PDA

View Full Version : S Carolina nigger squatters kicked off land claim 'inherited ownership' dating back to slavery



Whitey Ford
07-18-2019, 02:42 AM
Their Family Bought Land One Generation After Slavery.

Licurtis Reels, left, and Melvin Davis.
The Reels Brothers Spent Eight Years in Jail for Refusing to Leave It.




N THE SPRING OF 2011, the brothers Melvin Davis and Licurtis Reels were the talk of Carteret County, on the central coast of North Carolina. Some people said that the brothers were righteous; others thought that they had lost their minds. That March, Melvin and Licurtis stood in court and refused to leave the land that they had lived on all their lives, a portion of which had, without their knowledge or consent, been sold to developers years before. The brothers were among dozens of Reels family members who considered the land theirs, but Melvin and Licurtis had a particular stake in it. Melvin, who was 64, with loose black curls combed into a ponytail, ran a club there and lived in an apartment above it. He’d established a career shrimping in the river that bordered the land, and his sense of self was tied to the water. Licurtis, who was 53, had spent years building a house near the river’s edge, just steps from his mother’s.

Their great-grandfather had bought the land a hundred years earlier, when he was a generation removed from slavery. The property — 65 marshy acres that ran along Silver Dollar Road, from the woods to the river’s sandy shore — was racked by storms. Some called it the bottom, or the end of the world. Melvin and Licurtis’ grandfather Mitchell Reels was a deacon; he farmed watermelons, beets and peas, and raised chickens and hogs. Churches held tent revivals on the waterfront, and kids played in the river, a prime spot for catching red-tailed shrimp and crabs bigger than shoes. During the later years of racial-segregation laws, the land was home to the only beach in the county that welcomed black families. “It’s our own little black country club,” Melvin and Licurtis’ sister Mamie liked to say. In 1970, when Mitchell died, he had one final wish. “Whatever you do,” he told his family on the night that he passed away, “don’t let the white man have the land.”

Mitchell didn’t trust the courts, so he didn’t leave a will. Instead, he let the land become heirs’ property, a form of ownership in which descendants inherit an interest, like holding stock in a company. The practice began during Reconstruction, when many African Americans didn’t have access to the legal system, and it continued through the Jim Crow era, when black communities were suspicious of white Southern courts. In the United States today, 76% of African Americans do not have a will, more than twice the percentage of white Americans.

https://features.propublica.org/black-land-loss/heirs-property-rights-why-black-families-lose-land-south/

No title, deed or legal paperwork to establish ownership. Smart.

Bottle_of_Hate
07-18-2019, 09:03 AM
Even if it is true, only humans can own land. Farm equipment can't own land.

DJ Stoopnig
07-18-2019, 10:35 AM
It had a sister named Mamie and it grew watermelons. :lol

Rape Ape
07-18-2019, 11:27 AM
I'll bet these coons didn't pay one penny in property tax.
"It beez my lans cuz gram mammy dun squatted an shat muh mammy out here an sheeit! Gnomesane?"

Mitchell didn’t trust the courts, so he didn’t leave a will.
Here's your sign:
:unigger
:rofl

Sandy
07-19-2019, 10:58 AM
David Cecelski, a historian of the North Carolina coast, told me, “You can’t talk to an African-American family who owned land in those counties and not find a story where they feel like land was taken from them against their will, through legal trickery.”

Bullshit. The niggers sold the land. What did they think, someone was just giving them dollars for nothing? Wait, they're niggers, so yes, yes they did think that.

If you read far enough into the sob story like I did (gag), the truth comes out. The niggers' own fambly did it to them:


In 1978, Gertrude’s uncle Shedrick Reels tried to carve out for himself the most valuable slice of land, on the river. He used a legal doctrine called adverse possession, which required him to prove that he had occupied the waterfront for years, continuously and publicly, against the owners’ wishes. Shedrick, who went by Shade and worked as a tire salesman in New Jersey, hadn’t lived on Silver Dollar Road in 27 years. But he claimed that “tenants” had stood in for him — he had built a house on the waterfront in 1950, and relatives had rented it or run it as a club at various times since. Some figured that it was Shade’s land. He also produced a deed that his father, Elijah, had given him in 1950, even though Mitchell, another of Elijah’s sons, had owned the land at the time.


The lawyer examining Shade’s case granted him the waterfront, and Wheatly signed off on the decision. The Reels family, though it didn’t yet know it, had lost the rights to the land on the shoreline.


Shade’s ownership would be almost impossible to overturn. There’s a one-year window to appeal a Torrens decision in North Carolina, and the family had missed it by two years. Soon afterward, Shade sold the land to developers.

So it's even bigger BS than American Indians claiming their land was stolen.