{
  "id": 8522990,
  "name": "LUCILLE B. TUNNELL, JOHN M. BERRY, JR., HENRY CLAY BERRY, MERLIN S. BERRY, VELMA A. BERRY, LANDRETH W. BERRY, KAY BERRY YOUNG, FRANCES C. BARBOUR, MRS. EDWARD W. CAHOON, EVELYN ANN CROLEY, PHILLIP S. HARRIS, ELIZABETH C. LA VOY, NICHOLAS D. HARRIS, MARIETTA C. HEOBEAT, CLARY WESTON, WADE SWINDELL, ELLA S. BERRY, NELL GRACE BERRY, REUBEN W. BERRY, JR., WILLIAM C. BERRY, LEONA BERRY LUPTON, CARLOS BERRY, JR., SAMUEL G. JONES, JR., WILLIAM C. JONES, MARY RUTH JONES SCOTT, CHARLES A. JONES, HOWARD E. JONES, THAD BROWN, MARY ANNA BROWN WILKINSON, JOHN KENNETH BROWN, ALEXANDER B. BERRY, III, TIMOTHY B. BERRY, ELVA ANNE BERRY YATES, HAZEL BERRY BAKER, FRANCES BERRY CAVINESS, SUSAN SWINDELL WENRICH, MARK EDWARD SWINDELL, DALLAS N. BERRY, SR., JAMES F. BERRY, EVELYN BERRY PARRY ELLIS, MARGARET T. PITTMAN, SHIRLEY BERRY PHILLIPS, RICHARD DUANE BERRY, CHARLES HENRY HALL, C. TIMOTHY SMITH, EUNICE S. DARDEN, NELLIE B. OUTLAND, JAMES E. BRIDGMAN, SANDRA B. PARTIN, IRENE B. LASSITER, HARVEY D. WILLIAMS, JR., MICHAEL V. HOLTON, JACK M. HOLTON, WILBUR CLAY HOLDERBY, HILDAH JONES MURRAY, Z. VANCE JONES, JR., GEORGIA E. HARRIS, JEAN HARRIS POTTER, DOROTHY HARRIS IRELAND, MYRA HARRIS MAYO, JAMES T. HARRIS, RUBY HARRIS WILLIAMS, DORA HARRIS CLAYTON, RICHARD BERRY HARRIS, JR., ELLA LOUISE HARRIS, NANCY J. MUSSEL, BETSY J. NUGENT, MIKE E. JONES, JR., POLLY ANN BERRY CUTRELL, METRAH WARREN WILLIAMS, CLARENCE SPENCER HOLTON, JR., MARY ANN J. BEARD, LEWIS B. JONES, VIRGINIA JONES McKIE, JOSEPH SWINDELL CREDLE, MELINDA CREDLE EASTON, MARJORIE ANN WILLIAMS, GLENN W. HOLDERBY, HAL FORD HOLTON, JOHN B. McGOWAN, MARY KATHERYN McGOWAN, DORMAN J. McGOWAN, JAMES A. McGOWAN, JR., LINDA McGOWAN McQUEEN, RICHARD BERRY, AND LESLIE JONES, JR., HILDA J. MURRAY v. MRS. JOB BERRY, W. GRATZ SPENCER AND WIFE, MARGARET M. SPENCER, MORRIS BERRY, ROY CAHOON, WILLIAM CLIFF CAHOON, HIATT B. CAHOON AND WIFE, NORMA EARLE S. CAHOON, RICHARD DICKS, CHARLES DICKS, DORTHY DICKS RADCLIFFE, MILLICENT HARRIS LUPTON, MYRA H. YOUNGS, BOBBY BERRY, ALEXANDER BERRY CREDLE, GEORGE V. CREDLE, III, CHARLES BERRY, GUI V. HARRIS, MRS. JAMES BARNES, LEE WILLIAMS, FANNIE CAHOON BOOMER, METTA McGOWAN, DAVID McGOWAN, SCOTT HOLTON, MRS. ATRIL LILLY, MRS. DORCUS E. CLARKE, MRS. JEAN ROSS, CAROLYN JONES, SELBY JONES, RUTH HOLTON DALE, CECIL RUBEN HARRIS, AND EASTWOOD HUBERT, AND ANY OTHER PER STIRPES ISSUE OF JOHN BERRY",
  "name_abbreviation": "Tunnell v. Berry",
  "decision_date": "1985-03-05",
  "docket_number": "No. 842SC536",
  "first_page": "222",
  "last_page": "228",
  "citations": [
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      "cite": "73 N.C. App. 222"
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    "name_abbreviation": "N.C. Ct. App.",
    "id": 14983,
    "name": "North Carolina Court of Appeals"
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    "name_long": "North Carolina",
    "name": "N.C."
