21 S.E. 699 | N.C. | 1895
In his complaint the plaintiff alleged that he held title and possession of a certain tract of land, which he described by metes and bounds, and charged that defendant had trespassed upon it. The defendant denied all these allegations and set up, by way of counter-claim, that he was the owner and was in the possession of a specified tract of land, a part of which was embraced in the boundaries of that described in the complaint. In order to support an action for simple trespass, a plaintiff must show, where any person is holding adversely, actual possession, but in the absence of adverse occupation, the constructive possession, which proof of title draws to him, is sufficient. Harris v.Sneeden,
Whether this is a case in which the question of costs is the main point, as in Futrell v. Deanes, ante, 38, or is merely incidental to an appeal which involves the validity of the judgment, as in Hobson v. Buchanan,
Cited: Vanderbilt v. Johnson,
(848)