King v. Lee

Morris, J.

Appellants’ denial that petitioners owned any interest in the land described in the complaint as tract No. 3 converted the action into a civil action to try title, and it became, in effect, an action in ejectment. Skipper v. Yow, 249 N.C. 49, 105 S.E. 2d 205 (1958); 6 Strong, N.C. Index 2d, Partition, § 4, p. 199; Cothran v. Laughlin, 157 N.C. 282, 72 S.E. 961 (1911).

In ejectment, plaintiff must prevail, if at all, upon the strength of his own title and not because of the weakness or lack of title in defendant. Murphy v. Smith, 235 N.C. 455, 70 S.E. 2d 697 (1952); Cothran v. Motor Lines, 257 N.C. 782, 127 S.E. 2d 578 (1962). To recover, “plaintiff must show title good against the world, or good against the defendant by estoppel. It makes no difference whether the defendant has title or not, *371the only inquiry being whether the plaintiff has it.” Davis v. Land Bank, 219 N.C. 248, 249, 13 S.E. 2d 417 (1941).

Petitioners’ proof of title consisted of the following: A deed (plaintiffs’ exhibit #2) dated 11 September 1946, from B. M. Johnston and wife, Mattie I. Johnston, to Albert King and wife, Lula King, recorded in Book 373, at page 593, Rocking-ham County Registry, conveying the following described property:

“A certain tract or parcel of land in Rockingham County, State of North Carolina, and adjoining the lands of B. M. Johnston, Lester Harrelson, J. L. Butler and others, and bounded as follows: It being a tract or parcel of land situated in Rockingham County near the Caswell County and Rockingham County lines, described and bounded as follows: Bounded on the North by the Watlington Estate; on the East by the lands of Lester Harrelson; on the South by Paw Paw Branch and the R. H. Johnston Homeplace; on the West by Hogan’s Creek and the lands of J. L. Butler, containing 100 acres, more or less, and being a part of the Billie Garrett Tract, later owned by George Johnston, Paw Paw Branch is the South boundary of the land herein conveyed; Hogan’s Creek and the land of J. L. Butler are the Western boundary thereof and the Watling-ton line is the Northern boundary. The Northeastern boundary is a small branch running from Lester Harrel-son’s land Southeasterly to Paw Paw Branch.”

The Tax Director of Rockingham County testified that tract No. 3 in the petition was described exactly as was the tract conveyed to the intestate by the deed referred to as plaintiffs’ exhibit No. 2. He testified that his records disclosed that the land in controversy had been listed for taxes by the intestate prior to his death and by his estate after his death. On cross-examination, he testified that the land listed for taxes by the intestate and by his estate was on the west side of Hogan’s Creek (the deed introduced by petitioners having shown that Hogan’s Creek was the western boundary of the land). He further testified on cross-examination that he had been a registered surveyor since 1954, that he had read the description of the land as contained in plaintiffs’ exhibit No. 2 but he could not tell where the land was situated.

*372Petitioners then offered the Register of Deeds who testified from the records of her office that Lula King, wife of Albert King, died on 5 June 1947.

In Mobley v. Griffin, 104 N.C. 112, 10 S.E. 142 (1889), Avery, J., set out clearly and precisely the various ways by which a party may prove title. They are:

“1. He may offer a connected chain of title or a grant direct from the State to himself.
2. Without exhibiting any grant from the State, he may show open, notorious, continuous adverse and unequivocal possession of the land in controversy, under color of title in himself and those under whom he claims, for twenty-one years before the action was brought. (Citations omitted.)
3. He may show title out of the State by offering a grant to a stranger, without connecting himself with it, and then offer proof of open, notorious, continuous adverse possession, under color of title in himself and those under whom he claims, for seven years before the action was brought. (Citations omitted.)
4. He may show, as against the State, possession under known and visible boundaries for thirty years, or as against individuals for twenty years before the action was brought. Secs. 139 and 144, Code.
5. He can prove title by estoppel, as by showing that the defendant was his tenant, or derived his title through his tenant, when the action was brought. Code, sec. 147; (citations omitted).
6. He may connect the defendant with a common source of title and show in himself a better title from that source. (Citations omitted.)”

In Cothran v. Motor Lines, supra, Rodman, J., noted that what was said by Avery, J., in 1889 accurately summarizes the law today with the exception that G.S. 1-36 makes it unnecessary to prove the sovereign has parted with its title when not a party to the action.