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      "cite": "106 S.E. 150",
      "category": "reporters:state_regional",
      "reporter": "S.E.",
      "year": 1921,
      "pin_cites": [
        {
          "page": "151"
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    {
      "cite": "181 N.C. 53",
      "category": "reporters:state",
      "reporter": "N.C.",
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    {
      "cite": "148 S.E. 2d 546",
      "category": "reporters:state_regional",
      "reporter": "S.E.2d",
      "year": 1966,
      "pin_cites": [
        {
          "page": "548"
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    {
      "cite": "267 N.C. 643",
      "category": "reporters:state",
      "reporter": "N.C.",
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      "cite": "131 S.E. 575",
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      "year": 1926,
      "pin_cites": [
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      "cite": "191 N.C. 203",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T21:55:13.639601+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "Judges Wells and Martin concur."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "LUCILLE B. TUNNELL, JOHN M. BERRY, JR., HENRY CLAY BERRY, MERLIN S. BERRY, VELMA A. BERRY, LANDRETH W. BERRY, KAY BERRY YOUNG, FRANCES C. BARBOUR, MRS. EDWARD W. CAHOON, EVELYN ANN CROLEY, PHILLIP S. HARRIS, ELIZABETH C. LA VOY, NICHOLAS D. HARRIS, MARIETTA C. HEOBEAT, CLARY WESTON, WADE SWINDELL, ELLA S. BERRY, NELL GRACE BERRY, REUBEN W. BERRY, JR., WILLIAM C. BERRY, LEONA BERRY LUPTON, CARLOS BERRY, JR., SAMUEL G. JONES, JR., WILLIAM C. JONES, MARY RUTH JONES SCOTT, CHARLES A. JONES, HOWARD E. JONES, THAD BROWN, MARY ANNA BROWN WILKINSON, JOHN KENNETH BROWN, ALEXANDER B. BERRY, III, TIMOTHY B. BERRY, ELVA ANNE BERRY YATES, HAZEL BERRY BAKER, FRANCES BERRY CAVINESS, SUSAN SWINDELL WENRICH, MARK EDWARD SWINDELL, DALLAS N. BERRY, SR., JAMES F. BERRY, EVELYN BERRY PARRY ELLIS, MARGARET T. PITTMAN, SHIRLEY BERRY PHILLIPS, RICHARD DUANE BERRY, CHARLES HENRY HALL, C. TIMOTHY SMITH, EUNICE S. DARDEN, NELLIE B. OUTLAND, JAMES E. BRIDGMAN, SANDRA B. PARTIN, IRENE B. LASSITER, HARVEY D. WILLIAMS, JR., MICHAEL V. HOLTON, JACK M. HOLTON, WILBUR CLAY HOLDERBY, HILDAH JONES MURRAY, Z. VANCE JONES, JR., GEORGIA E. HARRIS, JEAN HARRIS POTTER, DOROTHY HARRIS IRELAND, MYRA HARRIS MAYO, JAMES T. HARRIS, RUBY HARRIS WILLIAMS, DORA HARRIS CLAYTON, RICHARD BERRY HARRIS, JR., ELLA LOUISE HARRIS, NANCY J. MUSSEL, BETSY J. NUGENT, MIKE E. JONES, JR., POLLY ANN BERRY CUTRELL, METRAH WARREN WILLIAMS, CLARENCE SPENCER HOLTON, JR., MARY ANN J. BEARD, LEWIS B. JONES, VIRGINIA JONES McKIE, JOSEPH SWINDELL CREDLE, MELINDA CREDLE EASTON, MARJORIE ANN WILLIAMS, GLENN W. HOLDERBY, HAL FORD HOLTON, JOHN B. McGOWAN, MARY KATHERYN McGOWAN, DORMAN J. McGOWAN, JAMES A. McGOWAN, JR., LINDA McGOWAN McQUEEN, RICHARD BERRY, AND LESLIE JONES, JR., HILDA J. MURRAY v. MRS. JOB BERRY, W. GRATZ SPENCER AND WIFE, MARGARET M. SPENCER, MORRIS BERRY, ROY CAHOON, WILLIAM CLIFF CAHOON, HIATT B. CAHOON AND WIFE, NORMA EARLE S. CAHOON, RICHARD DICKS, CHARLES DICKS, DORTHY DICKS RADCLIFFE, MILLICENT HARRIS LUPTON, MYRA H. YOUNGS, BOBBY BERRY, ALEXANDER BERRY CREDLE, GEORGE V. CREDLE, III, CHARLES BERRY, GUI V. HARRIS, MRS. JAMES BARNES, LEE WILLIAMS, FANNIE CAHOON BOOMER, METTA McGOWAN, DAVID McGOWAN, SCOTT HOLTON, MRS. ATRIL LILLY, MRS. DORCUS E. CLARKE, MRS. JEAN ROSS, CAROLYN JONES, SELBY JONES, RUTH HOLTON DALE, CECIL RUBEN HARRIS, AND EASTWOOD HUBERT, AND ANY OTHER PER STIRPES ISSUE OF JOHN BERRY"
