Watford v. . Pierce

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Watford v. . Pierce, 124 S.E. 838 (N.C. 1924)
188 N.C. 430; 1924 N.C. LEXIS 90
Adams

Watford v. . Pierce

Opinion of the Court

Adams, J.

This Court has stated and repeatedly approved the rule that when parties with a view to making a deed go upon the land, survey it, and actually run and mark the boundaries and thereupon execute and deliver the deed, intending to convey the land they have surveyed, the title to the surveyed land will pass to the grantee although the description in the deed may be erroneous. The ruling is aptly exemplified in the leading case of Person v. Roundtree, 2 N. C., 378. Roundtree entered a tract of land and ran it out as follows: “Beginning at a tree on the bank of Shocco Creek, running south .poles to a corner, thence east. poles to a corner, thence north.poles to a corner on the creek, thence up the creek to the beginning.” By mistake the courses were reversed and thereby the land was placed on the side of the creek opposite that on which it was surveyed. Roundtree settled on the land that had been marked out and Person afterwards entered it and obtained a deed or grant from Earl Granville. Person then *433 brought ejectment, and on the trial Roundtree proved the lines of the survey and possession under his grant. It was held that the erroneous description in the grant should not prejudice the defendant and that be was entitled to the land which the parties had surveyed and intended to describe in the grant. Referring to this case after the lapse of a century the court said: “The principle that applies here is the much broader one laid down in Person v. Roundtree and the cases that have followed it, that upon satisfactory proof that the original survey was so made as to embrace a totally different tracf of land from that included in the boundaries set forth in the deed, it is the province of the jury to find that the calls for course and distance were inserted in the deed by mistake and that the true location is that which they find was made at the original survey.” Avery, J., in Higdon v. Rice, 119 N. C., 623. The rule was adopted for the sole purpose of executing the intention of the parties at the time the deed is delivered and is sustained by a long line of decisions. Bradford v. Hill, 2 N. C., 22; Cherry v. Slade, 7 N. C., 82; Reed v. Schenck, 13 N. C., 415; Baxter v. Wilson, 95 N. C., 137; Cox v. McGowan, 116 N. C., 131; Deaver v. Jones, 119 N. C., 598; Mitchell v. Welborn, 149 N. C., 347; Lance v. Rumbough, 150 N. C., 19; Clarke v. Aldridge, 162 N. C., 326; Allison v. Kenion, 163 N. C., 582; Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 169 N. C., 80; Lee v. Rowe, 172 N. C., 846; Millikin v. Sessoms, 173 N. C., 723; Potter v. Bonner, 174 N. C., 20.

There are two reasons, however, why this principle cannot avail tbe plaintiff. In tbe first place, there is a defect in tbe description of tbe land which tbe deed from Robertson to the plaintiff purports to convey. The land is described as “lying and being in Bertie County, Colerain Township, and being a part of tbe Ada Hardy land, which is located and bounded by tbe lands of Shady Pierce and others, containing 15 acres, more or less.” It is thé Ada Hardy land — tbe ninety-five acres — that is thus bounded. The plaintiff testified that tbe fifteen acres marked out for him does not adjoin the land of Shady Pierce. The deed purports to convey to the plaintiff an undefined lot of fifteen acres to be carved out of a tract containing ninety-five acres, and upon its face is void for uncertainty. Higdon v. Howell, 167 N. C., 455. Evidence that the lines were actually marked does not cure this defect. Parol evidence, while competent to correct a mistake, cannot validate a void description, because it would amount to a substitution by parol of an essential element of the deed which tbe statute of frauds requires to be in writing. Higdon v. Rice, supra.

