Love v. Turner
Love v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The contest in this case is over a tract of land of 100' acres, situated in Cherokee County, and known as the Holloway tract. The exact nature of the action is in dispute. Plaintiff claims it is for the recovery of possession of real property; this is denied by defendánt, who contends that the only cause of action stated in the complaint is for trespass upon the land. The Circuit Judge held it was an action for the recovery of real property, and as such the cause was tried. Plaintiff claimed under the following chain of title set out in his complaint:
1. Grant to' G. B. Palmer, January 18, 1858, the survey dated December 15, 1857, being attached;
2. Warranty deeds from all the heirs of G. B. Palmer, except Mrs. Love, conveying to plaintiff all their rights and interests in the Palmer Gold Mine tract of land, of which the Holloway tract was a part;
3. Will of Mrs. Susan L. Love, executed in the presence of two witnesses in North Carolina, purporting to devise to her husband, the plaintiff, all of her property.
*325 Plaintiff also introduced tax receipts showing that one of the Palmers paid taxes on the Gold Mine tract in 1842, ’46; ’50, ’57, ’61, ’62, ’63, ’70; ’71, ’73; and that plaintiff himself paid taxes on the same tract from 1872 to 1898, inclusive, with the exception of 1873, ’78 and ’91. The land was returned as 484 acres in 1874, from 1880 to- 1885, and from 1893 to 1898; all the other years as 576 acres, the number named in the Palmer grant. Plaintiff -testified that this difference in acreage was without his knowledge or consent.
Defendant, in her answer, denies plaintiff’s title, setting up title in herself, and also pleads the statute of limitations, adverse possession, estoppel, and the pendency of another suit on the same cause of action.
Defendant’s documentary and record proof was as follows :
1. Sheriff’s Sale Book showing the sale of the land in dispute by the sheriff under tax execution May, 1868;
.2. Sheriff’s Sale Book showing the sale of the same land ■in May, 1871, under the judgment in the case of Elizabeth Littlejohn v. A. P. Turner, the land being bid in by A. L. Casey and A. W. Cummings, who assigned their bids to A. C. Merrick;
3. Deed of the Holloway tract from the sheriff to A. C. Merrick, dated October 11, 1879 ;
4. Deed from A. C. Merrick to Geo. S. Turner, conveying the whole tract in dispute, June 17, 1886;
5. Deed from Geo. S. Turner to Duncan & Sanders, conveying one-half interest in the land, November 24, 1888 ;
6. Deed from Duncan & Sanders to< R. B. Powell, conveying the same one-half interest, September 3, 1894, Powell giving a mortgage to- secure the purchase money;
7. Sale of this one-half interest by the mortgagees, Duncan & Sanders, under power in the mortgage, and conveyance of Powell by the mortgagees as his attorneys in fact to themselves, April, 1896;
*326 8. Deed of their one-half interest from Duncan & Sanders to W. N. Turner, defendant’s husband, March 15, 1899;
9. Partition suit between W. N. Turner and the heirs of Geo. S. Turner, under the decree in which the entire Holloway tract was sold by the clerk of Court, and bid in by Mrs. M. J. Turner, she receiving a deed therefor from J. Ebb Jefferies, clerk of court, December 5, 1899.
Defendant offered in evidence a grant, with survey attached, to Mose Waters, dated August 6, 1817, which purported to convey the Holloway tract. She did not attempt to connect herself with this grant, however, but introduced it merely to show that the State had already parted with its title at the time of the Palmer grant in 1858.
