Brown v. . House

21 S.E. 938, 116 N.C. 859
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 938 (Brown v. . House) 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
Brown v. . House, 21 S.E. 938, 116 N.C. 859 (N.C. 1895).

Opinions

EubChes, J.:

This is an action of ejectment brought to this Court on appeal of plaintiff. Plaintiff for the purpose of making out his title offered in evidence a grant from the State of North Carolina to himself issued on the 18th of June, 1890. And it being admitted by defendant that it covered the land in question, and it also being admitted that defendant was in possession, plaintiff rested his case.

The defendant for the purpose of showing that the land claimed by plaintiff had been granted prior to the date of plaintiff’s grant", and was not the subject of grant in 1890, offered in evidence a grant from the State to John Gray JBlount and William Steadman, dated March 28th, 1799, which he claimed covered the land in controversy. The calls of this grant are for “ ten thousand two hundred and forty acres of land in Buncombe County on the West side of the French Broad river, beginning at a birch, ash and pine on the West bank of said river opposite the Painted Nock below the Warm Springs, running South 860 chains to a stake, supposed to be in Stokley Donelson’s line, thence with his line east 390'chains to his north-east corner,'thence south 275 chains to a bunoh of dogwood on a branch of Spring Creek near the Puncheon Camp, Don-elson’s beginning corner, thence east 80 chains, thence 150 chains to a line of David Allison’s 250, 240 acre survey, thence with that line north 45 degrees east to the French Broad river, thence down the river with the meanders of [861]*861the bed of the river and around the line of the old patented land on the west side of said river to the beginning.”

The beginning call of this grant on the west bank of the French Broad river at the Painted Bock was agreed upon by plaintiff and defendant. And it is admitted by defendant that to run south from this agreed beginning, three hundred and sixty chains, and then east will not include the land covered by plaintiff’s grant. But defendant claims that the Blount grant, under which he is defending, calls for the line of the Stokley Donelson grant,” which he alleges is further south, and that the Stokley Donelson line is the southern line of the Blount grant. Under this claim of defendant, the surveyor, as it was proper for him to do, extended this south line for one and one-fourth mile further than the three hundred and sixty chains called for in the Blount grant, to a point that defendant claimed to be the “ Stokley Donelson ” line. And it is admitted by plaintiff that if this point, claimed, by defendant to be the Stokley Donelson line, is the southern boundary of the Blount grant and thence east, that it does cover the land contained in his entry of 1890.

There was much evidence offered by both sides as to the location of the Donelson grant which was for 60,400 acres “ issued August 28, 1795. Defendant’s evidence tended to establish it at the point contended for by him. And plaintiff’s evidence tending to show that this line, the one contended for by defendant, was not the Stokley Don-elson line.

There are some exceptions taken to the evidence which we are not prepared to approve, as we understand the ruling of the Court.. But as the point does not distinctly appear, and we may not understand the point intended to be made, and as a ruling on this point in favor of the [862]*862plaintiff would probably not materially affect a new trial, we prefer to put our opinion on a more substantial point.

At the close of the evidence the plaintiff asked several special instructions of the Court which we will not repeat in lull. But in these instructions he asked the Court to charge that the first call “South 360 chains to a stake, supposed to be Stokley Donelson’s line, thence with his line ■east 390 chains to his north-east corner,” was too vague and uncertain to vary the course and distance called for in the grant. And that the Court should so charge the jury and instruct them that said grant stopped at the end of the call for 360 chains, and thence run east. The Court refused this prayer of plaintiff, and instructed the jury “that if they should find that the beginning corner of the Donelson grant was at the point designated by the hand at the figure 28, as contended for by defendant, and that its lines had been run out and marked- and located at the date of Blount’s .grant, or that they were susceptible of location to a mathematical certainty from the Donelson grant, the beginning • corner of the Blount grant being admitted, the call of the Blount grant ‘beginning' at an ash opposite the Painted Rock, running south 360 chains to a stake supposed to be in Stokley Donelson’s line, and then east with his east line 390 chains to his northeast corner, &c.’ (though the distance gave out before the Donelson line was reached by the first call) the second call would carry the line to the nearest limit in the Stokley Donelson line, and then with that line to the north-east corner of Donelson’s grant, if such a line can be found, and if they believe from all the evidence that the Stokley Donelson line was the line called for in the Blount grant, that the land in controversy was covered by the Blount grant,‘and the plaintiff could not recover. That if they should find that the Stokley Donel-,son grant had been correctly located ; that its beginning [863]*863comer was established at the date of its issue, and its lines were located or were susceptible of location to a mathematical certainty from the grant, and the lines of the Stok-ley Donelson grant were the lines called for in the'Blount grant, that the law would extend the second call in the Blount grant to the line of the Stokley Donelson grant, and then with it to its north-east corner, &c. So that at the date of the plaintiff’s entry and grant there was no land vacant and open to grant within the said boundary, the same having been previously granted to Blount by the State.”

So then the question is, Was the refusal to give the instructions asked and the charge as given erroneous? If they were, the plaintiff is entitled to a new trial! If they were not, then the judgment should be affirmed.

In the early history of this State there were a great many very large grants of land obtained by speculators, commonly called Speculation-grants. As the country did not fill up rapidly, these lands did not increase in value rapidly, and but few of these “speculators” derived much benefit from such lands. But many of them have floated down with the current of time, and are now in the hands of other speculators who now hold them under tax-titles or otherwise, purchased for small sums. And as these lands now begin to grow in value and importance, we have more and more litigation growing out of these old grants, the most of them being located in an almost unsettled rough mountain country, the lines of which often extend for miles. Many of them, it is said, were never actually surveyed, but a party wanting to make an entry would locate a beginning corner and then plot the boundaries, and in the language of the Court below locate them “with mathematical certainty” by simply making a plot of a survey. And it is evident to our minds that both the Blount grant and the Donelson grant [864]*864(some of the lines of which were 20 miles long) were located in this way. And this may afford some explanation for the Blount grant calling for “a stake supposed to be in the Stokley Donelson line” — when the Stokley Donelson line is a mile and a quarter from where the calls in the Blount grant give out, if the Stokley Donelson line is where defendant contends it is.

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Related

Dunn v. . Clerk's Office
96 S.E. 738 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1918)
Lumber Co. v. . Hutton
68 S.E. 2 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1910)
Wilson Lumber & Milling Co. v. Hutton
152 N.C. 537 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1910)
Whitaker v. Cover.
52 S.E. 581 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1905)
Brown v. . House
24 S.E. 786 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 938, 116 N.C. 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-house-nc-1895.