Bowen v. . Gaylord

29 S.E. 340, 122 N.C. 816, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 340 (Bowen v. . Gaylord) 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
Bowen v. . Gaylord, 29 S.E. 340, 122 N.C. 816, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 358 (N.C. 1898).

Opinion

Douglas, J.:

This cause was by consent of parties heard upon the admissions of counsel. It is admitted that the plaintiff claims under a grant to Thomas Mackey and Edmund Blount, dated May 18, 1789, and that if this grant covers the locus in quo the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages for a trespass committed by the defendant, in entering and cutting upon said lands. The description in the grant is as follows: “Beginning at a forked cypress running thence South 30 degrees West, 110 poles; thence South 45 degrees West, 700 poles, the various courses of Edward Van Daniel’s line; then North 60 degrees West, 320 poles; then North 40 degrees East, 520 poles; then South 69 degrees East, 120 poles; then North 45 degrees East, 200 poles; then *817 South 28 degrees East 250 poles to the first station, as by the plot hereunto annexed doth appear.” The plot of said lands, showing the contention of the plaintiff and defendant as agreed upon, was made a part of the decree and hereunto annexed. The red lines show the location of the Van Daniel patent called for and referred to in the Mackey and Blount patent. It' is admitted that the beginning of the Mackey and Blount patent is at a forked cypress at black A on the map and runs to black B.

It is admitted that the Edward Van Daniel patent begins at red A and runs to red B, and thence following the red lines on the map to red D and red E, and thence back to red A.

The plaintiff contends that when the line of the Mackey and Blount grant reaches black B, the course and distance called for in the grant should not be followed, but that the line should then run from black B with the red line to -red A, the course of the Edward Van Daniel patent, and thence along the red line to red E, and thence completing the 700 poles called by following the black line D and E, marked on the map as the Dwight patent line. If this contention be correct, and the Mackey and Blount patent is located as contended by the plaintiff, it is admitted that the plaintiff is entitled to recover-dollars damages, together with the costs of this action.

The defendant contends that when the Mackey and Blount grant reaches black B on the map it should follow course and distance, South 45 degrees West 700 poles, which is delineated on the map as the Mackey and Blount patent line as claimed by Alfred Gaylord; that, if this contention be not true, the Mackey and

*818

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 340, 122 N.C. 816, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-gaylord-nc-1898.