14 S.E. 317 | N.C. | 1891
The land was known as lot number 8, which was assigned to Elizabeth, the widow of J. A. Henning, by consent, for her lifetime in lieu of dower. She died in 1844, when the seven heirs at law, children of her marriage with J. A. Henning, held the land as tenants in (407) common. It is not necessary to set forth the evidence in detail. William Henning continued to live on the land until he died, about 1887, but conveyed it to the defendant Warner by deed, dated 15 November, 1883. *296
Katie, a sister of William, lived with him on the land till she died. Her daughter Bettie continued to live with William after the death of Katie, and on the death of Bettie, Viney, her daughter and a granddaughter of Katie, continued to live on the land till a year ago, or two years after the death of William.
There was testimony tending to show that William Henning, during all of this period, received the rents and paid the taxes. There was, also, testimony tending to show that the rents were received by him and his sister Kate and divided between them, and were later divided between him and her daughter, Bettie, and still later that he shared the rents with the granddaughter Viney. It was also in evidence for the defendant that about two years before the action was brought on the ____ day of ___________, 1890, Viney, who has now joined the other heirs at law as plaintiffs, asked his permission to be allowed to stay on the land, and remained, by his permission and on condition of good behavior, till the fall preceding the trial. Only one issue was submitted which, with the response to it, was as follows: "Are the plaintiffs tenants in common with the defendant in the land set out in the petition? Yes."
At October Term, 1890, the following order was entered: "It is ordered by the court that if no bond is filed before Tuesday of the next term of this court, the case stands dismissed."
When the case was called for trial the defendant moved to dismiss for non-compliance with this order. His Honor, exercising his (408) discretion, allowed the plaintiffs to file a bond, and refused to dismiss.
For alleged error in instructions given to the jury, the defendant appealed.
"Alternative or conditional judgments at law are void in civil as well as in criminal cases." Strickland v. Cox,
The testimony would have possibly supported any one of three specific findings of fact, certainly either of two. (409)
1. That William Henning, by his adverse possession for twenty years, had acquired title to the whole interest in the land in fee simple, and had conveyed the whole to the defendant Warner.
2. That William Henning and his sister Katie, succeeded by her descendants, had been jointly in the perception of the profits for over twenty years, and had thereby acquired title as tenants in common, each to one undivided half, and that, consequently, only an undivided half passed by William's deed to Warner, the title to the other half being in Viney, and subject to the assertion of her right in it, until, by joining in the petition, she was estopped of record from denying that the other heirs at law were entitled to share equally with her, whatever interest she held.
3. That there was, in fact, no adverse possession on the part of William or Katie and her daughter or granddaughter, and consequently the undivided fee was still vested in the heirs at law of J. A. Henning, according to their several interests, as his descendants.
It is evident that the jury did not believe that William Henning had acquired the whole undivided fee, and consequently that the defendant Warner was sole seized. They have found that the plaintiffs and the defendant are tenants in common, and have, thereby, negatived the idea of sole seizin in him. If the court submitted on the question whether Warner was sole seized (and we so understand its charge) it was error, because the instruction asked by the defendant certainly raised a question as to the effect of the occupancy of Katie and Viney, supposing that they were successively in the joint perception of the profits with William Henning for twenty years. Instead of presenting this question, the court told the jury "that the possession of Viney Henning could only be taken as a circumstance tending to show that William Henning's possession was not adverse to that of plaintiffs." In giving this instruction there was error. (410) *298
The two, William and Katie and her issue, occupied the land from 1844 to till 1889, certainly, during which time no rents were received by others of the heirs of J. A. Henning. If they were jointly receiving the rents, the possession inured equally to the benefit of both, and at the end of twenty years, nothing more appearing than that they did so enjoy the profits, the law raised a presumption from the fact that the other heirs, not shown to be under disability, had failed to assert any dominion over the land, that they had conveyed their interest to those in possession, or abandoned all claim to it. Avent v. Arrington,
If the jury believed that Katie, and afterwards Viney, were on the land, not as the pensioners of William, but as the recipients successively of an equal share of the profits derived from it, the presumption would arise that in 1883, when William conveyed to the defendant Warner, he was the owner as tenant in common with Viney of only one undivided half, and conveyed to Warner only that interest. It was a question for the jury to determine, from the conflicting testimony, what were the relations of William and his sister and her daughter and granddaughter as residents upon the land, but if the whole evidence, or the substance of it, is set forth in the statement of the case on appeal, it may be well to consider whether there was any evidence to go to the jury to rebut the presumption of absolute ownership in the recipient of the rents for over twenty years, as it was not questioned that they were paid either to William Henning or to him and his sister and her heirs.
If the title to one undivided half interest vested in Viney, she could not divest her title by leasing from Warner. If she went in as (411) his tenant in 1889, she was estopped to deny, during her occupancy under the contract with him, that he was the owner, but she was at liberty to reassert her title as against him after abandoning possession. While she could not directly divest herself of that interest, after acquiring it by possession, except by a conveyance of it or by her laches in allowing another to occupy it for the statutory period (Aventv. Arrington, supra,) she might, by joining the other plaintiffs in a petition setting forth, as she has done, that she claims no interest except by inheritance through her mother from her grandmother, estop herself from setting up her claim to the one undivided half, though it had vested in her by possession. The effect would be to give her coplaintiffs equal benefit of her possession as to the one undivided half with herself, but the interest of William Henning, which he conveyed to Warner, would be in nowise enlarged by this pleading, but would, in that event, still remain one undivided half. *299
It will be the duty of the court also, when the case shall be tried again, to require the jury to find more specifically the interests of the tenants in common. It will not be sufficient to find that they sustained that relation to each other. Gilchrist v. Middleton,
There was error, for which a new trial must be awarded.
Error.
(412)