In the next place, tbe fifteen-acre lot was “taped off and marked out” to tbe plaintiff twelve months after the deed had been executed. Tbe principle upon which parol evidence is admitted to correct a mistake in the description of land is based upon tbe theory that tbe contested *434 grant or deed was executed in pursuance of the survey and that the marked boundaries were adopted and acted upon in making such deed or grant. Fincannon v. Sudderth, 140 N. C., 246; Safret v. Hartman, 50 N. C., 185. It follows that evidence of a survey made after the execution and delivery of the conveyance is not competent for the purpose stated. For such purpose “it is always competent to show by admissible evidence the location of a contemporaneous, not of a subsequent survey.” Higdon v. Rice, supra. See, also, Elliott v. Jefferson, 133 N. C., 207, on the question of a previous survey.

It is clear, then, that the description in the plaintiff’s deed is insuffi- • cient and that parol evidence of a physical survey of the fifteen-acre lot made a year after the deed was executed is not admissible for the purpose of correcting such erroneous description; but in our opinion there is another principle upon which the judgment may be upheld. It rests upon the doctrine of estoppel.

In Barker v. R. R., 125 N. C., 596, the plaintiff executed and delivered to the defendant a deed containing this description: “Adjoining the lands of T. G. Barker (the plaintiff), beginning at a stake on the east side of the railroad track and on said track, and runs east 20, south 270 feet to a stake; thence north 2 west 240 feet to a stake; thence west 20 north 270 feet to a stake in the railroad track; thence south 2 east with the railroad track 240 feet to the beginning, containing 1% acres . . . for its use as a stockyard, and other railroad purposes.” The plaintiff, relying on the insufficiency of the description brought suit to recover the land, and the defendant offered evidence to prove that at the time the deed was executed the plaintiff had a surveyor to run out and locate the lot in controversy, and put the grantee in possession. The Court said: “While we have come to the conclusion that the description in itself is too vague to be located by outside evidence, it appears from the testimony that the land was in fact located by the plaintiff himself, who is thus estopped from denying his own act. Having had the lot surveyed, and placed the defendant in actual possession thereof under designated lines and marked corners, he is now bound by his own admission, and cannot be permitted to controvert the legal effect of his own conduct to the prejudice of another, especially after such long acquiescence. There is a clear distinction between cases where the parties themselves have definitely located the land and where it is merely sought to locate it by outside testimony not in the nature of admissions. We think this distinction is recognized inferentially in Massey v. Belisle, supra, where the Court says on page 177: ‘The stakes may be real boundaries when so intended by the parties, but it is a settled rule of construction with us that when they are mentioned in a deed simply, or with no other description than that of .course and distance, they are intended by the *435 parties, and. so understood, to designate imaginary points.’ If tbe facts are true as testified upon the trial, we think the plaintiff is clearly estopped from denying his location of the land, and therefore cannot recover.” See, also, Elliott v. Jefferson, 133 N. C., 207, approving this decision.

In Barber’s case, as in the one before us, the description of the land was insufficient. True, the lines were run when the deed was made, but that fact is not controlling, for the doctrine of estoppel, unlike the ruling which admits parol evidence to correct an erroneous description, is not confined to such acts or declarations as are contemporaneous with the execution of a deed. It is upon this theory that Washburn says: “To sell ten acres of land without describing any boundaries to the same would be void; but if the parties then go on and stake out that quantity of land, and the grantee takes possession of it, it ascertains the grant, and gives effect to the deed. 3 Real Prop., 435. The principle is sustained in sundry decisions. In Simpson v. Blaisdell, 35 A. S. R. (Me.), 348, the plaintiff claimed title to an undivided interest in a lot described as “one-half of an acre of land near the wharf and at the wharf.” The defendant contended that the deed so far as it affected this lot was inoperative and void for want of a sufficient description; but the Court held otherwise, Peters, C. J., saying: “Now, there were two ways in which the parties might have consummated the conveyance of the half-acre according to their intention. They could survey out the parcel from the grantor’s surrounding land, and then make the deed of it, or could first make the deed and survey out, and identify the parcel after-' wards. The defendant’s position is that one or the other of these methods of making certain the location of the parcel was adopted. While either mode would be legitimate, the indications are that after the deed was delivered the grantor assigned a certain half-acre to the grantee, which the latter accepted; or that the grantee appropriated to himself a certain half-acre with the acquiescence of the grantor, possession and occupation following afterwards. Suppose that Hinman, after receiving his deed, had selected out a half-acre, and entirely covered it with permanent structures, or had surrounded it with a permanent fence, the structures of fence remaining to this day, and the grantee being in possession all the time, could any possible criticism defeat the title of the latter?”

