Shaffer v. Gaynor

Court: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Date filed: 1895-09-15
Citations: 117 N.C. 15
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Lead Opinion
Avery, J. :

In the discussion of the admissibility of evidence by reputation and of hearsay evidence, in Dobson v. Finkley, 8 Jones, 499, Chief Justice PeaksoN said: “It is settled law that both kinds of evidence are competent in questions of private boundary in this State. In the latter, to-wit, hearsay evidence, it is necessaary as a preliminary to its admissibilty to prove that the person whose statement it is proposed to offer in evidence, is dead ; not on the ground that the fact of his being dead gives any additional force to the credibility oí his statement, but on

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tbe ground that if he be alive, he should be produced as a witness, whereas it is manifest that in respect to evidence by reputation, this preliminary question cannot arise.” Harris v. Powell, 2 Hay., 349; Hartzog v. Hubbard, 2 D. & B., 241.

The rule that testimony by reputation was competent, under any circumstances, to locate the boundaries of land was admitted to be a departure from the English doctrine, which is still adhered to in many of the States, notably by the court of Massachusetts; but the fact that the country had been recently settled and was still but sparsely inhabited and that consequently monuments of title could not be so well known or firmly established, as in an older country, seems to have been ample justification for a modification which adapted the rule to the reason. The fact that the courts of Tennessee and of Kentucky, where the conditions were similar, followed the ruling in this State, is additional evideuce of the necessity for the change Sasser v. Herring, 3 Dev., 342; Bond v. Talbott, I. Cooke, 142 ; Smith v. Arwells, 2 Littell, 159; I Greenleaf, Sec. 145, note on pp. 194 and 195.

The newly adopted principle was subject however to the single restriction that it was not competent to show a general reputation that the premises claimed were located within the limits of certain grants without any evidence as to monuments of title though the claimant was permitted to prove that particular landmarks, such as trees, streams or lines constituted, according to the general report, parts of his boundary, or that he held possession with the acquiescence of others up to a known line, Mendenhall v. Cassels, 3 Dev. & Bat., 49.

The exception, therefore, to the testimony of the witness Whitehurst that there was a general reputation in the

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neighborhood that the sweet gum at 12 was Bond’s corner, is without merit.

“Occasional acts of ownership, however clearly they may indicate a purpose to claim title and exercise dominion over land, do not constitute a possession that will mature title.” Ruffin v. Overby, 105 N. C., 78; Asbury v. Fair, 111 N. C., 251; Hamilton v. Icard, 114, N. C., 532. A possession that ripens into title must be such as continually subjects some portion of the disputed land to the only use of which it is susceptible or it must be an actual and continuous occupation of a house or the cultivation of a field however small according to the usages of husbandry. McLean v. Smith, 106 N. C., 172; Bynum v. Carter, 4 Ired., 310; Tredwell v. Riddick, 1 Ired., 56; Cox v. Ward, 107 N. C., 507; Hamilton v. Icard, supra. The test is involved in the question whether the acts of ownership were such as to subject the claimant continually during the whole statutory period to an action in the nature of trespass in ejectment instead of to one or several actions of tresspass quaere clausum fregit for damages. Hamilton v. Icard, supra, pp. 536 and 537 ; Osborne v. Johnston, 65 N. C., 22; McLean v. Smith, supra; State y. Suttle, 115 N. C., 784; Boomer v. Gibbs, 114 N. C., 76. The digging of ditches and constructing roads through Swamps for the purpose of getting shingles, when it appeared affirmatively that the swamp lauds were susceptible of no other use, was such an assertion of ownership as subjected the occupant to an action of possession, as was the continuous getting of turpentine on a pine barren worthless for any other purpose (Tredwell v. Riddick, 1 Ired., 56 ; Bynum v. Carter, 4 Ired., 310); and these two cases mark the extreme limit to which this Court has gone. The testimony in this case was similar to that offered in Ruffin v. Overby, and several others that we have cited. The acts of dominion

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consisted of cutting board timber some time during a particular year on a piece of woodland ; but there was no evidence to show that they were continuous or if they were, that the land, though while covered with timber it was not susceptible to other use, might not have been cleared ' and cultivated, regardless of its capacity for profitable produc-' tion. There was no error therefore in instructing the jury that such acts were not an assertion of the right that would mature title.

