The case on appeal, which was not settled by the judge, and the record show several irregularities.
The complaint and answer raise the issue as to whether the plaintiff and defendants are tenants in common of the land described in the complaint, while the issue submitted to the jury was as to the sole seisin of the defendants, which, in the absence of admissions by the parties, would not be determinative, nor sufficient to support the verdict.
It does not follow that the plaintiff and defendants are tenants in common because the defendants are not sole seised, unless there is an admission to this effect.
Again, the burden of proof was placed on the defendants, and at the close of the evidence a motion for judgment as of nonsuit on the defendants’ evidence was allowed.
The burden of proof is on the plaintiff when sole seisin is pleaded (Huneycut v. Brooks, 116 N. C., 793), although it will devolve on the defendant to establish adverse possession after a prima facie case of a tenancy in common is made out, and there is no precedent for a judgment of nonsuit of a defense.
It is probable the case on appeal does not state accurately the action of the court (and our knowledge of the learned judge before whom the trial was had leads to this conclusion), and that his ruling was that the defendants had not offered sufficient evidence of adverse possession to justify submitting it to a jury, and we will so treat it.
The. plaintiff testified that she had never received any rents from the land; that her father, the common source.of title, died between 1861 and 1865, and that the father of the defendants, N. B. Harward, was in possession of the land until his death, three or four years ago.
One of the defendants also testified that she was a daughter of N. B. Harward and was 28 years of age; that she was born and reared on the land, and lived on it until her father died, and that she and the other defendants had been in possession and had collected the rents since the death of her father.
This furnishes evidence of an exclusive possession for twenty years in the defendants and those under whom they claim, and under our *85decisions suck possession by one tenant in common raises a presumption of an ouster and, unexplained, will bar tlie other tenants.
“The possession of one tenant in common is in law the possession of all his cotenants, because they claim by one common right. When, however, that possession has been continued for a great number of years, without any claim from another who has a right, and is under no disability to assert it, it will be considered evidence of title to such sole possession; and where it has so continued for twenty years, the law raises a presumption that it is rightful, and will protect it. This it will do as well from public policy, to prevent stale demands, as to protect possessors from the loss of evidence from lapse of time. Possession, then, for twenty years under the above circumstances will amount to a disseisin or ouster of the cotenant, and furnishes a legal presumption of the fact necessary to uphold an exclusive possession — as that the possession was adverse in its commencement, and tolls the entry of the tenant not in possession.” Blade v. Lindsay, 44 N. C., 467.
This authority was approved in Dobbins v. Dobbins, 141 N. C., 216, where the principle is fully discussed and the cases collected.
It was, therefore, error to refuse to submit the evidence of adverse possession to the jury.
We have not considered the effect of the coverture of the plaintiff, as it does not appear when she was married.
New trial.