In Moore v. Miller, 179 N.C. 396, 102 S.E. 627 (1920), plaintiff alleged ownership of a tract of land and alleged defendant was in wrongful possession of a portion thereof. Defendant by *373answer averred that he owned and was in possession at 22.6 acres which he described. At trial, plaintiffs introduced a connected line of deeds, the first dated in 1895, for 185 acres of land which was described by metes and bounds, and the last dated in 1918 conveying the land to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs’ evidence further tended to show defendant in possession of 22.6 acres of land, with definite boundaries as claimed by defendant in his answer, lying and being within the larger boundaries set forth in plaintiffs’ deeds. Defendant’s motion for nonsuit was granted, and the court entered judgment adjudging defendant to be the owner of the 22.6 acres and entitled to retain possession. On appeal the Court affirmed the nonsuit but held that there was error in adjudging title in defendant because that could only be done on affirmative findings. In affirming the nonsuit, the Court reiterated the rule that in an action in ejectment plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title. After setting out, in seriatim, the six methods of meeting that requirement, the Court said:

“From a perusal of this statement it will appear, as held in Graybeal v. Davis, 95 N.C., 508, that, in order for plaintiff to establish his title, he must show:
1. A grant from the State directly to himself or connect himself with one by proper deeds or he must show possession in the assertion of ownership, with or without color, for the requisite period, or that defendant is estopped to deny his title.
Recurring to the testimony, the plaintiff has failed to show title in any of the ways indicated in these decisions. He has not shown any grant from the State. Nor has he offered any evidence of possession in himself or those under whom he claims. Nor presented any facts creating an estoppel in his favor. He has shown merely a line of deeds, beginning in 1895, covering a tract of land of 185 acres, and that defendant is in present possession of a portion of said land asserting ownership, and, on authority, this will not suffice.”

In Cothran v. Motor Lines, supra, plaintiff alleged that he owned a certain tract of land, specifically described; that defendant had wrongfully cut a ditch on the land in which it had laid a four-inch iron pipe for the transmission of sewage into Paw Creek, a stream crossing plaintiff’s land. He sought a mandatory injunction. Defendant denied plaintiff owned the *374land described in the complaint. At trial in 1962, plaintiff introduced a deed to himself dated in May 1951. The description in the deed was identical to the description in the complaint. The plaintiff testified and referred to the land as “my land,” and also testified that part of the land was vacant, that there were two buildings and a deep well on a part, that he intended to build a house on the vacant part, that he hadn’t been out there much since the sewer line was put in, that sometimes he got out and walked on the property. There was no evidence that any buildings were or had been occupied nor what he did when visiting the property before the sewer line was put in nor how often he went there. The trial court sustained defendant’s motion for nonsuit. On appeal, the opinion of the unanimous court was written by Rodman, J. He referred to the various ways a party may prove title and said:

“Plaintiff made no effort to show title by estoppel or that he and defendant claimed from a common source. He introduced a deed to himself dated in May 1951. The description in that deed is identical with the description in the complaint. It begins in the center of the Thrift Belt Road and proceeds by specific course and distance to embrace the area described in the complaint.
The deed is color of title; but color of title is not sufficient to make a prima facie case of title. The color must be strengthened by possession, which must be open, notorious, and adverse for a period of seven years. G.S. 1-38.”

The Court held that plaintiff’s evidence was not sufficient to show possession and affirmed the nonsuit.

In Norman v. Williams, 241 N.C. 732, 86 S.E. 2d 593 (1955), plaintiffs sought to recover damages for trespass in cutting and removing timber from certain lands in Halifax County, specifically described in the complaint, alleging ownership. Defendant answered denying the allegations of the complaint and by further answer set out a timber deed under which he claimed the right to cut the timber. At trial plaintiffs introduced a connected chain of deeds from 1905 to 1940 and also introduced oral testimony with respect to the line and boundaries of the land involved. When plaintiffs rested, defendant’s motion for judgment as of nonsuit was granted. On appeal the judgment was affirmed. The Court said that plaintiff must rely on the strength of his own title, referred to the various methods of proving title set out in Mobley v. Griffin, supra, and noted *375that in all actions involving title to real property, title is conclusively presumed to be out of the State unless it be a party to the action. The Court held that plaintiffs’ evidence was not sufficient to bring their case within any of the six rules. If they intended to invoke the sixth rule, that is, to show a common source of title, the evidence was insufficient because it failed to connect defendant with any source of title common to both plaintiffs and defendant. If they relied on adverse possession under known and visible boundaries or under color of title, the evidence was too vague and insufficient to' support either.

Testing petitioners’ evidence by these rules, we must conclude that petitioners have failed to show prima facie their good title. There has been no proof of title by estoppel nor was there evidence of a common source of title with the evidence showing better title in petitioners from that source. The only evidence of possession is that the intestate, and after his death his estate, listed property in Ruffin Township known as the “Ben Johnston” tract for taxes. There is no evidence that the taxes were paid nor is the evidence clear with respect to whether the land described in the complaint was the same land listed for taxes. Evidence of listing and payment of taxes is no evidence of actual possession and does not suffice to support an action in ejectment. Chisholm v. Hall, 255 N.C. 374, 121 S.E. 2d 726 (1961). Nor was plaintiffs’ evidence sufficient to identify and locate the land they claim.

Having concluded, as we do, that petitioners have failed to prove title to tract No. 3, it follows that the court was in error in entering the judgment in the record. The motion of Willie Albert King and Dorothy Lawson King for directed verdict should have been granted and judgment entered denying petitioners’ request for sale of tract No. 3 and remanding the cause to the Clerk of the Superior Court to the end that tracts Nos. 1 and 2 as described in paragraph 5 of the petition could be sold for partition.

Error and remanded.

Brock and Graham, JJ., concur.