The' sweet-gum at 12, had, it seems, beeh marked by S. T. Carrow, as a pointer to show where a stake call ed for as a corner -was located. The marking was done in the progress of a survey made by one S. T. Roberson, to determine the location of the line between Carrow’s land and that of Noah W. Guilford. The plaintiff claimed through S. T. Carrow, to whom the Sheriff of Beaufort County Conveyed, by virtue of a sale under execution of the lands of Noah W. Guilford, on the 6th of January, 1872. Plaintiff exhibited mesne conveyances, including deed of trust from Carrow to John 0. Blake, deed from Blake, trustee, to the First National Bank of Raleigh, and from the bank to the plaintiff, dated October 31st, 1883.

The defendant claimed under a deed from N. W. Guil-ford to George W. Guilford, trustee for Graham A. Guil ford, dated May 23, 1872. It was in evidence that this survey was made between the date of the deed of Satch-well, Sheriff, to Carrow and that of Noah’W". Guilford to George Guilford, trustee, and at some time in the spring of 1872. S. T. Carrow was at the time of the survey in possession under the Sheriff’s deed.

A deed conveying land is a species of contract, in the enforcement of which the leading jmi’pose of the courts, where the controversy involves a question of boundary, is to ascertain the precise lines and corners as to which the

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minds of grantor and grantee concurred. Parol proof of course is not as a-general rule admissible to vary or contradict a plain written description,,but it is always competent to show where the parties, located the lines and corners by a cotemporaneons survey in order to define more exactly what was intended to pass. Cherry v. Slade, 3 Mur., 82. The survey made under such circumstances is intended, in contemplation of law to reduce to a certainty, what the courts would- have held sufficiently definite for enforcement as a contract without a survey, only when it appeared that by running from an established point called for according to the description contained in the deed, a definite boundary would be embraced within the lines. Hence, it is held competent to prove that a eotemporaneous but not a subsequent survey located a corner at a place different from that ascertained by following course and distance. The corner was located by means of the Gum pointer and the lin'e was marked by Oarrow not cotem-poraneously or with a view to the subsequent execution of the conveyance by Noah W. Guilford to George Guil-ford, trustee, and the,law does not therefore impute to the parties the intent to contract with reference to the survey merely because it had been made before the date of the deed. Admissions made in the progress of a survey subsequent to the date of the deed-executed to George Guil-ford or even a parol agreement to mark the lines and corners in a certain way, would not have been competent to show that a line or corner was located otherwise than where a definite description contained in the deed would locate it, because the effect would be to contradictor vary a written contract, upon its face free from ambiguity, by a subsequent verbal agreement entered into without consideration. Caraway v. Chancey, 6 Jones, 361; Buckner v. Anderson, 111 N. C., 572; Shaffer v. Hahn, 111 N. C., 1. It is
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equally clear that the testimony is not competent as proof of an act accompanying the delivery of a deed and constituting a part of the res gestae, so as to bring the case (in accordance with the contention of counsel) within the reason of the ruling in Roberts v. Preston, 100 N. C ., 243.

Though Oarrow is dead, his declarations made in his own interest would be no more competent when they relate to the boundaries of land, than when made in reference to other subjects. Heddrick v. Gobble, 63 N. C., 48; Ray v. Pearce, 84 N. C., 485; Roberts v. Roberts, 82 N. C., 29. But the declarations of parties to suits are always admissible evidence against, though not for, them. McCrainey v. Clark, N. C. T. R., 278 (698); McDonald v. Carson, 95 N. C., 377; Gidney v. Moore, 86 N. C., 484; Avent v. Arrington, 105 N. C., 377.

