Opinion
(February Term, 1896.)
DEEDS AS EVIDENCE — LOST RECORDS — PRESUMPTIONS IN FAVOR OF PROPER PROCEEDINGS IN THE COURTS — ADVERSE POSSESSION DEFINED — EQUIVOCAL POSSESSION — WIDOW'S POSSESSION NOT ADVERSE TO HEIR — RECITALS IN DEEDS OF COMMISSIONERS — THE CODE, SECS. 69, 70.
1. Where a deed is offered in evidence, no objection lies, except to the regularity of the probate and registration, the court having the power always to reserve the questions of relevancy and legal effect till a subsequent stage of the trial. Therefore an objection, in limine, for all purposes, cannot be sustained.
2. In order to ripen into title, a possession must not only be open, notorious, adverse and continuous during the statutory period, but it must be unequivocal.
3. The test of the sufficiency of the possession to fully mature title depends upon the question whether a right of action had existed for the statutory period, when the suit was instituted, in favor of the parties against whom the benefit of lapse of time is claimed.
4. The possession of a widow is not adverse to the heirs of her husband.
5. Where the original papers of the judgment roll are lost or destroyed, but the rough minute docket of the court shows that a petition to sell land for assets was filed, and the other dockets show memoranda of an order for publication for nonresident defendants that an order of sale was made, report of sale filed and judgment of confirmation, there is a presumption of law, independent of the statute (The Code, secs. 69, 70), that the publication was made, as ordered, and proper proof of it filed before the judgment of sale was entered.
6. Recitals in a commissioner's deed that the sale was made under a judgment of the court are prima facie evidence of the "binding force" and validity of such judgment as against all persons who were parties to such judgment; this by virtue of the Code, secs. 69, 70.
(920) ACTION tried before Starbuck, J., at Spring Term, 1895, of SWAIN.
A. M. Fry for plaintiffs.
J. W. Cooper for defendant.
Verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs, and appeal by defendant.
The facts are sufficiently set out in the opinion.
The land in controversy was granted by the State to the defendant, William Newton, in 1854, and he now contends that the title has never passed out of him. The plaintiffs, who are (except the plaintiff administrator) heirs at law of Clark Whittier, claim through a deed which they allege was executed by the defendant to his father, Solomon Newton, and which was lost or destroyed, and through mesne conveyances to their ancestor, Clark Whittier, who devised to them as tenants in common. There is no controversy as to the execution of the mesne conveyances. They likewise allege that Solomon conveyed at one time to one W. P. Hyde, and that Hyde reconveyed to Solomon, but that the last-named deed has also been lost or destroyed. Upon an issue submitted the jury found that the defendant did execute a deed for the land in controversy to Solomon Newton, as alleged, and in response to a second issue, that Hyde also conveyed the same land to Solomon before his death. Solomon and his wife, according to the undisputed testimony, lived on the land before his death, and he died before 1866. In deraigning title from Solomon the plaintiff's offered in evidence a deed from William R. Grant, administrator of Solomon Newton, dated 15 January, 1869, conveying the land in controversy to James S. Queen, subject to the right of the widow of Solomon to dower, in which deed it is recited that the sale was made on 24 December, 1867, by virtue of a decree of the Court of Pleas (921) and Quarter Sessions of Jackson County (in which the land now embraced in Swain County was then situated), at public auction, and James S. Queen became the highest bidder.
If the land passed to Queen it is not controverted that whatever title he acquired was transmitted to the plaintiffs, the devisees of Clark Whittier. But, despite the finding that he conveyed to his father, the defendant still relies upon his own testimony and that of another witness to prove that in 1866 he (defendant) directed his mother, Keziah Newton, to go upon the land and keep it for him till his return, and that he gave her the grant for it and left the State, remaining absent until 1889, when he came back and took possession from Amburn, with whom he had a fight about the land. The plaintiffs offered evidence for the purpose of showing the existence of the records of proceedings by the administrator for sale of and by the widow of Solomon Newton for allotment of dower in the land. The exception to the admissibility of the deed from Grant, administrator, was without merit. The objection in limine to its introduction, for all purposes, cannot be sustained, because it has more than once been held by this Court that no objection lies to the introduction of a deed as evidence when offered, except to the regularity of the probate and registration, the Court having the power always to reserve the questions of relevancy and legal effect till a subsequent stage of the trial. Vickers v. Leigh, 104 N.C. 248; Cox v. Ward, 107 N.C. 507; Wilhelm v. Burleyson, 106 N.C. 381; Hodges v. Wilkinson, 111 N.C. 56. But the exception upon which the defendant relied chiefly was to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that there were certain (922) aspects of the testimony in which they might find that the title of the defendant had matured by possession, notwithstanding the fact that he had conveyed the land to his father, as alleged. The instruction asked was based upon the theory that, if the jury believed the testimony offered for the defendant, his mother went upon the land and in 1866, as his tenant, and that the land was occupied till her death, in 1888, either by herself or those who held under her, and whose possession inured to the benefit of the defendant, they holding up to visible lines and boundaries. The court refused to instruct the jury, at the request of the defendant, that the possession of his mother and those holding under her from 1866 till 1888 inured to his benefit so as to ripen title in him, because they could not destroy the privity with him as tenants except by surrender or eviction, and that their possession for twenty years, up to visible lines and boundaries, matured title in him. The