In Purinton v. R. R., 46 Ill., 297, the appellants bound themselves to convey to the company a right of way, eighty feet wide, across a tract of land. Some time after the execution of the agreement the apellants gave the company possession and subsequently brought ejectment to recover the land. Eefusing the relief sought the Court said: “It is insisted that this contract is too indefinite and uncertain in its descrip *436 tion of the land to be enforced. .There might be force in this objection if it were not that the company had gone into possession and constructed their road with the permission of appellants. By letting the company into possession, the parties locate the eighty-feet strip through this piece of ground. They give a construction to the agreement, by the manner in which they have, in part, executed it. If a vendor gives a bond for the conveyance of ten acres, part of one hundred and sixty acres, or other larger tract, without any other designation of the particular portion, such a contract would no doubt be inoperative for want of certainty, nor could the purchaser or a stranger to the contract do any act by which that uncertainty could be aided or removed. But if the vendor and vendee were to select the number of acres and separate them from the remainder, and the purchaser were permitted to enter into the same, make improvements thereon, and to hold possession, the contract would thereby be so far executed as to remove the uncertainty, and a court of equity would compel the execution of a deed. By permitting the purchaser to hold possession, and to make lasting and valuable improvements, the vendor is estopped from urging the uncertainty of his obligation.” See, also, Farrar v. Cooper, 34 Me., 394; Armstrong v. Mudd, 50 A. D., 545, and note citing several cases; Patterson v. Patterson, 27 S. W. (Tex.), 837.

It appears, then, from our own decisions and those of other States that the devisees of Bobertson are estopped to deny the plaintiff’s title; and the remaining question is whether the estoppel affects the alleged title of the defendant Pierce. In discussing a similar question, in Simpson v. Blaisdell, supra, the Court said: “The question presented here is to be considered precisely as it might have been had it arisen between the original parties to the deed, inasmuch as the present parties make their claims respectively by inheritance through and under him.” And in Dudley v. Jeffress, 178 N. C., 111, the doctrine is upheld as to those in privity with the original parties. “Privity,” it is there said, “exists between two successive holders when the later takes under the earlier, as by descent or by will, grant, or voluntary transfer or possession. . . . . He who is in privity stands in the shoes or sits in the seat of the owner from whom he derives his title, and thus takes it with the burden attending it.” It was also said: “The plaintiff Dudley, having bought and taken the deed with knowledge that the line as claimed by the defendant had been.settled and marked on the ground by a fence and a line of chopped trees to the river, and that the parties, since said partition, including those under whom he claims, had recognized and held up to that line, cannot go beyond that boundary by reason of any error of the parties in drawing the deed not in conformity to said line.”

*437 Upon this principle we think the defendant Pierce is estopped equally with his grantor. The plaintiff and two others contracted to purchase different parts of the tract containing 95 acres. When the deeds were executed, the purchasers went into possession of the entire tract; and, afterwards, when the plaintiff’s lot was set apart by metes and bounds, he went into possession of the. 15-acre lot. The defendant Pierce attended the survey and saw the lines run. He knew their location. After the plaintiff’s deed had been registered, and after he had gone into possession of the land, the defendant, with full knowledge of the plaintiff’s deed, boundaries, and possession, received his deed from Eobertson, and “stands in his shoes and sits in his seat.”

The defendant Eobertson filed an answer, admitting the plaintiff’s title; and while the defendant Pierce alleged that he was an innocent purchaser for value, we find nothing in the record to support his allegations. In fact, he introduced no evidence.

After a careful examination of the record and the authorities, we find

No error.

Reference

Full Case Name
W. C. WATFORD v. S. D. PIERCE Et Al.
Cited By
9 cases
Status
Published