Cummings v. Dosam, Inc.

159 S.E.2d 513, 273 N.C. 28, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1968
Docket849
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 159 S.E.2d 513 (Cummings v. Dosam, Inc.) 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
Cummings v. Dosam, Inc., 159 S.E.2d 513, 273 N.C. 28, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 553 (N.C. 1968).

Opinion

LAKE, J.

A grantee, who accepts a deed containing otherwise valid covenants purporting to bind him, thereby becomes bound for the performance of such covenants. Realty Co. v. Hobbs, 261 N.C. *32 414, 135 S.E. 2d 30; Barrier v. Randolph, 260 N.C. 741, 133 S.E. 2d 655. Such a covenant restricting the use which the grantee may make of the land so conveyed to him is deemed a grant by him of a negative easement m such property. Ring v. Mayberry, 168 N.C. 563, 84 S.E. 846. See also: Callaham v. Arenson, 239 N.C. 619, 80 S.E. 2d 619; Craven County v. Trust Co., 237 N.C. 502, 75 S.E. 2d 620. It necessarily follows that such a covenant which purports to restrict the use he may make of other land owned by him is to be deemed a grant or attempted grant by him of such an easement in that land. Thus, the construction and the sufficiency of the provision are to be determined by the principles of law applicable to the creation of such an easement by deed.

The law looks with disfavor upon covenants restricting the free use of land. Hege v. Sellers, 241 N.C. 240, 84 S.E. 2d 892; Judian v. Lawton, 240 N.C. 436, 82 S.E. 2d 210. In Turner v. Glenn, 220 N.C. 620, 18 S.E. 2d 197, this Court, speaking through Barnhill, J., later C.J., said, “Restrictive covenants cannot be established by parol evidence or otherwise save by a recordable instrument containing adequate words so unequivocally evincing the party’s intention to limit the free use of the land that its ascertainment is not dependent on inference, implication or doubtful construction.” It is well established that such covenants are to be strictly construed in favor of the free use of the land. Lamica v. Gerdes, 270 N.C. 85, 153 S.E. 2d 814; Hullett v. Grayson, 265 N.C. 453, 144 S.E. 2d 206; Shuford v. Oil Co., 243 N.C. 636, 91 S.E. 2d 903; Ingle v. Stubbins, 240 N.C. 382, 82 S.E. 2d 388; Callaham v. Arenson, supra; Craven County v. Trust Co., supra; Davis v. Robinson, 189 N.C. 589, 127 S.E. 697. Any doubt or ambiguity will be resolved against the validity of the restriction. Edney v. Powers, 224 N.C. 441, 31 S.E. 2d 372. Thus, if the nature and extent of the intended restriction cannot be determined with reasonable certainty from the language of the covenant, it will not serve as the basis for the issuance of an injunction forbidding the owner of the land to use it for a purpose otherwise lawful and proper. Hullett v. Grayson, supra.

The covenant by the grantee in the deed from the plaintiff to Merrimac is far from clear. Does it impose a duty upon the grantee to construct buildings for retail business establishments, or is it intended to limit its right to do so? Does it limit the total number of buildings to four, or does it mean that each building is to contain no more than four units for the housing of retail business establishments? Does the mandate or limitation apply to each tract separately, or to the combined tracts as one unit?

It is equally well established that a deed granting an easement *33 must describe the land burdened with the easement. In Gruber v. Eubank, 197 N.C. 280, 148 S.E. 246, Brogden, J., speaking for the Court, said, “An easement, of course, is an interest in land, and, if it is created by deed, either by express grant or by reservation, the description thereof must not be too uncertain, vague and indefinite.” In Thompson v. Umberger, 221 N.C. 178, 19 S.E. 2d 484, Barnhill, J., later C.J., speaking for the Court, said:

“When the easement — here a passageway — is created by deed, either by express grant or by reservation, the description thereof must not be so uncertain, vague and indefinite as to prevent identification with reasonable certainty.
“If the description is so vague and indefinite that effect cannot be given the instrument without writing new, material language into it, then it is void and ineffectual either as a grant or as a reservation.
“The description must either be certain in itself or capable of being reduced to a certainty by a recurrence to something extrinsic to which it refers.
* * *
“If the ambiguity in the description in a deed is patent the attempted conveyance or reservation, as the case may be, is void for uncertainty. And a patent ambiguity is such an uncertainty appearing on the face of the instrument that the court, reading the language in the light of all the facts and circumstances referred to in the instrument, is unable to determine therefrom the intention of the parties as to what land was to be conveyed. This type of ambiguity cannot be removed by parol evidence since that would necessitate inserting new language into the instrument which under the parol evidence rule is not permitted.” (Emphasis added.)

G.S. 8-39 provides that in an action for the possession of or title to land, parol evidence may be introduced to “identify the land sued for, and fit it to the description contained in the paperwriting offered as evidence of title.” However, as we said in McDaris v. “T” Corporation, 265 N.C. 298, 144 S.E. 2d 59, “The purpose of parol evidence is to fit the description to the property, not to create a description.” As Higgins, J., speaking for the Court in Deans v. Deans, 241 N.C. 1, 84 S.E. 2d 321, said with reference to the sufficiency of a description in a deed, “The description must identify the land, or it must refer to something that will identify it with certainty.” The same principle applies to the description of the servient estate in a deed granting an easement.

*34 The covenant upon which the plaintiffs rely purports to impose a restriction upon the use of “this tract [i.e., the land conveyed by the grantors to Merrimac] and adjoining tracts being acquired by Grantee (containing in the aggregate approximately 10 acres).” Upon the basis of deeds offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, the superior court found that the tract now in question, and tracts separating it from the land coneveyed by the plaintiffs to Merrimac, were conveyed to Merrimac by other grantors prior to the execution of the deed to Merrimac from the plaintiffs. Does the expression “adjoining tracts being acquired” by the grantee point with certainty to tracts already owned by the grantee? The term is patently ambiguous. On its face, it applies, at least equally well, to other lands which the grantee may then have been in the process of acquiring or attempting to acquire. It must be interpreted as of the date the deed containing it was executed. See 23 Am. Jur. 2d, Deeds, § 222. If the description was not sufficiently certain at that time, it does not become so later by the occurrence or nonoccurrence of some other event.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E.2d 513, 273 N.C. 28, 1968 N.C. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-dosam-inc-nc-1968.