83 S.E. 755 | N.C. | 1914
Action to recover the possession of land. There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment thereon defendant appealed.
The only question in the case arises upon the exceptions to the charge upon the adverse possession of the defendants under their color of title. If there is any inexact or inaccurate expression of the court, when read by itself, we think the charge, when taken and construed as a whole, each part being given its proper connection and its relation to the other parts, would be perfectly understood by an intelligent jury. We are not authorized to construe it disconnectedly, but must give a fair and reasonable interpretation to the context. Sackett Instructions to Juries (2 Ed.), secs. 23 and 24; Hodges v. Wilson,
It was entirely proper for the court to submit the conflicting evidence to the jury, so that the fact as to the adverse possession might be found under proper instructions of the court. It was not a question of law for him to decide, but a mixed question of fact and law. Hoilman v. Johnson,
There was no error in the trial of the cause that we have been able to discover. The jury simply found the fact, upon the evidence, that defendant's possession was not of the kind required by the law to divest plaintiffs of the true title and vest the same in defendants.
No error.
Cited: Patrick v. Ins. Co.,