Court Opinion

ID: 7390176
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-29 00:53:06.471205+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:21:39.702553
License: Public Domain

O’Neall, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The right of the plaintiff to recover depends upon the question, whether he and-his wife have together had four years adverse possession of the slaves in dispute, after the defendant’s right of action or seizure accrued. This question presents two points for consideration ; 1st as to the character of the possession; and 2d as to the time when the Statute of Limitations commenced to run against the defendant.
It is true, as was stated by the Judge below, that " when one holds for himself and in his own right, and not for and in the right of another,” it is an adverse possession. The application of this definition to the facts of this case must show, that the possession of the plaintiff’s wife could not be adverse to the defendant. He sold to Dr. Wragg under an order of the Court of Equity, directing the sale to be made on a credit of one, two and three years, to be secured by bond with personal security and mortgage, the titles to be made but not delivered till the payment of the first instalment, and on non-payment thereof the commissioner was to re-sell for cash. The purchaser, received possession without giving either bond or mortgage; and this was, on the part of the commissioner perhaps, a waiver of any benefit which he would have received from that part of the order. Still, how*258ever, this did not confer a perfect right of property on the purchaser; he had only a qualified estate, liable to be divested on failing to pay the first instalment. His possession was according to his title, and consistent with the title of the defendant. He held not exclusively for himself, but with and for the defendant. If he was the plaintiff how seeking a recovery, no one could suppose that his title was perfected by a possession commencing before there had been a failure to pay the first instalment; the purchaser from him with notice of the decree for sale, cannot be in any better situation than he is: the purchase so made is affected by all the equities existing between Wragg and the defendant. Mrs. Patterson’s possession under the title of Dr. Wragg, was consistent with the title of the commissioner until default was made in making payment of the first instalment. Up to that time she held an estate which in buying from Dr. Wragg she legally consented should be divested on his failing to make that payment. She did not hold for herself and in her own right, but for and in the right of the commissioner; her possession, therefore, was not adverse untill that time. It may b'e, as was' supposed in the argument, that upon the failure of Dr. Wragg to give bond and personal security, the Commissioner had the right to re-sell; but if he had the right then, there can be no doubt that he had also the right to seize and re-sell upon default being made -in the payment of the first instalment. He might waive the first without defeating the second. Eor the right to act upon the second default did not depend upon the first; each was independent of the other. The Commissioner might, if he chose, regard the purchaser as both able and willing to pay, and dispense with the execution of either bond or mortgage; it was an act which rendered him liable to the parties in interest, for the purchase money, if he failed to make it out of the purchaser or the property. This is, however, the extent of its effect; it discharged no other lien on, or right in, the property. If bond and mortgage had been given, the Commissioner acting under the order would have had an unquestionable right, if default in the payment of the first instalment had been made, to have seized and re-sold the negroes. The fact that neither of these securities were executed, cannot defeat his right to proceed under the order. Under the mortgage, if it had been exe*259cuted, be would have proceeded to sell from a failure to pay any of tbe instalments, even if tbe first bad been paid. But under tbe order be bad only tbe right to re-sell if tbe first instalment was not paid. Tbis was a pre-requisite to tbe vesting of a legal right in Dr. Wragg; at this default the defendant’s right to seize and re-sell the slaves was perfect: in other words, he then might, by virtue of his legal estate, defeat the equitable estate of his vendor. From that time his cause of action accrued, and from that time Mrs. Patterson’s possession was adverse to his title; but four years not having intervened between that time and the seizure and re-sale, the defendant’s justification was a legal one, and he was entitled to recovery.
The motion for a new trial is therefore granted.