contention of counsel on the argument was confined chiefly to the single question whether the court erred in refusing this instruction. It being found that the land had been conveyed by the defendant to his father, who held under the deed when he died, neither the defendant, as the grantor from the State, nor he or the other heirs of Solomon Newton, as heirs, nor anyone claiming through them by a deed, reserving a right to dower like all of the mesne conveyances after that of Grant to Queen, could have maintained an action for possession against her or her grantee during her life, because the possession was not adverse to them. Avent v. Arrington, 105 N.C. 377; Love v. McClure, 99 N.C. 290. Her life estate was an elongation of the husband's estate, and as widow she held in privity with, not adversely to, the heirs and those claiming under them, certainly under conveyances made expressly subject to her right. Granting that the defendant told her to enter, and (923) that she consented to do so, if the plaintiffs' ancestor, Clark Whittier, had brought an action for the possession, it would have been a sufficient answer that the claimants held subject to her right to occupy the land as dower. In order to mature title, the possession must not only be open, notorious, adverse and continuous during the statutory period, but it must be unequivocal. Osborne v. Johnston, 65 N.C. 22; McLean v. Smith, 106 N.C. 172. The test of the sufficiency of the possession to fully mature title depends upon the question whether a right of action had existed for the statutory period, when the suit was instituted, in favor of the parties against whom the benefit of lapse of time is claimed. S. v. Suttle, 115 N.C. 784; Boomer v. Gibbs, 114 N.C. 76; Hamilton v. Icard, 114 N.C. 532; Osborne v. Johnston, supra. If, therefore, no action could have been maintained by the plaintiffs, as claimants, through the heirs at law of Solomon, against those holding under the widow, the statute did not run, in any aspect of the evidence, against them before her death, in 1888. It follows that there was no error in the ruling of the court that neither plaintiffs nor defendant, in any aspect of the testimony, had offered evidence of possession under color which should be submitted to the jury as tending to prove title.
It was agreed that the court should find the other facts and enter the responses to the third issue, involving the question whether the defendant, William Newton, was a party to a special proceeding, by virtue of a decree in which Grant, administrator of Solomon, sold and conveyed the land to Queen, and to the issue of title numbered four. In the deed of Grant, administrator of Solomon Newton, was a recital of the fact that the sale was made, as already stated, on 24 December, 1867, in pursuance of a decree of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Jackson County. There was abundant evidence to prove that most of the records of said court were lost or (924) destroyed, and the record of the pleadings and orders in this particular proceeding could not, after diligent search by successive clerks, be found. It appeared, however, from the rough minute docket of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Jackson County, that a petition to sell land was filed at the December term, 1866, entitled "W. R. Grant, administrator of Solomon Newton, deceased, against William Newton and others." At the next term, April, 1867, there appears upon the minute docket an order that publication be made for six successive weeks in the Henderson Pioneer, a newspaper published in Hendersonville, for G. W. Cline and wife (Lorena), Alfred Shuler and wife, Marion Newton and William Newton, who, as it appeared to the satisfaction of the court, were nonresidents, to appear at the next term, to be held on the fourth Monday in July, 1867. At the next (July) term there was an entry made upon the minutes that the order of sale was allowed, and at the December term the minute made in the same proceeding is: "Report of sales confirmed by the court and filed. Judgment for costs against the administrator to be taxed by the clerk." Leaving out of view the provisions of the statute (The Code, secs. 69, 70), the law would presume, when the papers have been destroyed, that the publication was made, as ordered, and proper proof of it filed before the decree of sale was entered at the succeeding (July) term. The papers being now shown to have been lost or destroyed, the presumption arises upon this state of facts that the court acted upon the prescribed proof that the defendant, William Newton, had been made a party by publication. Lawson Pres. Evidence, p. 34, II, III. The testimony of the defendant that there was no actual service did not tend to rebut the presumption that (925) he was duly made a party by publication. But the recital in the deed, which refers to the decree, so as to identify it, is of itself prima facie evidence of its "binding force" and validity as against all persons "who were parties to said decree." The Code, secs. 69, 70; Dail v. Sugg, 85 N.C. 104; Durham v. Wilson, 104 N.C. 595.
The finding of the court, therefore, upon an inspection of the record and deed, that there was a presumption that the defendant was a party, was supported by the record and deed from which the facts are gathered, and is sustained in its legal aspects by the statute and authorities cited. The judge was authorized by the parties to find the facts in relation to that branch of the case, and upon the evidence was warranted in holding, in the capacity of juror, that the presumption was not rebutted by the defendant's testimony. It may not be amiss to mention that the discrepancy between the printed and written records upon a very important point misled us for some time. The word "not" was omitted in the printed record, so as to make it appear as the finding of the court that the presumption was "rebutted" by the testimony of William Newton.
No Error. Affirmed.
Cited: Lewis v. Covington, 130 N.C. 544; Brinkley v. Smith, 131 N.C. 132; Joyner v. Futrell, 136 N.C. 303; Norcum v. Savage, 140 N.C. 474; Card v. Finch, 142 N.C. 148; Barefoot v. Musselwhite, 153 N.C. 211; Pinnell v. Burroughs, 168 N.C. 319; Cooley v. Lee, 170 N.C. 23; Graves v. Causey, ib., 177; Kluttz v. Kluttz, 172 N.C. 624; Vanderbilt v. Chapman, ib., 813.
(926)