Judges: Neall, Whole
Filed Date: 12/15/1847
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The possession of the plaintiffs on the tract of which the ground covered by the defendant’s mill-pond was part, by construction is regarded as possession of the whole, and there is no doubt that such a possession was enough to put the defendant to proof to justify his act. Indeed the ancestor of the plaintiffs had at one time the possession of a field on the eighty acre tract granted to Roberts, and cultivated it for many years; when he ceased the cultivation, did not appear. But there was no subsequent cultivation on the land by Johnson, or any one under him. The only thing which was done, was to flood the land with water. This was no pedis possessio, evidencing adverse right — it was merely an easement, not inconsistent with the title in another. Looking at these facts, there is no pretence that the plaintiffs’ possession, prima facie, was not enough for the maintenance of their action. When they, however, in addition to their posses
Motion dismissed.