111 S.E. 774 | N.C. | 1922
This is an action, in the nature of an action for trespass, to recover damages from the defendant for cutting and removing timber from that portion of the plaintiff's land, known as the J. F. Watkins tract of land, which lies between Poley Branch and the highwater mark of the mill-pond lying north of the Poley Branch. The plaintiff acquired the title to this timber by mesne conveyances from J. F. Watkins for the timber of the J. F. Watkins tract of land, which included the timber alleged to have been unlawfully and wrongfully cut and removed by the defendant, that is, the timber in controversy being on the land between the Poley Branch and the high-water mark of the branch on the north side, and the jury found that the defendant committed the trespass by cutting and removing the timber, as alleged. *462
In order to establish ownership of the timber, the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that J. F. Watkins had been in the adverse and continuous possession of the land for more than forty years before his death in 1913, claiming it as his own and as belonging to him in his own right, and the case was submitted to the jury by the court only in this view, that is, whether J. F. Watkins had acquired title to the land by such an adverse possession of it by him. This fact it seems to us eliminates many of the objections made and questions raised by the defendant. One of its contentions being that the adverse possession of J. F. Watkins could not be considered as against his wife, Mrs. Watkins, who was the daughter of Daniel B. Newton. But we do not understand from the record that it ever was so allowed to have effect. It does not even appear that his wife had any title to the land, or that she even claimed any, but all that does appear in that respect tends to show the contrary to be the case.
We may refer to one part of the evidence from which it would appear that the wife did not claim the land, nor did her children, but at J. F. Watkins' death the tract of land on which the timber in controversy stood was divided by order of court among his heirs alone, without any claim or suggestion that Mrs. Watkins was interested at all in it. It appears from the syllabus of the case relied on by the defendant that it was there were held as follows: "The possession of lands by the husband under a deed made to him by his wife, for noncompliance with Rev. 2107, is for the benefit of the wife, and during the continuance of the marriage relation during her life cannot be considered as adverse to her and ripen title in him by sufficient adverse possession. Semble, after her death his possession would be adverse possession against her heirs; and quaere as to whether it would be such before demand is made for possession." Kornegay v. Price,
It was, of course, competent to show where the land was situated that had been trespassed upon by cutting the trees and what damage had been done to it, not only that which arose from cutting and removing the trees, but how, and to what extent, the remaining land had been injured, or depreciated in value, by the acts of trespass, so that the full amount of the damages could be estimated. It was also competent and pertinent to show where the "high-water mark" and Poley Branch were, *463 as they were alleged to have been called for in the deed. There was something said about tampering with the deed of H. J. Faison and wife to the defendant, those witnesses having testified that they had only conveyed to the defendant the timber to the high-water mark of the millpond, which was the southern boundary of their land, and that the deed then exhibited was not the one they signed and delivered to the defendant, that the sheets were now of different width, one of the four sheets not being like the others; and that the deed was torn, but, as we have said, this evidence proved to be harmless owing to the careful and discriminating manner in which the learned judge charged the jury and restricted their attention solely to the question as to the adverse possession of J. F. Watkins, the cutting of the timber and the damages. If the defendant had mutilated the deed of Faison and wife, or defaced it in any material way, we do not see why it was not competent to show it upon the question of the defendant's good faith in claiming the land, and denying the trespass; and as impeaching the validity of the defense, and as showing the true location of the defendant's land to be different from what it was claimed to be. And further, it was admissible to show that the alleged spurious deed differed from the original as signed by Faison and wife, and in what respects it differed, so as to establish the real boundaries of the land as they conveyed it. In this connection the plaintiff contended that notwithstanding the testimony of H. J. Faison and wife that the paper exhibited to the court by the defendant as the deed from them was not the original deed so delivered to the defendant, the defendant failed to offer any evidence explanatory of the appearance of the paper and of the other facts testified by H. J. Faison and wife tending to establish the falsification of the said paper, and that the deed to the defendant's grantor, H. J. Faison, limits his boundaries to the high-water mark, yet the defendant is undertaking in this action to claim title to the timber on the land between the high-water mark and the run of Poley Branch by virtue of a (433) conveyance which its grantors declare bears a substituted page which changes, as the witnesses testify, the true description by erasing the words "high-water mark" and substituting therefor "the run of Poley Branch." This evidence as to the alteration of the deed was not used, so far as we can discover from the record, for any purpose to which it was not relevant, even if it was met with proper objection at the time it was offered.
We will not consider the alleged alteration with reference to its legal effect upon the continued validity of the deed itself, but only so far as it may have influenced the jury in determining the location of the lands *464 in controversy and upon the question whether there had been a trespass by the defendant.
The objections to the testimony of A. T. Griffin were not well taken. He had denied the trespass by the defendant company of which he was the general manager, and testified to the comparative value of the timber and it was competent to cross-examine him as to those matters and with reference to the Faison deed to the defendant, in order to test the value of his testimony, and especially as to the value of the land and timber and the damages (Gay v. R. R.,
Numerous exceptions were taken to testimony consisting of several distinct parts, without indicating more particularly the ground of the objection. This we have held to be too general. Holmes v. R. R.,
Upon a review of the case and a due consideration of the exceptions noted by the defendant, we are of the opinion that it was correctly tried.
No error.
Cited: State v. Nelson,