Evidence was offered tending to prove that G. B. Palmer continued in possession under his grant until 1865, when he died intestate, and his two sons and the plaintiff administered upon his estate. His son, T. W. Palmer, who' seems to' have represented the estate as ho this land, having failed for several years to pay the taxes, it was sold for taxes in 1868, and bid in by A. P. Turner, but it appears that he failed to comply with his bid. There was also' evidence to' the effect that plaintiff was in possession of the land prior to> 1886, but that George S. Turner entered under color of title in that year; and defendant offered much testimony for the purpose of showing that George S. Turner and his heirs, under whom she claimed, had held it adversely for the statutory period. The jury found for the plaintiff the possession of the land in dispute, and one dollar damages, and defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was refused. An order was then made by the Court adjudging that plaintiff recover possession of the land, and enjoining the defendant from trespassing upon or interfering with it. Erom this judgment the defendant appealed. The effort will be made to discuss the questions involved in the appeal without special mention of each of the twenty-eight exceptions covering twelve pages of the record.
*327
' It is essential to an action of the former class that the plaintiff must allege and prove a trespass continued down to the time the action is brought. Anderson v. Lynch, 37 S. C., *328 575, 16 S. E., 773. It is not necessary, however, to- allege and p-ro-ve actual occupancy by the defendant; any continued subjection of the property to the will or dominion of the defendant is sufficient. “Acts by which a claim to- the possession hostile to- the true owner is asserted and maintained, and by which he is excluded from the enjoyment o-f the property, fairly subject the party committing them to the action.” 7 Ency. P. & P., 302, note. The complaint here comes within the rule as stated in these authorities, for after setting out the source o-f her own title, the plaintiff alleg-es: “That defendant claims to be in possession of said property and denies plaintiff’s title thereto- and right to- possession thereof.” Following the narrative o-f a number of separate acts of trespass is the further allegation: “That the said defendant continues to- assert her claim of title against this plaintiff to said premises, to deny plaintiff’s right therein, and asserts her determination to prevent the use and enjoyment of said premises by plaintiff, or persons holding under plaintiff, and to continue to use and, occupy it for her own beneñt; rendering it necessary for plaintiff to- apply to this Court for relief and for the protection of his title.” The Circuit Court, therefore, properly held the action to be for the recovery of possession o-f the land described in the complaint.
*331
For the errors above indicated, the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Love v. Turner.
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Real Property — Verdict.—If an action is brought for trespass on land and the verdict is for plaintiff, “for the possession of the land and for $1 damages,” the portion of the verdict as to the 'possession of the land may be treated as surplusage, as the verdict for damages is decisive of the title. 2. Ibid. — PeEadings.—Allegations in a complaint of facts which make out a continued subjection of the land to the will or dominion of the defendant, make out a cause of action for possession of the land. 3. Ibid. — Grant.—In an action for possession of land plaintiff must show title against the world or from a common source, and if he claim from a grant by the State, defendant may show an older grant, without connecting himself with it, which renders the junior grant null and void. 4. Charging that if State granted land for which it had issued an older grant, it would be presumed to have reacquired title, is not cured by charging that if it had no title when it made the junior grant, plaintiff must establish title by adverse possession. 5. New Triae will not be granted for inadvertence of judge in seeming to charge that ten years’ possession presumed a grant, when he had just charged it required twenty years, as it was duty of appellant to call attention to the inadvertence. 6. Reae Property — Adverse Possession — If plaintiff shows legal title to land, he is presumed to have been in possession for ten years and to recover against such title, it is necessary to rebut this presumption by proof of adverse possession. ' 7. Ibid. — Ibid.—Party holding land by adverse possession for ten years thereby acquires a good title, which he may convey and his purchaser may set up same against the legal title without himself having held for ten years. • « 8. Ibid. — Ibid.—Actual notice to holder of legal title of adverse possession is shown by proof of notorious adverse possession. 9. Ibid. — Ibid.—A wiee of a foreign State executed in presence of two witnesses will not pass title to land in this State, but may be available as color of title. 10. Ibid. — Ibid.—Estoppee.—When a defendant requests Judge to charge what was necessary to give plaintiff title by adverse possession, he is estopped from insisting that plaintiff, having set out in his complaint his claim of title, can not rely on adverse possession.