29 N.C. 135 | N.C. | 1846
Where any person, or the person under whom he claims, shall have been or shall continue to be in possession of any lands whatever under titles derived from sales made either by creditors, executors, or administrators of any person deceased, or by husbands and their wives, or by indorsement of patents, or other colorable title for the space of twenty-one years, all such possessions of lands under such title shall be and are declared good, and are a bar against the entry (137) of any person under the right or claim of the State, provided
the possession so set up shall have been ascertained and identified under known and visible lines or boundaries. Rev. Stat., 372. If the defendant had rested his defense solely under this statute, then color of title would have been indispensable for him. But this statute does not affect the common-law principle of presuming a grant. Fitzrandolph v.Norman,
PER CURIAM. New trial.
Cited: May v. Mfg. Co.,
(139)