Lamar v. Raysor
Lamar v. Raysor
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiffs, in this action to try title, had the evidence of paramount paper title, The defendants undertook to show, that the plaintiffs had been divested, by the adverse possession, on the part of one William Brown, (from whom the defendants derived their claim of title,) of the locus in quo. Upon the evidence received and submitted to the jury, they have established, by their verdict, that William Brown acquired title to the land in dispute, by seven consecutive years of adverse possession, beginning as early as 1808. This result supersedes any question whether five years adverse possession would have been sufficient to divest Twining, (who was absent from the State,) by reason that his co-tenant, Breen, was in the State; that is to say, whether the right of action of any co-tenant of realty is preserved by the circumstance of the absence beyond seas, of one co-tenant, or of other recognized disability, for the term appropriate to each disability respectively, in like manner as in the case of minority on the part of one of several co-tenants. The utmost time, that of seven years, has been allowed
The case of McRa vs. Smith (Note, 2 Brevard’s Dig., 25) established a rule which has never been disavowed, to wit: that one occupying land, using and claiming it as his own, acquires immunity against action, even by the creditor of the judgment debtor, or the purchaser at. sheriff’s sale under the judgment, after the proper lapse of time. Judge Waties so ruled on circuit, and his judgment was approved, on appeal, by Grimke, Bay, Johnson and Trezevant. The like doctrine had been previously announced in Cholett vs. Hart (2 Bay, 156) as to personalty, and Waties, J., then held, that the A. A., 1712, called the statute of limitations, applied equally to bar actions, notwithstanding the liens of judgments, as to realty and personalty— and that otherwise the great end of the Act, the quieting of possessions, would be defeated. We hold that in view of the declared purpose of the Act of 1712, the complete barring of the action against an adverse occupier, it operates to divest the former true owner of title, and invest the occupier with it. Carrying this consideration along, it will be obvious that the difference is wide between breaking the continuity of adverse possession, by a sale on the part of one occupier of land, or holder of personalty, before he is invested with title, to another; and the
Another question is, whether the recovery of judgment by certain co-tenants of the plaintiffs, against one John M. Basset, in 1848 operated an estopel against the defendants, on the footing that he was their tenant. Basset said that the ancestor of defendants put him on the land in dispute; that the ancestor died, leaving, as heirs, infants of tender years; that he set up no claim to the land, and that he gave no notice'to the defendants. Of course we are to assume, that the defendants were in possession, or some of them, representing the class who were in equali jure ; arid that a writ of possession turned them out with Basset, so that they re-entered, after a formal ejectment in behalf of Hill and wife, who sued. Under such circumstances it would be very hazardous to hold the defendants bound by the law of estoppel, arising out of a recovery against Basset, when it is manifest that the right and title disputed now, was not in contest then. We maintain the judgment on circuit upon this point, and reason enough for it may be found in the case of Chirac vs. Reineiker, 2 Peters, 613.
We agree with Chancellor DeSaussure (Hillegas vs. Hartley)(
We may remark, that in the present instance, the paper offered and rejected was designed to subserve a purpose merely collateral and subsidary — and the most stringent proof of even an original paper, or the highest grade of evidence, is not, in general, required tor such matter. It may turn out, and we surmise that it will, (since we hear that the original has been found,) to be of no avail in the next trial, how we decide this point, but ex débito justicies, and to avoid the force of an unsafe precedent, we order a new trial upon the last ground considered.
(a) 1 Hill, Oh. 106.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I regret to have to record a dissent in such a matter as that now in hand. I understand the Court to be perfectly satisfied with the ruling and result of the case below, in every respect, except the rejection of the record of. the deed from William Brown to James Brown. Upon this ground, strangely to my apprehension, the case is to go back. I think that the decision below, rejecting it, was right. It was a naked record of a deed, without any evidence, or proof, of execution. The 30th section of the Act of 1731, 3 Stat., 303, provides “ that the records of all grants in the office of the said auditor general, or his deputy, and the records of all grants and deeds duly proved before a justice of the peace, according to the usual method” in this Province, “and recorded, or to be recorded in the Register’s office of this Province, and also the attested copies thereof,' shall be deemed to be as good evidence in the law, and of the same force and effect, as the original would have been, if produced, in all Courts of Law and Equity.” It is not de
It is supposed that the registry presumes all things done rightly. That would be true, if the contrary did not appear. If the Register had said that the deed was proved, and recorded, then we should presume every thing right; but the copy and the record shew no such thing was done. Indeed, since the trial, the original is found, and no probate, of any kind, indorsed upon it. The Act of 1843,11 Stat., 255, only permits an office-copy to be given in evidence, after notice, where the paper had been properly admitted to record.
But if the decision was wrong, it by no means follows that the case must go back. The deed was wholly immaterial and irrelevant. ' Indeed, it made so little impression on me, that I overlooked it altogether in making up my report. The question before the Court was, whether William Brown, under his grant of 1808, had possession for seven years, before 1818. This deed relates to the Powell grant, older than the plaintiffs’. It lies in one corner of the William Brown grant. Any possession on it, it was ruled, could not give title to the William Brown grant of 1808. How that deed could have any effect on that question, will be difficult of shewing.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.