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Meredith v. Andres

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1846
29 N.C. 5 (N.C. 1846)

Opinion

(December Term, 1846.)

1. When one of two tenants in common of a tract of land is in possession of the tract, and his cotenant makes a demand of the whole tract, his refusal to comply with that demand is not to be considered as evidence of an ouster of his cotenant.

2. More especially is this the case when the demand is made by one professing to claim under the cotenant, but of whose title the tenant in possession knows nothing.

3. Nor, when the person so claiming enters into possession and is turned out by a writ of forcible entry and detainer, can this be considered an ouster of the cotenant.

APPEAL from BLADEN Fall Term, 1846; Settle, J.

Ejectment. Title was established in the lessor of the plaintiff to an undivided moiety of the premises as a tenant in common with the defendant. It was thus derived: John Andres died seized in fee, (6) and from him the land descended equally to the present defendant and one Elizabeth Locke; and the latter devised her share to the plaintiff's lessor.

The defendant was in possession of the premises, and the plaintiff alleged that he had actually ousted Meredith before this action was brought. In order to establish such an ouster, the plaintiff gave in evidence that a person who claimed to be a tenant under the lessor of the plaintiff took possession of the tract of land, and the defendant proceeded against that person under the statute as for a forcible entry and detainer, and he was turned out and the defendant restored to the possession. The plaintiff further gave in evidence that his lessor demanded the possession of the premises from the defendant, and that the defendant refused to admit him; and the witnesses stated that the demand was an unqualified demand of the possession, the lessor of the plaintiff not claiming a share of the premises, nor alleging that he wished to be admitted into the possession with the defendant as a tenant in common.

The counsel for the defendant insisted that there was not evidence upon which the jury could find an ouster, and moved the court so to instruct them. But his Honor refused the motion, and held that the jury might infer the ousters from the evidence; and after a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed.

Reid for plaintiff.

Strange for defendant.


The Court cannot concur in the opinion of his Honor. It will be perceived that there are no dates set forth in the case, nor any great length of possession by the defendant, nor any knowledge by him of the title of the lessor of the plaintiff as derived from the defendant's original cotenant, nor any knowledge that the person who was turned out as a forcible trespasser was the lessee of Meredith, (7) nor even that such person was really Meredith's lessee. Without something of the kind the other two circumstances proved are too inconclusive to constitute evidence of an ouster. Although an actual ouster may be inferred from circumstances, yet they must be such circumstances as tend to show that the tenant in possession denies the right of the other to any part and refuses to let him into possession of his share, but claims the whole for himself. The rule is thus laid down by a respectable text-writer: "If upon demand by the cotenant of his moiety the other refuse to pay, and deny his title, saying he claims the whole, and continue the possession, such possession is adverse and ouster enough." And the text is fully authorized by the two cases cited in support of it, Fisher v. Prosser, Cowp., 217, and Hillings v. Bird, 11 East, 49; in the latter of which it is said: "The tenant in possession claiming the whole, and denying possession to the other, is sufficient evidence of ouster." Now, it is plain that the principle can reach no case in which the tenant in possession did not know or was not informed by the other of his right, so that he might understand to what extent he was required to surrender the possession, and that he was not required to give it as far as he could rightfully claim it under his own title to a share of the land. Hence, where a demand and refusal, merely, are relied on as evidence of ouster, the kind of demand meant is a demand by the cotenant of "his moiety." If to such a demand the party in possession replies by a denial that the other is entitled to a moiety, and an assertion of his own title to the whole, that shows that his possession is not held for his fellow and himself, but for himself exclusively, and thus is adverse and constitutes evidence of an ouster. But if a cotenant aliens, and the alienee, without giving notice that he has the estate that was in his vendor, comes to the other and demands possession generally, the latter may well (8) regard him as a stranger who is attempting the usurpation of the title and possession of the whole, and as such refuse to surrender the possession; for in such a case the demand is that the tenant in possession shall surrender it out and out, and not that he shall let in the other with him; and he is only doing that which is apparently his duty to the former owner, whom he supposes to be his cotenant still, as well as asserting his own right by a refusal to let such a person in at all. It cannot be inferred from such a transaction that the possessor is claiming all for himself, which is indispensable to turn the possession into an adverse one, but only that he does not acknowledge in the person who makes the demand a title of which he is ignorant, and the other gives him no notice.

It follows from what has been said that the proceedings for a forcible entry and detainer still less tend to create a presumption of an intention in the defendant to hold the possession against his cotenant, Elizabeth Locke, or any person entitled under her to a moiety. It is said, indeed, that person claimed to be Meredith's tenant. But that cannot make a difference; for it is to be presumed that, like his landlord, he claimed the whole land. Besides, nothing else appearing to the contrary, it is an inference from the judgment of the justices that the supposed lessee took possession in an illegal and violent manner, and without any right; for, although it is said that he "claimed" under the lessor of the plaintiff, it does not appear that he made that known to the defendant, nor does it appear that he had in fact a lease from that person. Even supposing, then, that the defendant was informed of Meredith's title to a share (which cannot be assumed), yet he had sufficient grounds for proceeding, as he did, against one who was prima facie a trespasser with strong hand; and it creates no likelihood that the defendant intended to put out or to keep out the person, whoever he or she might be, to (9) whom the undivided moiety of the land descended from John Andres really belonged, and claim the whole for himself. Such may have been the fact; but if it be, it was not made to appear upon the trial of this suit.

PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.

Cited: Page v. Branch, 97 N.C. 102; Gilchrist v. Middleton, 107 N.C. 682.


Summaries of

Meredith v. Andres

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1846
29 N.C. 5 (N.C. 1846)
Case details for

Meredith v. Andres

Case Details

Full title:DEN ON DEMISE OF JAMES MEREDITH v. TIMOTHY ANDRES

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1846

Citations

29 N.C. 5 (N.C. 1846)

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