11 Gratt. 420 | Va. | 1854
I think the first instruction given to the jury on the motion of the demandants’ counsel, will not bear the construction placed upon it by the counsel for the plaintiff in error in this court. He supposes that it confined the tenant to proof of adversary possession under the grant obtained upon his inclusive survey, and deprived him of the right of going behind that patent, and for the purpose of making out his defence under the statute of limitations, of showing possession under -color of title anterior to its emanation. That he had the right to do so will not be denied. For this purpose he was authorized to give in -evidence the entries for the different tracts embraced in the inclusive survey; the order of court authorizing the survey, and the survey made in pursuance of the order; though as there can be no adversary possession
But in truth the tenant could not have been prejudiced if he had been restricted to his inclusive patent as the basis of the claim of title under which he held possession, because that patent issued in 1797, and it was not necessary, in order to complete the bar under the statute, to carry back the adversary possession
The instruction to the jury that the possession which would avail the tenant under the statute of limitations must be an actual and continued adversary possession of the land in controversy, or some part thereof, is, I think, strictly correct, nor do I perceive how there can be any objection to it. If the tenant had not had such possession, he could not maintain this defense. The actual adversary possession of the premises in controversy is the very essence of a defense under the statute of limitations. Its effect is to render such possession conclusive in behalf of either demandant or tenant, without reference to the original merits of the controversy, and even against the plainest and most convincing proof of better original title. To say that a party sued for land in his possession is defending himself under the statute of limitations, is exactly equivalent to saying that he is seeking to defeat the action by proving actual adversary possession of the subject in controversy in himself and those under whom he claims, for the period necessary to complete the bar. How he is to make out this possession, whether by proof of actual settlement and occupancy, or of such open, notorious and habitual acts of ownership importing the use and enjoyment of the property, and equivalent to actual occupancy, or by proof of such actual occupation and enjoyment of another portion of the tract claimed by him, of which the disputed premises is also parcel, is a totally different question. This involves other and distinct principles, and especially the enquiry in what sense the rule that
In this state of the case, if the junior patentee settle upon that portion of the land within the interlock, claiming the whole within his boundary, he thereby ousts the senior patentee of his constructive seizin, and becomes actually possessed to the extent of his grant. Calk v. Lynn's heirs, 1 A. K. Marsh. R. 346; West v. Price's heirs, 2 J. J. Marsh. R. 380; Fox v. Hinton, 4 Bibb’s R. 559. Here possession of part is possession of the whole. But if his settlement be outside of the interlock, there the possession of part is to be construed in reference to the conflict of boundaries,
There is nothing in any of the cases cited by the counsel for the plaintiff, in conflict with the opinion above expressed. In the cases of Green v. Liter, 8 Cranch’s R. 229; Clarke v. Courtney, 5 Peters’ R. 319; Bradstreet v. Huntington, Ibid. 402; Taylor v. Burnsides, 1 Gratt. 165; and Overton v. Davisson, Ibid. 211, the possession relied on was within the limits of the opposing claim, and so the question did not and could not arise. In the case of Taylor v. Burnsides, however, Judge Baldwin, in the able and luminous opinion delivered by him, adverts to this question, and expresses
It is objected to the third instruction, first, that it is abstract in its character; secondly, that it is not law. That an instruction presents merely an abstract proposition, is certainly a very sufficient reason why a court may refuse to give it: but if given and it state the law correctly, I am not aware that it has ever been held a sufficient cause for reversing the judgment. And though erroneous, it would, as it seems, not be deemed sufficient to reverse. Hunter v. Jones, 6 Rand. 541. But the instruction was not of this character; for there was evidence in the case which might involve the question as to the nature of the acts which would amount to an adversary possession. And whatever doubts may formerly have been entertained as to the correctness of the doctrine which it asserts, it must now be regarded as settled in Virginia by the cases of Taylor v. Burnsides, 1 Gratt. 165, and Overton v. Davisson, Ibid. 211. The authority of these cases upon the points decided by the court, has been, I believe, universally acquiesced in by the profession, and I deem it unnecessary to do more than simply to refer to them : They will be found fully to cover the instruction in all its breadth; and indeed the language in which it is expressed would seem to have been adopted from the judgment of the court in Overton v. Davisson. If it be said that “ the acts of ownership” effecting a change in their condition which shall constitute an adversary possession of lands uncleared and
I think the motion for a new trial was properly overruled. The contest in the case turned upon the statute of limitations; and to make out the defense it was necessary for the tenant to carry back the possession of those under whom he claimed to July 1779. There was no proof of possession of any part of the lands covered by the inclusive patent prior to the year 1800 ; nor was there proof of any actual possession or entry upon the disputed portion prior to the year 1812. In the view I have taken of the case, there was no disseizin of the demandants’ ancestor prior to the year last named. But if even the possession of part of the land without the interlock could be regarded as importing adversary possession of the portion within, and thus working a disseizin, still the evidence fails to carry it back far enough to complete the bar. From the possession in 1800 no inference can legitimately be drawn that the same party had had possession for the previous year. Nor do the circumstances referred to, the making the inclusive survey, obtaining the patent thereon, probable notice of those proceedings to the demandants’ ancestor, &c., &c., constitute any proof of such possession as is necessary to work a disseizin. They tend to make out rather a case of adverse claim than one of adversary possession; and they fall within the influence of the rules in Taylor v. Burnsides and Overton v. Davisson. Nor do they raise, in connection with the possession in 1800, any necessary presumption of previous posses
As to the supposed misunderstanding of the instructions by some of the jury: I will remark that while affidavits of jurors will generally be received in support of their verdict, they will not readily be received to invalidate it. The cases in the books upon this subject are numerous ; and it is true, in the multitude of decisions there will appear to be some contrariety; and quite a number of cases are to be found in which such affidavits have been received for the purpose of impeaching verdicts, and new trials have been sometimes granted. But the leaning of the courts of most approved authority is against the practice of grounding such motions upon them; and a disposition has been manifested greatly to restrict the class of cases in which, upon such affidavits, new trials will be allowed. In the case of Harnsberger v. Kinney, 6 Gratt. 287, Judge Allen, delivering the opinion of the court, states strongly the reasons founded on principles of public policy for discouraging a resort to evidence of this character. It was a case in which a new trial was asked for on the ground that the instruction of the court had been misunderstood by some of the jury. The Circuit court had set aside the verdict and granted the new trial; and this court reversed the judgment of the Circuit court, and proceeded to render judgment on the verdict. I should therefore feel very reluctant to entertain a motion for a new trial, upon the ground that some of the jurors, as disclosed by their own affidavits, had misunderstood the instructions of the court in a case in which the court before which the trial was had, had refused to set aside the verdict as contrary to evidence, and in which, so far as this court could see, full justice had been done.
But in truth, were it not for the statement in the
There remains to be considered but one other question, and that is as to the effect of the imperfect description of the land in the count, and the variance between it and the verdict as to quantity and boundaries. And on my first examination, I felt some difficulty on this point. Further reflection, however, has served to remove -it. The form of the count in a writ
Upon the whole case, I am of opinion to affirm the judgment.
The other judges concurred in the opinion of XiEE, J.
Judgment affirmed..