This is a petition by the plaintiff to rehear and affirm the judgment below in its original form, instead of directing that it be should be so modified as to order a writ commanding the Sheriff to put the plaintiff into possession of one undivided seventh of the land in dispute as a tenant in
The first issue with the response to it was as follows: “Is plaintiff the owner of the land described in the complaint? Answer. Yes; one-seventh of the Sandy Bottom tract- — -160 acres.”
The plaintiff claims and demands judgment in his complaint as sole owner of a tract containing twenty-five acres.
In stating the case on appeal, his Honor says: “On the trial, it was agreed that one Ezekiel Leary had originally owned the land. The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that Emanuel Leary was a son and heir of Ezekiel-Leary, and then offered a deed from Emanuel Leary to Bradford Allen (the father of the plaintiff), who had six other children, his heirs.” So far, it does not appear what land was covered by the deed- to Bradford, the father' of the plaintiff, who, with six other children, inherited his land.
The statement of the case then set forth that “there was evidence tending to show the location of the land described in the deed to Bradford Allen, and tending to show that it loas known as the Sandy Bottom tract of 160 a.cres.” The second stage of the statement, therefore, brings us one step further, by testimony tending to show not only that the plaintiff was one of seven, children, but that the deed to Bradford Allen (we must infer is the one from Emanuel Leary) could be so located as to cover a tract of land containing one hundred and sixty acres, and known as the Sandy Bottom tract, thus tracing, if the evidence is believed, the title to -one undivided seventh of said Sandy Bottom tract to the plaintiff, as one of the seven heirs at law of his father, Bradford Allen, from Ezekiel Leary, the admitted common •source of title, through Emanuel. “ There was no evidence,” .as the Judge informs us, “that there was any judicial pro
The only other statements of testimony that come up are in the following language (being transposed out of its order without affecting its meaning), viz.: “ There was also evidence tending to show possession of Bradford Allen, and those claiming under him, for forty years, of the land in controversy. There were many deeds offered by defendant (none by the plaintiff) from heirs of Ezekiel Leary and others, which defendant insisted covered the land in controversy and offered evidence to show it.”
When a plaintiff in an action for possession of land is said to have offered testimony tending to show a possession for forty years, the irresistible inference is that the possession must have been under the deeds he has introduced as evidence of title, and that -he intended to use them as color. In this particular case there was no deed located, so far as we know, except the one showing title in Bradford Allen, the plaintiff’s father. It was natural, therefore, that the Court should infer, on the former hearing here, that the trespass of the defendant was shown to be on the 160-acre Sandy Bottom tract. That view was strengthened by the instruction given by the Court below upon the law governing adverse possession, and especially in cases where the title deeds of the parties to the controversy lapped each upon the other.
We must remember always that the expression used, “the land in controversy,” does not necessarily mean “ the land described in the complaint,” and if this distinction is well iaken, there is not a word in the statement of case on appeal
This Court, on the former hearing, did not advert to the fact that the plaintiff had declared for a twenty-five-acre tract, and that its metes and bounds would not, therefore, fit, the Sandy Bottom tract of 160 acres; but, acting upon the natural idea that when the statement of the Judge informed us that the plaintiff had offered testimony tending to trace the title of the Sandy Bottom tract to his father, and to show that he was one of seven heirs of Bradford Allen, we inferred that the findings in response to the verdict might be reconciled by treating the “one-seventh of the Sandy Bottom tract” as the one-seventh of the land described in the complaint. The petitioner now admits that there are two-responses to the first issue that do not mean the same tiling, and upon which a judgment may issue either for a writ of possession for twenty-five acres described in the complaint, or for the one undivided seventh of the Sandy Bottom tract. When the defendant insisted -upon a new trial because of that contradiction on the former hearing, that being the only ground of defendant’s appeal, the plaintiff resisted. He now insists that when we have two findings- — -one predicated on the proof offered, and the other in harmony with the pleadings — we shall treat the former as surplusage, and render judgment with a contradictory finding of facts as a basis for it.
' Without any information as to how be. proposes to point out the location of the twenty-acre tract described in the complaint, and to show that the defendant was a trespasser on it when the action was brought, the plaintiff’s attorney now insists in his brief that while the deed to Bradford Allen “may have hem intffedual to convey more than the one-seventh that descended to Emanuel Leary from his father Ezekiel (though it does not appear that Ezekiel was one of seven heirs), still it was color of title under which possession would ripen to the twenty-five-acre tract.” If that were true, still the difficulty grows out of another fact that Bradford Allen, as well as Ezekiel, had seven children, and the plaintiff offered no evidence to show title except by descent: as one of Bradford’s seven heirs to one-seventh of the Sandy Bottom tract. The counsel does not insist that the plaintiff has shown the twenty-five acres, by proving the metes and bounds of a deed exhibited in evidence, to be within the limits of the one-hundred and-sixty-acre tract-, but relies upon an alleged admission made in the brief and argument, submitted since the last hearing by defendant’s counsel, to show that the tract described in the complaint was really a part of the Sandy Bottom tract, when the original appeal rests solely on the ground that the verdict was contradictory because that very fact did not appear.
The learned Judge who tried the cause below' very properly did not treat “the land in controversy” and “the land described in the complaint,” as convertible terms-. He understood, evidently, that the land really in dispute was some border land where the title deeds of the parties located, according to the contention of the parties respectively, would lap upon each other.
We append so much of the charge as is sent up, together with the exception to the judgment, as every other material portion of the case on appeal has already been set forth.
The instructions given presented every aspect of the case arising on the volume of evidence, oral and documentary. The only error alleged wus that the Court had instructed the jury that if the plaintiff, and those under whom he claimed, held possession of part of the land embraced in his deed for more than seven years, openly, continuously and adversely, it would ripen his title to all the land embraced in' his deed, which was not occupied by anyone, else, unless there was a lapse; if there was a lapse, and neither party wras in possession of the lappage, as to that part embraced in both deeds, the latter title w'ould prevail. The motion for new trial was •overruled. Then the defendant objected that the answer of the jury was not responsive to the issues, and was vague and indefinite. The Court, being of opinion that the answer of the jury was sufficient, gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.
In the case of Mitchell v. Brown, 88 N. C., 156, the jury found, in response to a firrst issue, “Yes,” which meant that the plaintiff was the owner of the land described in the complaint, but the response to a subsequent issue being contradictory, a new trial was granted. Where the findings of a jury are apparently repugnant in any material respect, so that the Court cannot safely proceed to judgment and see it is unmistakably that to which the verdict establishes a right, a new trial must be granted. Porter v. Railroad, 97 N. C., 66; Smith v Fite, 98 N. C., 517; Morrison v. Watson, 95 N. C., 479; Turrentine v. Railroad, 92 N. C., 638. The rule generally laid down is, that an inconsistent verdict, or one that, in connection with the pleadings, requires explanation to make it harmonize completely with the pleadings and evidence and support a judgment, will be set aside, if it is too late to have it reformed by the jury. Clough v. Clough, 6 Foster (N. H.), 24; Hilliard on Mistrial, §29;
The plaintiff should have asked the Judge below to have the verdict reformed by the jury, so as to elicit an unqualified answer to the question involved in the first issue. In failing to do so, he has placed himself in such a position that be must accept the alternative prayer of his petition and join the- defendant in asking a venire de novo. We accordingly grant the prayer of the petitioner in that respect, by ordering a venire de novo.
Venire de novo.