Den on Dem. of Love v. Gates

Decision Date31 December 1839
Citation20 N.C. 498
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesDEN ON DEM. OF ROBERT LOVE v. SILAS GATES ET AL.
Ejectment—Both Parties Claiming Under Same Person—Sheriff's
Deed For Taxes.

1. The defendant in ejectment is generally permitted to shew a better title than the lessor of the plaintiff, in a third person. But where both parties claim title under the same person, it is not competent to either, as such claimants, to deny that such person had title; and though the defendant, in such case, may still show that he had in himself a better title than that of the plaintiff's lessor, yet he cannot set up a title in a third person.

2. A sheriff's deed for land sold for taxes is not of itself sufficient to deprive the owner of his land—there must be further evidence that the taxes were due for which the land was sold by the sheriff.

[The cases of Ives v. Sawyer, ante, 51, and Murphy v. Burnett, 4 N. C., 14, approved.]

EJECTMENT, tried at Buncombe, on the last circuit, before his Honor, Judge Pearson.

On the trial the lessor of the plaintiff produced and read in evidence a grant to one Z. Candler for the land in dispute, dated in the year 1829, and then showed a regular judgment and execution against Candler, and a sheriff's deed to himself, dated in the year 1831. He then showed another judgment and execution against Candler, and proved that the sheriff levied on the same land as the property of Candler; after the date of the deed to him, the plaintiff's lessor, and sold it as Candler's property, when the defendant Gates became the purchaser and took a deed from the sheriff for the same, dated in the year 1834. The defendants relied upon showing title out of the plaintiff's lessor, and for that purpose offered to read in evidence a patent to one Blount, dated in 1794. This evidence was objected to upon the ground that the defendants were estopped from denying the title of Candler, under whom both parties claimed, but the objection was overruled and the evidence admitted. The lessor of the plaintiff then contended that the whole of the land covered by Blount's patent had been sold for taxes and passed to the State, and thereby had again become vacant, and was subject to entry at the time when Candler took out his grant, and for this purpose heproduced a sheriff's deed for the land, but was unable to show that the taxes were due from Blount at the date of the sheriff's deed. His Honor thought that the deed from the sheriff was not of itself sufficient to show that Blount's title had been divested, and the plaintiff's lessor in submission to this opinion was nonsuited and appealed.

DANIEL, J., after stating the case as above, proceeded as follows: As the party in possession of land is presumed to be the owner until the contrary appears, the claimant in ejectment must show a good title in himself; he cannot found his claim upon the weakness of that of the defendant, for possession gives the defendant a right against every man who cannot establish a good title in himself against everybody. The defendant, therefore, generally is permitted to show a better title than the plaintiffs in a third person. But it has been decided in this State that where both parties claim title under the same person it is not competent to either, as such claimants, to deny that such person had title. Den ex. dem. Ives v. Sawyer, ante, 51; Murphy v. Barnett, 1 Car. Law Repos., 105. In this case both of the parties claimed under Candler. The...

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10 cases
  • Weston v. John L. Roper Lumber Co.
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of North Carolina
    • March 12, 1913
    ...in quo, and has connected itself with such title. Mobley v. Griffin, 104 N.C. 115, 10 S.E. 142; Whissenhurt v. Jones, 78 N.C. 361; Love v. Gates, 20 N.C. 498. But plaintiff contends that as he claims title to lot No. 1, under Enoch Sawyer, to whom it was allotted in the New Lebanon division......
  • Stewart v. Cary
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of North Carolina
    • October 29, 1941
    ...which it has been applied: Murphy v. Barnett, 1813, 6 N.C. 251, 1 Carolina Law Repository 105, 4 N.C. 14; Ives v. Sawyer, 20 N.C. 179; Love v. Gates, supra; Gilliam Bird, supra; Johnson v. Watts, 46 N.C. 228; Thomas v. Kelly; 46 N.C. 375, 376; Feimster v. McRorie, 46 N.C. 547, 548; Newlin v......
  • Weston v. John L. Roper Lumber Co
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of North Carolina
    • March 12, 1913
    ......Mobley v. Griffin, 104 N. C. 115, 10 S. E. 142; Whissenhurt v. Jones, 78 N. C. 361; Love v. Gates, 20 N. C. 498. But the plaintiff contends that as he claims title to lot No. 1, under ......
  • Stewart v. Cary, 23.
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of North Carolina
    • October 29, 1941
    ...rule is that plaintiff must rely upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of that of defendant, Love v. Gates, 20 N.C. 498; Newlin v. Osborne, 47 N.C. 163, 164; Spivey v. Jones, 82 N.C. 179; Keen v. Parker, 217 N.C. 378, 8 S.E.2d 209, there is in this State a well settl......
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