Blow v. . Vaughan

10 S.E. 891, 105 N.C. 198
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 10 S.E. 891 (Blow v. . Vaughan) 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
Blow v. . Vaughan, 10 S.E. 891, 105 N.C. 198 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

*203 Avery, J.

after stating the facts: The deed from John \V. Blow and wife to Henry B. Blow, under whom plaintiffs claim immediately, contains only this description: “Fifty acres of land lying in the county of Hertford and bounded as follows, by the lands of John P. Liverman, John H. Liverman and Isaac J. Snipes.” The language of the deed leaves but one question open for parol proof. If the plaintiff could have shown that there was a tract of land in Hertford County, containing fifty acres, and so bounded by the lands of the three persons named in the conveyance as to separate it fr> m other tracts and indicate its limits with reasonable certainty, it was competent for them to do so, but the deed could not have been made operative in any other way. Harrell v. Butler, 92 N. C., 20; Allen v. Chambers, 4 Ired. Eq., 126; Grier v. Rhyne, 69 N. C., 346: Wharton v. Elborn, 88 N. C., 345; Capps v. Holt, 5 Jones Eq, 153; Dickens v. Barnes, 79 N. C., 490; Hinchey v. Nichols, 72 N. C, 66; President of D. & D Institute v. Norwood, Busb. Eq., 65; Cox v. Cox, 91 N. C., 256; Murdock v. Anderson, 4 Jones Eq., 77; Mason v. White, 11 Barb. (N. Y.), 173.

In Harrison v. Hahn, 95 N. Cl, 28, the late Chief Justice SinTi-r, for the Court, says: “The office of the descriptive words is to ascertain and identify a,n object and parol proof is heard, not to add to or enlarge their scope, but to fit the description to the thing described. When they are too vague to admit of this, the instrument in which they are contained becomes inoperative and void.” There is no testimony tending to show the location of fifty acres of land in Hert-ford County, bounded on all sides by the lands of the two Livermans and Snipes. A deed that contains no descriptive word or phrase that, with the aid of competent extrinsic testimony, will identify and determine all of its boundary lines, will not pass any < state in land to the bargainee therein named. In McCormick v. Monroe, 1 Jones, 16, Judge Pearson says: “This case (referring to Waugh v. Richardson, *204 8 Ired., 470) differs from the case under consideration in that here the exception is ‘two hundred and fifty acres, previouly granted.’ This would point to the means by which the description in the exception may be made sufficiently certain to avoid the objective vagueness by aid of the maxim ‘ Id cerium est, quod cerium reddi 'potest.'’ The test of the admissibility of evidence dehors the deed is involved in the question whether it tends to so explain some descriptive word or expression contained in it, as to show that such phraseology, otherwise of doubtful import, contains in itself, with such explanation, an identification of the land conveyed. The doctrine finds its support in the maxim cited by Judge Peakson.

Judge GastoN, in the case of Massey v. Belisle, 2 Ired., 170, stated the principle very clearly and concisely when he said that “every deed of conveyance must set forth a subject matter, either certain in itself , or capable of being reduced to a certainty, by a recurrence to something extrinsic to which the deed refers.”

The rule that the descriptive words in a deed, with the aid of the evidence aliunde, to which they point, must, in order to establish the validity, identify the boundaries of the land conveyed, has been sanctioned by this Court, not only upon the idea that there must be a certain subject-matter in the deed, but because its observance is essential to the proper enforcement of the statute of frauds. The evasion is as palpable and as dangerous a violation of the statute when it is accomplished by amending a void contract, as where the entire contract is proven by parol evidence.

A single word in a deed is sometimes held sufficient to show with certainty the source from which information may be sought to determine definitely whether the title to any land rests in a grantee or bargainee. In the case of Murdock v. Anderson, 4 Jones’ Eq., 77, this Court held that a receipt describing land, as “ my house and lot-, in the town *205 of Hillsborough,” was not a sufficient memorandum, under the statute of frauds, of an agreement to convey land, and was void because of the imperfect description. On the other hand, where the language used in the deed to point out the land was, “my house and lot, in the town of Jefferson, Ashe County, North Carolina,” it was decided that testimony that the grantor had but one lot in that town was admissible and fitted the description to it, because the word “my,” with such proof, made the description as definite as “the house and lot, on which I now live.” Carson v. Ray, 7 Jones, 609. Any lot in a town can be located by metes and bounds by the map of the town in which it is situate. Davidson v. Arledge, 97 N. C., 172.

In Wharton v. Eborn, 88 N. C., 345, it was held that extrinsic testimony was competent to locate the land, because in addition to describing it, as in B Township, Beaufort County, adjoining the lands of T. and H., containing one hundred, and fifty acres, it was decided to be “ the same land conveyed by John W. Earle to said Rowland by deed, dated May 28th, 1868,” thus adopting the more particular description in the last named deed. In Brown v. Coble, 76 N. C., 391, the description of the land as “ that John Brown, ancestor of the petitioner, died seized of and possessed of a tract of land in said county of Guilford, on the waters of Stinking. Quarter, adjoining the lands of-,” was held sufficiently definite, upon the principle stated in Carson v. Ray, supra. In McGlawhorn v. Worthington, 98 N. C., 199, where the deed purported to convey “all that tract of land, lying in the county of Pitt, and Slav of North Carolina, and known as a part of the John Tripp land, adjoining the lands of R. W. and others, containing one hundred acres,” it was held competent to locate, by parol testimony, a tract of land known as a part of the John Tripp land, but the deed was held void for failure to offer any evidence sufficient to be submitted to the jury to so identify the land. This ruling was in accord- *206 anee with the principle announced in Farmer v. Batts, 83 N. C , 387, which has been considered as marking the extreme limit io which the Courts would go in fitting ambiguous descriptions to land.

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10 S.E. 891, 105 N.C. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blow-v-vaughan-nc-1890.