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "ARNOLD, Judge.\nThe first issue presented by this appeal is whether the trial court erred by concluding that the words \u201cbrothers and sisters or their heirs\u201d in the will of John Berry were words of limitation rather than words of purchase, and that as such they served only to preserve the ancestral shares of the \u201cbrothers and sisters.\u201d\nWords of purchase in wills are those words which designate the persons to whom an estate in land is granted, while words of limitation are those which define the quantum of interest given and fixes the time for the commencement of the estate. The word \u201cheirs\u201d may be used as either a word of purchase or a word of limitation. Although the word \u201cheirs\u201d is primarily used as a word of limitation, when it is used to designate beneficiaries who are to take an estate it is a word of purchase. J. Grimes, 5B Thompson on Real Property \u00a7 2621 pp. 2-3 (1978 Replacement Volume). When a transfer is made to \u201cA and his heirs\u201d the words \u201cand his heirs\u201d are words of limitation and mean that \u201cA\u201d has an estate that is potentially infinite in duration or, put another way, an estate in fee simple. T. Bergin and P. Haskell, Preface To Estates in Land and Future Interest, p. 30 (1984). However, in a transfer to \u201cA or his heirs\u201d the words \u201cor his heirs\u201d are words of purchase which designate alternative takers to \u201cA.\u201d Grimes, supra, \u00a7 2622 p. 11. Thus, the trial court erred in concluding that \u201cbrothers and sisters or their heirs\u201d were words in limitation which served only to preserve the ancestral shares of the brothers and sisters.\nHaving determined that \u201cbrothers and sisters or their heirs\u201d are words of purchase, the next question presented is what meaning should we ascribe to the word \u201cheirs.\u201d The term \u201cheirs\u201d is generally interpreted to mean those persons who come within the intestate succession statute and who are living at the date of the testator\u2019s death. However, this general rule is subject to exceptions. See generally T. Bergin and P. Haskell, supra, pp. 230-232. Our Supreme Court recognized such an exception in Mercer v. Downs, 191 N.C. 203, 131 S.E. 575 (1926), where the testator left certain property to his wife for life with a remainder to the testator\u2019s \u201csurviving children or their heirs.\u201d The court held that: \u201cThe language \u2018our surviving children or their heirs\u2019 indicates that the death of the life tenant and not the death of the devisor was the time fixed for the ascertainment of the remaindermen.\u201d Id. at 206, 131 S.E. at 577. In Lawson v. Lawson, 267 N.C. 643, 645, 148 S.E. 2d 546, 548 (1966), the Supreme Court further held that when interests were contingent, that only those persons \u201c \u2018who can answer the roll immediately upon the happening of the [contingency] acquire any estate in the properties granted.\u2019 (Citation omitted.)\u201d The position adopted in Lawson is a minority rule which has in some instances had as its effect the disinheritance of whole lines of a testator\u2019s intended takers. See T. Bergin and P. Haskell, supra, p. 131. While we feel that Lawson is in need of further review, nevertheless we are bound by it. Finally, in Hutchinson v. Lucas, 181 N.C. 53, 54-55, 106 S.E. 150, 151 (1921), the court stated that \u201cwhen the holders of a contingent estate are specified and known they may assign and convey it and can make a deed which will conclude all claiming under them, . . . yet \u2018where the heirs, issue or children are so designated as to take by purchase under the terms of the will, there is no estoppel or rebuttal, as they do not take from their ancestor by descent, but dir\u00e9ctly from the devisor as purchasers.