Opinion
(June Term, 1856.)
A possession of seven years, under color of title, gives a good title against all the world, except the State, and a subsequent possession of thirty years, makes good the title against the State; although a large part of this thirty years possession was adverse to the person using, who is saved from its effect by the accumulated disabilities of infancy and coverture.
ACTION OF EJECTMENT, tried before his Honor, Judge PERSON, at the Spring Term, 1856, of Warren Superior Court.
Winston, Sen'r., for plaintiff.
Moore, for defendant.
Solomon Walker took possession of the land described in the declaration, under color of title, in 1790, and died in 1791, leaving an only son, John Walker, who continued in possession under his father's title, until his death, in 1802. In the same year, and after the death of John Walker, John Washington took possession, and claimed and used the land, as his own, until his death, in 1826; and, by his last will and testament, devised it in fee to his widow, Delphia Washington, and she continued in possession, claiming it as her own, till 1849, when she conveyed it in fee to the defendant, Joseph II. Gooch, who has been in possession ever since. John Walker left him surviving, his infant daughter, Betsy, who intermarried with one Hopgood in 1817, under the age of twenty-one years, and died covert, in 1831, leaving her daughter the feme lessor surviving, who afterwards, in 1842, intermarried with John R. Taylor, under the age of twenty-one. Hopgood moved away from the State in 1842, and has not been heard of since. In 1815, John Washington was appointed guardian of Betsy Walker, by the County Court of Granville.
Upon this state of facts, the Court charged the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Plaintiff excepted.
Verdict and judgment for the defendant, and appeal by the plaintiff.
The rule that the plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title, either as being in itself good against all the world, or good against the defendant by estoppel, is too well established in the law of this State, to be in the slightest degree shaken by the elaborate argument of the plaintiff's counsel. Duncan v. Duncan, 3 Ire. Rep. 316; Clark v. Diggs, 6 Ire. Rep. 159. As early as the year 1816, it was said by Mr. Mordecai, who argued for the plaintiff in the case of Shepherd v. Shepherd, N.C. Term, Rep. 108, that he did not intend to controvert the rule so long established, that the plaintiff in ejectment must recover on the strength of his own title. We do not intend to weaken the foundation of the rule by supposing it to be, at this day, open for discussion.
We are as little convinced, by the argument of counsel that Mr. Washington, who entered upon the land and claimed it as his own for several years, became the possessor of it for the infant heir of the ancestor of the plaintiff's lessor, by the mere fact of being appointed by the County Court her guardian.
It is unnecessary, however, to discuss this question, because we are satisfied that the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon other principles which are well established by the decisions of this Court. In the case of Fitzrandolph v. Norman, N.C. Term, Rep. 134, one of the questions was, whether a grant from the State, in favor of the defendant, could be presumed from the possession of tenants, between whom and the defendant no privity could be shown. SEAWELL, J. said the Judge did right in leaving the facts of the possession in 1768 and 1769 to the jury, though there was no connexion proved between such possession and that under which the defendant claimed. For, as against the State, it was a circumstance from which it might be inferred that the State had parted with a right, as well as if those in possession had been successive claimants from one another. The evidence offered in such a case, was not to make a title in the defendant, but to oust the claim of the State. DANIEL, J. remarked, that "the defendant rested his defense upon length of possession, connected with a chain of circumstances as evidence to presume a grant had once been issued. And it was quite immaterial whether the grant issued to that person under whom he immediately claimed, or whether it issued to any person or persons no way connected with him." RUFFIN, J. concurred, for the reasons given by SEAWELL, J. The principle decided in this case was referred to and confirmed in Chandler v. Lunsford, 4 Dev. and Bat. Rep. 407, and again in Reed v. Earnhart, 10 Ire. Rep. 516. In the last case the Court went further, and held, that a continuous unceasing possession is not necessary to raise the presumption of a grant. The leading idea, in the opinion of the Court, is that, "when land has been for a long time treated and enjoyed as private property, the presumption must be made that the State has parted with its title, unless the presumption is repelled by proof, that such is not the fact." The presumption being made that the title is out of the State, the contest between individual claimants must be decided according to the well-established rules of property, applicable to each case. For the purpose of illustrating this idea, PEARSON, J. made the following suppositions: "A plaintiff in ejectment shows color of title, and seven years possession in the lessor, he then shows a grant in the defendant; this entitles him to recover. So, if he shows that the defendant was in possession under color of title, twenty-one years, or without color of title, thirty years, or, that the defendant was in possession twenty-four years when the lessor evicted him, the defendant's possession for twenty-four years, added to the lessor's possession of seven years, takes the title out of the State, which is sufficient for the purpose of the plaintiff; the State is presumed so have parted with her title, because A is permitted to keep possession twenty-four years, and B, who evicts him, seven years." The principle deducible from these supposed cases is, that a possession of land for more than thirty years, raises a presumption that the State has made a grant of the land to some person, but without fixing on any particular person, leaving that to be settled by others rules of law. Apply this to the present case. The seven years possession, under color of title, of the feme lessor's ancestors, Solomon and John Walker, gave the latter a good title against all the world except the State. The subsequent possession of the defendant, and those from whom he claimed, for more than thirty years, raised the presumption that the State had parted with its title, and yet, did not bar the title of the feme lessor, because she, and her mother, from whom she claimed, were all the time under the disabilities of non-age and coverture; indeed, the possession of John Washington, did not avail anything as against the title under which the feme lessor claimed, because it was unaccompanied by color of title. The possession of his widow as devisee under his will, was otherwise, but could not ripen into a good title, for the reason given above, that the feme lessor and her mother were laboring under disabilities. If these principles be correct, it follows that the charge of his Honor, in the Court below, was erroneous, and the judgment must be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.