131 S.E. 627 | N.C. | 1926
The complaint consists of the usual allegations in an action to recover land. The answer joins issue and sets up the defense of possession for thirty years under known and visible lines and boundaries and for twenty-one years and for seven years under color of title. Verdict:
1. Are the plaintiffs the owners of and entitled to the possession of the land described in the complaint? Answer: No.
2. Does the defendant unlawfully withhold possession of said land? Answer: __________.
Judgment for the defendant; appeal by plaintiffs upon errors assigned. The plaintiffs brought this suit to recover the tract represented on the plat by the letters ABXA. The defendant claims to be the owner of the lot designated by the letters YBAXY; but the plaintiffs say that her boundaries are limited by YBXY. On the trial the plaintiffs offered record evidence tending to show that in 1855 William S. *221 Battle was the owner of a large tract of land including the locus in quo; that in 1865 he divided the tract into two parcels, conveying one part to T. H. Griffin and the other to Willie B. Ricks; that by mesne conveyance the plaintiffs acquired title under Griffin to ABXA and the defendant under Ricks to YBXY. After putting in evidence their own chain of title the plaintiffs, for the purpose of showing a common source,
[EDITORS' NOTE: THE MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.], SEE
191 N.C. 221 .]
introduced the deeds under which the defendant claims. The description in the defendant's deed is as follows: "Adjoining the land of Will Harris and Jones Smith and others, bounded as follows: Being in the section of Rocky Mount, known as Little Raleigh, and beginning at a stake in the southern line of Grace Street, Jones Smith corner; thence in a northern direction with the western line of Grace Street, 64 feet to a stake, Will Harris corner; thence along Will Harris line 185 feet, more or less, to Garvey and Jones Smith corner; thence with Jones *222 Smith's northern line 120 feet, more or less, to the beginning, and being all of the land formerly owned by Calvin Battle, between the northern line of Jones Smith and the southern line of Will Harris, see deed from Jones Smith and wife to John Battle, Book 154, page 228, Nash County Registry."
The defendant contends that this description embraces YBAXY and takes in the disputed land; that the deeds under which she claims are color of title; that she and her predecessors held possession under known and visible lines and boundaries and under colorable title for seven years before the institution of the action; and that the plaintiffs are thereby barred. C.S., 428. On the other hand the plaintiffs say that the defendant's deed does not include ABXA and that the defendant could not have had color of title to this lot. These inconsistent positions require an interpretation of the defendant's deed. In Quelch v. Futch,
If it is shown that the northern boundary of the Calvin Battle land was XB at the date of his conveyance to Jones Smith, it will follow as an inference of law that the defendant's lot is bounded by the three designated lines, that is (1) the line extending from the beginning corner in the southern line of Grace Street with the western line of the street to Will Harris' corner; (2) the line running thence to the Garvey-Smith corner; and (3) the line running thence to the beginning — the location of course to be determined by the jury.
As to the title and the burden of proof the jury were instructed as follows: "The burden is upon them (the plaintiffs) to show that they *224 have been in possession of the land inside of the seven years, within the seven years, or that their deeds cover the land and that the defendant has not been in possession of the land within the seven years. To make it plain to you, the defendant pleads the statute of limitation and therefore the burden is upon the plaintiffs and not upon the defendant to satisfy you that they have the title to the land."
This instruction was erroneous. "It is settled that where the title deeds of two rival claimants to land lap upon each other, and neither is in the actual possession of any of the land covered by both deeds, the law adjudges the possession of the lappage to be in him who has the better title. If one be seated on the lappage and the other not, the possession of the whole interference is in the former. Green v. Harman,
The plaintiffs offered evidence tending to show a common source of title (if the defendant's deed should include the locus in quo) and that their claim was superior to that of the defendant. Under these circumstances it was incumbent upon the defendant to show by the preponderance of the evidence that she and those under whom she claims had held adverse possession for seven years under color of title. In Land Co. v. Floyd,
New trial.