\u2019 \u201d\nApplying these principles to the case sub judice we conclude that the takers under the contingent devise to Job\u2019s brothers and sisters or their heirs were the heirs of Job\u2019s brothers and sisters who were alive when Job died without leaving any children. Since these takers were not ascertainable until Job died in 1979 without leaving any children, the 1941 quitclaim deed by those persons who would have taken had Job died at that time was not effective to extinguish the rights of their descendants.\nFinally, we must determine whether the 1941 quitclaim deed served to estop those persons who executed it in 1941 and who were still alive when Job died in 1979. \u201cIn North Carolina, whether a quitclaim deed . . . creates an estoppel depends upon its language, . . . and there is substantial authority in this jurisdiction for the position that the principle of estoppel will apply when the deed shows that the grantor intended to convey and the grantee expected to acquire a particular estate. . . . (Citations omitted.)\u201d Realty Co. v. Wysor, 272 N.C. 172, 178-79, 158 S.E. 2d 7, 12 (1967). The 1941 quitclaim deed evidenced an intent by the grantors to convey and an expectation that the grantee was going to receive certain interests. Thus, those persons who are the heirs of Job\u2019s brothers and sisters and who signed the 1941 deed are estopped from pursuing their claim to the property.\nFor the foregoing reasoning, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the case is remanded for the entry of a judgment determining the ownership in the property in accordance with the guidelines set forth in this opinion.\nReversed and remanded.\nJudges Wells and Martin concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "ARNOLD, Judge."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Rodman, Rodman, Holscher & Francisco, by Edward N. Rod-man, and Davis & Davis, by George Thomas Davis, Jr., for plaintiff appellants.",
      "Wilkinson & Vosburgh, by James R. Vosburgh, for defendant appellees."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "LUCILLE B. TUNNELL, JOHN M. BERRY, JR., HENRY CLAY BERRY, MERLIN S. BERRY, VELMA A. BERRY, LANDRETH W. BERRY, KAY BERRY YOUNG, FRANCES C. BARBOUR, MRS. EDWARD W. CAHOON, EVELYN ANN CROLEY, PHILLIP S. HARRIS, ELIZABETH C. LA VOY, NICHOLAS D. HARRIS, MARIETTA C. HEOBEAT, CLARY WESTON, WADE SWINDELL, ELLA S. BERRY, NELL GRACE BERRY, REUBEN W. BERRY, JR., WILLIAM C. BERRY, LEONA BERRY LUPTON, CARLOS BERRY, JR., SAMUEL G. JONES, JR., WILLIAM C. JONES, MARY RUTH JONES SCOTT, CHARLES A. JONES, HOWARD E. JONES, THAD BROWN, MARY ANNA BROWN WILKINSON, JOHN KENNETH BROWN, ALEXANDER B. BERRY, III, TIMOTHY B. BERRY, ELVA ANNE BERRY YATES, HAZEL BERRY BAKER, FRANCES BERRY CAVINESS, SUSAN SWINDELL WENRICH, MARK EDWARD SWINDELL, DALLAS N. BERRY, SR., JAMES F. BERRY, EVELYN BERRY PARRY ELLIS, MARGARET T. PITTMAN, SHIRLEY BERRY PHILLIPS, RICHARD DUANE BERRY, CHARLES HENRY HALL, C. TIMOTHY SMITH, EUNICE S. DARDEN, NELLIE B. OUTLAND, JAMES E. BRIDGMAN, SANDRA B. PARTIN, IRENE B. LASSITER, HARVEY D. WILLIAMS, JR., MICHAEL V. HOLTON, JACK M. HOLTON, WILBUR CLAY HOLDERBY, HILDAH JONES MURRAY, Z. VANCE JONES, JR., GEORGIA E. HARRIS, JEAN HARRIS POTTER, DOROTHY HARRIS IRELAND, MYRA HARRIS MAYO, JAMES T. HARRIS, RUBY HARRIS WILLIAMS, DORA HARRIS CLAYTON, RICHARD