Citation Numbers: 56 S.E.2d 424, 231 N.C. 136, 1949 N.C. LEXIS 501
Judges: Ervin
Filed Date: 11/23/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This appeal involves three criminal actions which originated in the Recorder's Court of Wake Forest, and were carried thence to the Superior Court by appeals of the defendant. The cases were consolidated by consent in the Superior Court, where trial was had de novo on the original warrants. The first two warrants were based on criminal complaints drawn under G.S.
The State presented no documentary evidence to show any title in the New Bethel Church. It did introduce oral testimony, however, indicating that the New Bethel Church laid claim to two tracts of land adjoining a public highway known as the Raleigh Road in Barton Creek Township in Wake County; that the first of these tracts contained a church building and had been in the actual occupation of the congregation for upwards of fifty years; that the second of these tracts, which embraced about two acres, had been purchased from Zelma Rudd in May or June, 1947, and lay between the farm of the defendant and the Raleigh Road; that the officers of the New Bethel Church forbade the defendant to enter upon the two-acre tract, and thereafter, to wit, on 17 August, 1948, and October 1, 1948, the defendant traveled to and fro thereon between his farm and the Raleigh Road; that thereafter, to wit, on 4 January, 1949, officers and members of the New Bethel Church erected a barbed wire fence along an edge of the two acre tract to preclude its use as a way by the defendant, and two hours later the defendant tore down the fence; and that the two-acre tract was not in the actual possession of anybody during the times in controvery, except for two or three hours on 4 January, 1949, while officers and members of the Church were engaged in the erection of the barbed wire fence mentioned above.
The defendant introduced a duly registered deed dated 9 December, 1939, whereby J. K. Ray and his wife, Iola Ray, purported to convey to the defendant in fee simple eighty acres of land adjoining the Raleigh Road and the first tract claimed by the New Bethel Church in Barton Creek Township in Wake County. The defendant presented oral testimony tending to show that the eighty acre tract embraced the locus in quo; that he had been in the actual possession of the locus in quo and all other portions of the eighty acre tract at all times since 9 December, 1939, under a claim of fee simple ownership based upon his deed; and that he had torn down the barbed wire fence because it had been erected by the prosecutor against his will upon the land occupied and claimed by him under his deed, and interfered with his use of such land.
The jury found the defendant guilty in all three cases, and the court pronounced judgments of imprisonment upon the verdicts. The defendant excepted and appealed, assigning as errors the refusals of the court to nonsuit the actions under G.S.
Various criminal trespasses to land and fixtures are known to the law. Some are common law crimes, and others are legislative creations. S. v. Phipps,
Some, e.g., the crime of unlawfully cutting, injuring or removing another's timber as defined by G.S.
Others, e.g., the misdemeanor of forcible trespass under G.S.
There is yet another category of criminal trespasses to realty. It embraces offenses intended to protect possession, regardless of whether it be actual or constructive in its nature. S. v. Reynolds,
In prosecutions for criminal trespasses of the second class, i.e., those which are offenses against actual possession only, the title is not in issue, but the State must prove actual possession of the premises by the prosecutor as an indispensable element of the charge. It inevitably ensues that the prosecution fails in such cases for defect of proof if the evidence discloses that the accused and not the prosecutor actually occupied the locus in quo at the time in controversy.
These observations apply with equal force to prosecutions for criminal trespasses of the third category, i.e., offenses against either actual or constructive possession, unless such prosecutions be founded on entries upon vacant land. In the last mentioned eventuality, the title is in issue for the State cannot prevail, in such case, without showing the constructive possession of the prosecutor as an essential ingredient of the accusation, and to do that, the State must establish title in the prosecutor at the time of the alleged offense. S. v. Reynolds, supra. In consequence, the prosecution fails in this instance for defect of proof if the testimony reveals that at such time the accused and not the prosecutor had title to the locus in quo.
The crime created by the enactment now codified as G.S.
The assignments of error of the defendant based upon the refusal of the trial court to dismiss the prosecutions for trespass upon compulsory nonsuits under G.S.
The testimony of the prosecution itself discloses that the only acts done by the prosecutor in asserting its claim to the locus in quo consisted in warning the defendant to stay off the land, and in entering upon the land temporarily on a single occasion to erect a barbed wire fence thereon, which was designed solely to exclude the defendant from the land and which was forthwith removed by the defendant. Merely warning others not to go upon specific land does not constitute actual possession of such land. Ruffin v. Overby,
The only evidence presented by the State to show ownership of the locus in, quo by the prosecutor consisted of the oral assertions of witnesses that the prosecutor bought the property from Zelma Rudd in May or June, 1947. This testimony fell far short of meeting the legal requirements for proving title to realty. Mobley v. Griffin,
The criminal complaint supporting the third warrant was drawn under G.S.
For the reasons given, the motions of the defendant for judgments of nonsuit in the several prosecutions are sustained on this appeal. These rulings have the force and effect of verdicts of not guilty in all three actions. G.S.
Reversed.
State v. . Forte , 222 N.C. 537 ( 1943 )
State v. Wells. , 142 N.C. 590 ( 1906 )
State v. . Hause , 71 N.C. 518 ( 1874 )
State v. . Glenn , 118 N.C. 1194 ( 1896 )
Currie v. . Gilchrist , 147 N.C. 648 ( 1908 )
Locklear v. . Savage , 159 N.C. 236 ( 1912 )
State v. . Faggart , 170 N.C. 737 ( 1915 )
State v. . Boyce , 109 N.C. 739 ( 1891 )
State v. . Whitehurst , 70 N.C. 85 ( 1874 )
State v. . Yellowday , 152 N.C. 793 ( 1910 )
State v. . Winslow , 95 N.C. 649 ( 1886 )
State v. . Crosset , 81 N.C. 579 ( 1879 )
Tate v. . Fisher , 109 N.C. 817 ( 1891 )
Mitchell v. . Bridgers , 113 N.C. 63 ( 1893 )
State v. . Lawson , 101 N.C. 717 ( 1888 )
State v. Webster , 121 N.C. 586 ( 1897 )
State v. . Law , 227 N.C. 103 ( 1946 )
State v. . Reynolds , 95 N.C. 616 ( 1886 )
State v. . Howell , 107 N.C. 835 ( 1890 )
State v. Washington , 357 S.E.2d 419 ( 1987 )
State v. Clyburn , 247 N.C. 455 ( 1958 )
dunbar-corporation-robert-l-maxey-v-james-lindsey-frederick-a-perrenot , 905 F.2d 754 ( 1990 )
State v. Cooke , 246 N.C. 518 ( 1957 )
State v. Avent , 253 N.C. 580 ( 1961 )
State v. Mitchell , 234 N.C. App. 423 ( 2014 )
Matthews v. Forrest , 235 N.C. 281 ( 1952 )
State v. Hoyt , 1981 Minn. LEXIS 1259 ( 1981 )