9 S.E. 208 | N.C. | 1889
The complaint filed in this action, which was begun on 17 December, 1887, alleges that Bevil Ellington, being the owner of the tract of land therein described, made up of several parcels and containing about 443 acres, by deed executed in October, 1865, conveyed the same to the defendants Horace Ellington, a son, and William N. Ellington, the husband of his daughter Polly, together with the stock, farming implements and other articles of personal property on the plantation, upon the sole consideration of the support of the grantor and his wife during the residue of their respective lives. *61
It avers further, in reiterated allegations, that the said Bevil was at the time advanced in age, of enfeebled mind and body, unable to understand and measure the consequences of his act to manage and dispose of his property from want of legal capacity, and was, moreover, susceptible to undue influence, taking advantage of which the defendants, by false and fraudulent representations and the exercise of that control which they had acquired over him, procured the making of said deed for the very inadequate consideration expressed therein.
It states that thereafter the said Bevil broke up farming and went himself to live with his son Horace, in whose house and with whose family he continued to reside until his death in August, 1869, while his wife went to and took up her abode with her daughter Polly, where she remained until her death in 1867.
The prayer of the plaintiff, also a son of the said Bevil, is that said deed be declared and adjudged void for the causes aforesaid, and he be admitted to share in the said property as in case of an intestacy, and for general relief.
The answer distinctly and in detail controverts all the averments as to an unsound mind and the want of legal capacity in the said Bevil to make an effectual disposition of his estate; denies the (56) exercise of, or attempt to exercise, any undue or improper influence in procuring the deed and the alleged inadequacy of the obligation assumed as the consideration of the deed, and sets up a defense under the statute of limitations to the action, and the possession under the deed, which, if invalid, is color of title, for more than seven years before the institution of the suit.
The only issue submitted to the jury, and this without objection, was in these words:
"Is the plaintiff's cause of action barred by the statute of limitations?"
Under the instructions of the court as to the law arising upon the facts admitted, as set out in the complaint, for the purpose only of raising the question of the effect of the lapse of time, and reserving the other matter in controversy in the pleadings for further trial in the event of the defense under the statute, and from possession under the deed, being overruled, the issue was found in the affirmative.
Judgment being entered in conformity with the verdict rendered in pursuance of the direction given to the jury to so find, upon the facts stated in the complaint, the plaintiff, understood as excepting thereto, appeals. From the time of making the deed the defendants held possession of the land thereunder until the death of the grantor in August, 1869, and thereafter for a period of more than seventeen years, during all of which, except a half month, the statute was in full operation before the suit was brought.
Assuming the deed to be voidable, the possession under it, as color of title merely, in the absence of any indication of imperfection or (57) infirmity apparent upon its face, would ripen into a good title after the expiration of seven years, unless within three years after the "coming of sound mind," according to the Revised Code, ch. 65, sec. 1, and The Code, sec. 148 (the same language being used in each), the person so entitled commence his suit or make entry on the land. If the disability continued during life and for a period thereafter sufficient to complete the prescribed time of seven years, the title would be perfected in the occupant, subordinate only to a right in the heir to sue for the recovery of the land for the space of three years next after his death. The running of the statute against the action and to consummate the title would be concurrent after the decease of the grantor.
The cause of action to set aside the deed arises at once upon its execution, while the running of the statute was so far arrested in favor of the grantor, supposing him to be of unsound mind, as to admit of the prolonged period of three years after the restoration of reason, or, as we think, after death, to those to whom the estate would have descended, in the absence of any new interrupting personal disability in which to institute suit. Summerlin v. Cowles,
In this view of the case, and aside from the claim of title under the deed as affording color of title, with the support of the hostile possession held for the prescribed time, the bar to the action is complete and effective, whether the former statute or that substituted in The Code be applicable to the case.
While we deem the law settled in this State, whatever may have been the rulings elsewhere, by the case of Riggan v. Green,
Color of title, in connection with an adverse claim and occupation, (58) has been held to perfect the title when furnished by a deed from husband and wife, when there has been no privy examination of the latter (Pearce v. House, 2 Hay., 386); when the deed was executed in the name of a principal, and the agent professing to have authority had none to make it (Hill v. Wilton, 2 Murph., 14); when it was made by a person known by the grantee to have no title (Reddick *63 v. Leggat, 3 Murph., 539); when the deed has never been registered (Campbell v. McArthur, 2 Hawks, 33; Hardin v. Barrett, 6 Jones Law, 159;Hunter v. Kelly,
Color of title, as defined by Gaston, J., speaking for the Court, and with the hesitating assent of the Chief Justice, who favored a less circumscribed statement of the proposition, in Dobson v. Murphy, 1 D. B., 586, requires a party to have "some written document of title purporting topass the land, and one not so obviously defective that it would not havemisled a man of ordinary capacity." Not dissimilar is the definition given in Tate v. Southard, 3 Hawks, 119.
The contention of counsel that, inasmuch as, but for the deed, the inheritance would descend to the plaintiff and defendants as tenants in common, the relation thus created prevents the statutory bar until after the expiration of twenty years, according to the ruling in Hicks v.Bullock,
In no view of the case can the plaintiff prevail, and the judgment must be and is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: Avent v. Arrington,