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Carroway v. Chancey

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1855
47 N.C. 170 (N.C. 1855)

Opinion

June Term, 1855.

Where the owners of adjacent tracts of land ran and staked off a line, supposing it to be the true line between them, and had so considered it for more than twenty years, but there was no actual possession of the part included between this line and the true one, the original rights of the parties are not thereby altered and the true line being afterwards ascertained and fixed, the respective owners will hold according to it.

THIS was an action of EJECTMENT, tried before his Honor Judge ELLIS, at the Spring Term, 1855, of Beaufort Superior Court.

Attorney General, Biggs and Donnell, for the plaintiff.

Rodman, for the defendant.


The diagram below, as commented on and explained by the Court, will present the points in the case, without a further statement.


The grant under which the plaintiff sets up title, covers the locus in quo, and the question was, how much of the land covered by this grant had been taken off by the deed to Meazles, under which the defendant sets up title?

, SEE 47 N.C. 171.]

It was admitted "I" was the beginning: the next call is — "then a straight course to the great Pipe log branch." The plaintiff insisted this line terminated at II; the defendant contended the terminus was at G. The Court properly charged the jury that the line must be run so as to strike the great Pine log branch at the nearest point, which was the line I 2 3, which being intermediate between I II, and I G, left a part of the land in controversy out of the Meazle deed, and in regard to that part, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, unless the right was affected by the length of the possession of the defendant and those under whom he claimed, up to the line I G.

In reference to this second question, the evidence was that the parties under whom the present parties claim, had, many years ago, more than 20 years, run the line I G, and agreed it was the proper line separating the Meazle land from the balance of the land covered by the original grant, and "had put light-wood stakes up against pine trees upon this line," and had acquiesced ever since in the fact of its being the proper dividing line; neither party having ever, in disregard of it, taken possession by cultivating turpentine trees or burning tar-kilns; on the contrary both parties had cultivated turpentine trees and burnt tar-kilns up to it; with this distinction in regard to the party under whom the defendant claims, i. e., Mary Gayner, one of the persons under whom the defendant claimed in 1834, had the line T U, run and marked the trees, and there was no proof that there had ever been any cultivation of turpentine trees or burning of tar-kilns or other species of possession west of the line I G, and south of the line T U.

Let it be admitted that the possession by the defendant, and those under whom he claims for so many years, of the land west of the line I G, and north of T U, defeated the plaintiff's title as to that part which is designated on the diagram by I 2 U, what evidence was there to defeat the plaintiff's title to that part west of I G, and south of T U, designated upon the diagram by 2 U G 3? As to this part there never had been any species of possession, and this effect, if produced at all, must have been done by the fact that I G had been agreed on as the proper line, light-wood stakes set up against pine trees along it, and it had for more than twenty years been acquiesced in and never disregarded, so far as the acts of the parties tended to show, during all that time.

So the question presented is, can the true line of a deed be changed and its location be transferred to another place by the fact that the parties, acting under a mistake as to its true location, had agreed that it was at a different place and was the line indicated by I U G, and not I 2 3, and had, acting under this mistake, for the purpose of making known and visible what they then supposed to be the true line, set up light-wood stakes against pine trees, and ever after acquiesced in it as the true line?

In regard to the land lying west of the part of this line from I to U, and north of T U, we have seen that possession may have had some effect; but in regard to the land lying west of the part of this line from U to G, and south of T U, there was no possession, and the naked question was, could that part of the line be changed by the facts set out above? His Honor does not intimate an opinion to that effect, but he confounds the subject by treating the whole line I G, as a unit and indivisible; whereas the persons under whom the defendant claimed, had, by running and making the line T U, and confining the possession to the north side of this latter line divided the line I G, into two parts and made the several parts the subject of different considerations and rules of law; the one becoming a question of possession and rights that may be acquired thereby; the other being left as a mere question of boundary.

For this error the plaintiff is entitled to a venire de novo.

PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.


Summaries of

Carroway v. Chancey

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1855
47 N.C. 170 (N.C. 1855)
Case details for

Carroway v. Chancey

Case Details

Full title:Doe on the demise of JAMES CARROWAY vs . RANSOM A. CHANCEY

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jun 1, 1855

Citations

47 N.C. 170 (N.C. 1855)

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