Beaufort Lumber Co. v. Price

56 S.E. 684, 144 N.C. 50, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 684 (Beaufort Lumber Co. v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaufort Lumber Co. v. Price, 56 S.E. 684, 144 N.C. 50, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 106 (N.C. 1907).

Opinion

Connor, J.,

after stating tbe case: It is conceded that, by purchasing tbe standing timber subsequent to tbe listing of the land for taxation, tbe plaintiff company took title subject to tbe lien acquired by tbe State. It follows, therefore, that tbe purchaser at tbe sale by the Sheriff for taxes would, if tbe law bad been complied with, have acquired a good title to tbe land, including the standing timber. It is also *52 conceded that more than two years having elapsed between the day of the sale, 25 June, 1901, and the date of the deed, 30 January, 1903, Mr. Nunn acquired no title to either the land or timber. It is expressly provided by see. 66, ch. 16, Laws of 1899, that the purchaser at a tax sale may, within one year from the date of such sale, call for a deed, and by section 83 that if he shall fail within two years from said sale to demand a deed or institute a suit for foreclosure, the certificate “shall cease to be valid.” Revisal 1905, sec. 2905.

The title of Boyd and his children to the land and of the plaintiff corporation to the timber was, therefore, not impaired, nor in any manner affected, by the tax sale or the deed made pursuant thereto. Neither of them have 'executed any deed or paper-writing parting with the title. It is insisted that, as against the defendants, the plaintiff, by the execution of the deed by Mr. Nunn, has lost its title to the timber. It never having had any title to’ the land, the controversy is limited to the title to the timber.

Defendants, conceding that Mr. Nunn’s deed was invalid, and that no interest, right or title passed by it, contend that because of its execution by him in the light of the facts found by the Court, the plaintiff has, by way of estoppel, lost its title, and that it has passed to and vested in them, or at least that plaintiffs are precluded from claiming it.

It is elementary learning that .among the other methods by which title to land may pass is that of estoppel. There is probably no doctrine of the law which has received more careful and anxious study, or given the courts more concern in its application than that of estoppel. Ohief Justice Pear son, in an opinion, evincing much thought. and research, says: “According to my Lord Colee, an estoppel is that which concludes and shuts a man’s mouth from spealring the truth. With this forbidding introduction, a principle is announced *53 which lies at the foundation of all fair dealing between man and man, and without which it would be impossible to .administer law as a system.” Armfield v. Moore, 44 N. C., 157.

The deed made by Mr. Nunn to defendants contains no words of conveyance, but is carefully restricted to apt words of release, “remise, release, and quit-claim.” Out of abundant caution he confines the deed to “all estate, right, title, Interest,” etc., which he has in or to the premises. In this respect it essentially differs from the language of the deed in Richardson v. Levi, 74 Texas, 359, cited by defendants. The deed contains no warranty of title. The distinction, in respect to estoppel, upon the grantor between conveyances, in which it appears, from the language used, that the grantor, either expressly or impliedly, asserts that he is the owner of the land and those in which he, in the same way, indicates that he is conveying only such interest as he may have, is clearly pointed out by Mr. Justice Walker in Hallyburton v. Slagle, 132 N. C., 947. It is elementary learning that a quit-claim deed operates only as a release of such interest as the maker has, or as may be specifically named. It is for this reason that no estoppel grows out of such a deed. Nothing, in respect to the maker’s interest, is asserted. The very terms of the deed puts the purchaser upon notice that he is buying ,a doubtful title. “In form, a quit-claim deed is like the common-law release- — a derivative or secondary common-law form. In substance, it is similar to an original common-law deed creating an estate, and not requiring for its operation any estate in possession or otherwise in the grantee. In effect, it transfers to the grantee whatever interest the grantor has in the property described, be it a fee, chattel interest, a mere license, or nothing at all.” 9 Am. and Eng. Enc., 104. It implies a doubtful title in the party executing it. *54 Kerr v. Freeman, 33 Miss., 292. For this reason, subsequently acquired interests do not pass. McAllister v. Devane, 76 N. C., 57; Carson v. Carson, 122 N. C., 645.

The learned counsel for defendants concedes that, if the Court is of the opinion the deed from Nunn is a quit-claim, no estoppel, by deed, accrues against the plaintiff. He insists, however, that upon the facts found by the Court, an estoppel in pais, sometimes called an equitable estoppel, precludes the plaintiff from asserting title against defendants. In Devereux v. Burgwyn, 40 N. C., 351, Pearson, J., says: “A right can only be given up by the consent of the party, evidenced by a release. A right can only be lost or forfeited by such conduct as would make it fraudulent and against conscience h> assert it. If one acts in such a manner as intentionally to make another believe that he has no right, or has abandoned it, and the other, trusting to that belief, does an act which he would otherwise not have done, the fraudulent party will be restrained from asserting his right, unless it be such a case as will admit of compensation in damages. If one stands by or allows another to buy property to which he has the title, he will not, on account of this fraud, be permitted, in a court of equity, to assert his right.” The doctrine has been asserted and applied in many cases by this Court. In Saunderson v. Ballance, 55 N. C., 322, the defendant was present and heard the purchaser inquire of the former owner whether the title was good, and heard the reply that it was, he saying nothing. The purchaser by such statement was induced to purchase the land “at a full and fair price.” Judge Battle says: “There can be m> doubt that the trustee thought he was selling an undisputed fee-simple in the whole tract of land, and the bidders were laboring under the same impressionDefendant was held to be estopped.

*55 In Mason v. Williams, 53 N. C., 478, Judge Battle, after discussing the authorities, says: “When a person purchases a chattel from another who is not the owner, and it is admitted by the parties, or found by the jury as a fad, that the purchaser was induced to make the purchase by the declarations or .acts of the true owner, the latter will be estopped from impeaching the transaction.” In that, case there was a “case agreed,” with a provision that the Court should instruct the jury upon the law. His Honor, being of opinion that plaintiff was estopped, charged the jury to find for the defendant. The learned Justice said: “If, then, in the present case, it had been stated as an agreed fact

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 684, 144 N.C. 50, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaufort-lumber-co-v-price-nc-1907.