BERRY HARRIS, JR., ELLA LOUISE HARRIS, NANCY J. MUSSEL, BETSY J. NUGENT, MIKE E. JONES, JR., POLLY ANN BERRY CUTRELL, METRAH WARREN WILLIAMS, CLARENCE SPENCER HOLTON, JR., MARY ANN J. BEARD, LEWIS B. JONES, VIRGINIA JONES McKIE, JOSEPH SWINDELL CREDLE, MELINDA CREDLE EASTON, MARJORIE ANN WILLIAMS, GLENN W. HOLDERBY, HAL FORD HOLTON, JOHN B. McGOWAN, MARY KATHERYN McGOWAN, DORMAN J. McGOWAN, JAMES A. McGOWAN, JR., LINDA McGOWAN McQUEEN, RICHARD BERRY, AND LESLIE JONES, JR., HILDA J. MURRAY v. MRS. JOB BERRY, W. GRATZ SPENCER AND WIFE, MARGARET M. SPENCER, MORRIS BERRY, ROY CAHOON, WILLIAM CLIFF CAHOON, HIATT B. CAHOON AND WIFE, NORMA EARLE S. CAHOON, RICHARD DICKS, CHARLES DICKS, DORTHY DICKS RADCLIFFE, MILLICENT HARRIS LUPTON, MYRA H. YOUNGS, BOBBY BERRY, ALEXANDER BERRY CREDLE, GEORGE V. CREDLE, III, CHARLES BERRY, GUI V. HARRIS, MRS. JAMES BARNES, LEE WILLIAMS, FANNIE CAHOON BOOMER, METTA McGOWAN, DAVID McGOWAN, SCOTT HOLTON, MRS. ATRIL LILLY, MRS. DORCUS E. CLARKE, MRS. JEAN ROSS, CAROLYN JONES, SELBY JONES, RUTH HOLTON DALE, CECIL RUBEN HARRIS, AND EASTWOOD HUBERT, AND ANY OTHER PER STIRPES ISSUE OF JOHN BERRY\nNo. 842SC536\n(Filed 5 March 1985)\n1. Wills \u00a7\u00a7 33.1, 35.2\u2014 contingent devisee \u2014words of purchase \u2014 time of vesting \u2014effect of quitclaim deed\nIn an action to construe an 1899 will in which the testator devised real and personal property to his son with the following clause, \u201cFurther if my son Job dies without leaving children the property herein given to him must be divided equally amongst his brothers and sisters or their heirs,\u201d the words \u201cbrothers and sisters or their heirs\u201d were words of purchase rather than limitation, and the word \u201cheirs\u201d refers only to those persons \u201cwho can answer the roll immediately upon the happening of the contingency . . . .\u201d Thus, the takers under the contingent devise were the heirs of Job\u2019s brothers and sisters who were alive when Job died in 1979 without children, and a 1941 quitclaim deed by those persons who would have taken had Job died at that time was not effective to extinguish the rights of their descendants.\n2. Wills \u00a7 69; Estoppel \u00a7 2\u2014 quitclaim deed by contingent devisees \u2014 estoppel as to those signing\nA 1941 quitclaim deed by those persons who would have taken at that time under a contingent devise estopped those who executed it and who were still alive from pursuing their claim when the contingency occurred in 1979 because the 1941 quitclaim deed evidenced an intent by the grantors to convey and an expectation that the grantee was going to receive certain benefits.\nAPPEAL by the plaintiffs from Stevens, Judge. Judgment entered 20 January 1984 in Superior Court, HYDE County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15 January 1985.\nThis is a civil declaratory judgment action to construe the will of John Berry. Berry died testate about 1899 survived by a wife and ten children. In his will he devised certain real and personal property to his son Job. The will also contained the following clause: \u201cFurther if my son Job dies without leaving children the property herein given to him must be divided equally amongst his brothers and sisters or their heirs.\u201d By early 1941, all but one of Job\u2019s brothers and sisters had died. In 1941, Job\u2019s surviving brother and the issue of his other eight brothers and sisters executed a quitclaim deed conveying all their right, title, and interest in the subject property to Job. In February 1979, Job died testate, without ever having children. In his will Job devised the subject property to his widow for life with a remainder to Walton Spencer. The plaintiffs, who are the lineal descendants of Job\u2019s brothers and sisters, filed this action seeking to have the court to construe the will of John Berry and determine their interest in the lands devised to Job Berry.