Court Opinion

ID: 3660447
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:12:12.389326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:28:46.610875
License: Public Domain

This is an action of ejectment. The plaintiffs claim under a grant from the State to Neill Purcell, in 1771, and mense conveyances. In a deed from Draughan to W. T. Smith two lines were omitted, as plaintiffs claim, by mistake. They introduced a surveyor, who testified that in running this deed, "there were along the lines marks on all the lines of the Purcell 200 acres, corresponding to the age of the grant, and that, in his opinion, as an expert, the 200 acres were correctly located, leading to a well-known corner, * * * and that the proper location of this deed was as claimed by the plaintiffs, and the calls would cover the land in dispute." Another witness gave similar evidence. The defendants excepted to the foregoing evidence. The defendants introduced a grant from the State, in 1897, for twenty-eight acres included in the Purcell grant, according to the marked trees and corners referred to by the surveyor and not included by the course and distance expressed in the deed.
We are relieved from remarking on the above matters by another view presented by the record. In 1866 the   (300) heirs, and those claiming under them, of W. T. Smith, who claimed under the Purcell grant, had partition of said Smith land, and the lands were divided, and the report of the commissioners was confirmed by the Court and recorded. In that proceeding one lot was allotted to Julia Williams, and it covers the land now in dispute. J. L. Smith, for the plaintiffs, testified: "It (the lot) fell to my sister, Julia Williams, in the division of my father's estate. She had turpentine boxes cut on part of it, and worked it, and cut waste timber on it from the time it fell to her to within four or five years. Part of it is in round pine now. Work was done on the plantation in dispute. It was in her possession and those who claim under her, continuously for all this time, and taxes were regularly paid on it." His Honor instructed the jury that, if they believed the evidence, they ought to answer the first issue, "Yes." The defendants excepted to the admission of the partition proceeding as evidence, on the ground that plaintiffs had shown no title to the land, and that "such attempted division does not create a color of title in plaintiffs, and especially when plaintiffs have shown no possession or acts of ownership over the same." His Honor was of opinion that the partition record was color of title, and submitted the evidence to the jury to find the facts. The question was directly decided in Bynum v. Thompson,25 N.C. 578, where the Court held that possession under partition proceeding was taken under a permanent, written, and recorded muniment of title, and constitutes color of title, as much as if *Page 206 
(301) the parties had made deeds to each one severally for his share. The plaintiff's possession, then, for more than thirty years, is a perpetual bar against the entry of all persons (Code, sec. 141), subject to secs. 148-150, Code. There were verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. No error.
Affirmed.
Cited: Lindsay v. Beaman, 128 N.C. 192; Hill v. Lane, 149 N.C. 272.