If the declaration of Oarrow would have been competent against him as plaintiff in this action, it would be competent under the general rule applicable to all classes of cfises against the plaintiff, who claims through him. May v. Gentry, 4 Dev. & Bat., 117; Woodley v. Hassell, 94 N. C., 157; Braswell v. Gay, 75 N. C., 515. It has been frequently held, too, that where declarations are made by one in possession of land, characterizing or explaining his claim of ownership, or in disparagement of his own title, they are competent as evidence irot only against tbe declarant, but against all claiming under him. Gay v. Hall, 3 Murp., 150; Kirby v. Maston, 70 N. C., 540; Marsh v. Hampton, 5 Jones, 382; Mebane v. Bullard, 82 N. C., 23; Kelson v. Whitfield, 82 N. C., 46; Pearce v. Jenkins, 10 Ired., 355; Peck v. Gilmer, 4 D. & B., 249; Cansler v. Fite, 5 Jones, 424. If, however, the declaration of Oarrow, made even against his own interest, was offered to contradict a plain, umambiguous description, it was clearly incompetent under the principle laid down in Shaffer v.

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Hahn, and Buckner v. Anderson, supra. It appears that while there is no description of the disputed line given in the deed from N. W. Guilford to George Guilford, trustee, except by reference to Carrow’s line and the lines of other adjacent tracts, it purporting to cover the land bounded by the lines of Carrow and others, the surveyor ran the several calls of Carrow’s deed, or the deed to which it refers for description, either by course and distance, or to establish corners from the beginning to a pine, at fig. 7, known as the “proved pine,” and thence according to the course and distance of the deed, South 46 West 313 poles along an old marked line, the distance giving out at 8, though no gum was there found. The other calls were also run by course and distance, or to known corners at stations 9, 10, 11, and back to the beginning at fig. 1. Is Carrow’s declaration admissible to control a well defined description and an undisputed survey by course and distance ? The general proposition that the declarations of one in possession in disparagement of his own right is admissible as against all who claim through or under him, is, of necessity, subordinate to the more important rule that an unambiguous written description, which is the best evidence of the nature of the contract between the parties, and an undisputed location by a survey in accordance with the running from known corners by course and distance, cannot be contradicted by more uncertain proof of declarations by a former owner while in possession, which, if acted on, would require an utter disregard of .course and distance. If, as the surveyor testifies, by running from a known corner at the beginnnig, either to established corners or by course and distance, according to the calls of the deed to an admitted corner at 7, and thence by course and distance he located the plaintiff’s Gum corner at 8, it is not competent to contradict that description which, from
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known or admitted data, fixes tbe corner with mathematical certainty by the survey there, by a declaration made by the grantee under a mesne conveyance, while in possession. The beginning corner was not disputed, and courses and distances from it inevitably carried the surveyor to 7, which the defendant admitted was a corner which he made the point of departure in the controversy about the next line. The calls following chain and con^ass, as was not disputed, would run from 7 to 8, 9, 10, 11, and 1, so as to include the land trespassed upon and the whole boundary claimed by the defendant, except the triangle 8, 9, F. It is plain, then, that to give to the proof of Carrow’s declaration the effect of cutting off 800 acres by running from 7 to E, would be to contradict, by hearsay evidence, the description, which from admitted data and by a survey, the correctness of which was not questioned, appears to cover the locus in quo and fix the plaintiff’s boundary, as claimed by him. The case was somewhat confused in the argument by leaving the impression that there was doubt about the location of plaintiff’s calls, whereas it was the description of the defendant’s title which called for plaintiff’s line and the lines of others, so as to include what was not embraced by the deeds of either of them. We think, therefore, that there was no error in excluding the testimony as to Carrow’s declaration. The verbal agreement ofOarrow to join N. W. Guilford in the conveyance to George, which was not carried out, because of Oarrow’s embarassment in part by the mortgage through which plaintiff claims, was utterly void in any aspect. There is as little force in the exception to the refusal of the Judge to admit the testimony that Paul Lincke, plaintiff’s agent, prevented the sale of a raft.

The recitals in the deed from the trustee to the bank are deemed prima facie correct in so far as they

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show^that the sale was made by the trustee in pursuance of the power contained in the deed of trust. Shaffer v. Hahn, supra. The executions under which the land was sold as the property, of N. W. Guilford and bought by Oar-row, issued upon debts created before the year 186&. The title passed to the purchaser therefore discharged of all liability to allotment as a homestead. Long v. Walker, 105 N. C., 90.

IJpon a careful review of all the exceptions, we conclude that the judgment must be affiirmed.

Affirmed.