Carrico v. McGee
Carrico v. McGee
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Rachael McGee, claiming as the devisee of Patrick McGee (the junior patentee,) obtained a verdict and judgment in ejectment, for sixty and one-third acres of land, against Levi Carrico and Lewis Edelin, who attempted to defend the possession by shewing a derivation of title from Banks and Stephens, the elder grantees. To reverse that judgment, Carrico and Edelin have appealed, and McGee has prosecuted a writ of error.
The appellants insist that, the circuit court erred to their prejudice, in deciding that they were estopped to set up their title under Banks and Stephens, for sixty and one-third acres, of the hundred acres in contest. And the plaintiff in error complains because the defendants were permitted to defend their possession of the residuary thirty-nine and two-third acres, by relying on a title derived under the elder grant.
It appears very clearly from the proof, that no person claiming under, or connected with, the elder grant had actual possession of any part of the land in contest from about the year 1803 to 1323, when Carrico (claim
But the counsellor the appellants argue, that it was the province of the jury, and not of the court, to decide how and under what title Carrico entered. Tt is true that, in determining under what title the entry was made, facts must be considered : but it is equally true, that the court had a right to decide on the competency of the adversary title papers, or on the legal right of the appellants to rely on them ; and, as indispensable to that decision, the court had a right to decide whether the facts proved that,the entry was made under the title of McGee, or of Banks. Hamilton vs. Taylor, Lit. Sel. Cases,. 444. That decision, whether right or wrong, has been re-cognised too often to be now disturbed. Where there are opposing facts as to the mode of entry, that case might not be conclusively applicable. But we are unwilling to withhold its full application to a case in which the tenancy is admitted, or to one in which there is no contrariety of testimony as to the character of the entry as tenant.
But, as there was no proof that the persons from whom Carrico obtained the possession, occupied, or had a right to hold or claim, more than the sixty and one-third acres, his entry upon the residue of the one hundred acres should
It seems, therefore, that the circuit court decided correctly.
Wherefore the judgment must be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.