment, and so he may have his appeal under the statute.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed, with costs against the plaintiff in this Court.
Cited: Pierce v. Wanett, post, 452; Withrow v. Biggerstaff,