\nOn 14 November 1983, Judge Stevens sitting without a jury, heard the case in Hyde County Superior Court. On 20 January 1984, he entered a judgment which in pertinent part provided:\nFindings of Fact\nSECOND: That by deed dated January 20, 1941, as recorded in Book 58, page 424, Public Registry of Hyde County, John H. C. Berry, the only surviving child of John Berry except his brother, Job Berry, together with the surviving children of the other eight deceased children of John Berry, executed a deed conveying and quit-claiming all of their right, title and interest in and to the lands devised by John Berry in his will to Job Berry, his son.\nTHIRD: That Job Berry died in 1979 leaving a will duly probated in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Hyde County, wherein the lands in controversy were devised to his widow, Maude Elizabeth Swindell Berry, for her life with remainder over to Walton Gratz Spencer in fee simple.\nFOURTH: That plaintiffs contend, among other things, that the family of John Berry, as it existed as of the death of Job Berry in 1979, took said lands by purchase under the will of John Berry, when his son, Job Berry, \u201cdied without children.\u201d On the other hand, the defendants contend, among other things, that the deed to Job Berry purported to bar the interest of each heir of John Berry named therein, including the heirs of such persons, and in addition, purported to bar any further or future claim against this land by such heirs who are, as defendants say and contend, estopped to claim such interest.\nConclusions of Law\nFIRST: That the words, \u201cbrothers and sisters or their heirs\u201d, as set forth in the will of John Berry, are words of limitation rather than words of purchase, serving only to preserve the ancestral shares of such \u201cbrothers and sisters\u201d. That the interest so created being executory in nature, and although a future interest, is fully transferrable as the beneficiaries were ascertainable at the time they executed the deed to Job Berry in 1941.\nAnd SECOND: That, moreover, said deed, in the manner and form in which it was drafted and executed to Job Berry, effectively divest, (H. L. S. Ill) bars and legally estops all of the individuals who signed the deed, including also all of those individuals who assert or claim an interest in the property, either through, by or under them, be they heirs or survivors, from acquiring any rights of possession, claim of title or interest in and to the lands described in the said deed, whatsoever.\nIt is, therefore, Considered, Ordered, Adjudged, and DECREED that Job Berry\u2019s devise by will of the said lands in controversy to his widow, Maude Elizabeth Swindell Berry, for life with remainder over to Walton Gratz Spencer was absolute and in fee simple, subject only to claims of adverse possession, if any there be.\nFrom this judgment, the plaintiff appealed.\nRodman, Rodman, Holscher & Francisco, by Edward N. Rod-man, and Davis & Davis, by George Thomas Davis, Jr., for plaintiff appellants.\nWilkinson & Vosburgh, by James R. Vosburgh, for defendant appellees."
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  "file_name": "0222-01",
  "first_page_order": 254,
  "last_page_order": 260
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