Dorr v. School District No. 26

40 Ark. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 40 Ark. 237 (Dorr v. School District No. 26) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorr v. School District No. 26, 40 Ark. 237 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Dorr brought ejectment against the school district for three acres of land, deducing title by deed made to himself in 1874, by Benjamin I. Edwards and wife, for the quarter section, which included the premises in controversy.

The defences were, 1st. Adverse possession for more than the period required by law to ripen a title; and 2nd, a deed of conveyance for the premises made to the defendant’s trustee by the plaintiff’s grantor in 1870. This last deed does not mention any section or township, the description being “s> certain parcel of land lying and being in the county of Independence, commencing at a black-gum tree standing near the road and graveyard, near the residence of Benjamin I. Edwards, running north 40 poles to a stone, thence east 12 poles to a stone, thence south 40 poles, thence west 12 poles to the place of beginning, containing three acres, including said school house and. graveyard.”

A general demurrer to the whole answer was properly overruled; for, leaving out of consideration the defendant’s documentary title, it stated such facts as, if true, showed good right to the land.

Exceptions to th,e defendant’s deed, for uncertainty in the description of the premises because the same had never been recorded, were overruled. A.nd these objections were removed at the trial, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant.

The evidence was that Edwards had in 1867 proposed to his neighbors to donate the land for the building of a schoolhouse, to be used also as a church, and for the burial of the dead. His offer was accepted; the neighbors built the house, and in 1868 Edwards caused the land to be surveyed and a plat drawn, of which a record was made. In 1870, the neighborhood having been formed into a school district, Edwards and wife conveyed the land to the defendant’s trustee. And it has been ever since in the possession and subject to the control of the successive school directors or trustees, of the district, under a claim of ownership of the absolute title.

' The deed was duly executed and acknowledged, but had never been filed for record. Nor was a school kept there at date of plaintiff’s purchase; since the revenues only sufficed to maintain a school about three months in each year. But plaintiff saw the house and grave-yard and was apprised of the uses to which they were dedicated. He had afterwards himself presided at one of the annual school meetings and had attended others, and had never, to the knowledge of his neighbors, claimed the land, until shortly before June, 1881, when this action was begun.

“A deed is not to be held void for uncertainty, if by any reasonable construction it can be made available. Parol evidence can not be admitted to contradict or control the language of a deed. But latent ambiguities may be explained by such evidence. Facts existing at the time of the conveyance and prior thereto, may be proved by parol evidence with a view of establishing a particular line as being the one contemplated by the parties, when, by the terms of the deed, such line is left uncertain.” 3 Washburn, Real Prop., 3d Ed., 347; See also 1 Gr., Ev., sec. 298.

An ambiguity is patent, that is, apparent on the face of an instrument where the mere reading of it shows that something more must be added before the reader can tell which of several things or persons is meant. As, if a promissory note should omit to mention the sum to be paid; or a testator should leave a legacy to one of the sons of J. S., he having several sons. In such eases the defect is incurable.

Á latent ambiguity arises from facts not disclosed in the , -r-, & t • _ instrument. Eor example: A. grants or devises to B. his home farm. To identify the land, resort may be had to extrinsic evidence, namely, the knowledge of witnesses, who are acquainted with the farm upon which A. then dwelt. Parol evidence has always been admitted to give effect to a written instrument, by applying it to its subject matter; in other words, by proof of the circumstances under which it was made. Bradley v. Packet Co., 13 Peters, 89; Hill v. Felton, 47 Ga., 455; Clarke v. Lancaster, 36 Md., 196; Donley v. Tindall, 32 Texas, 43.

Here the ambiguity is latent. Is the déscription so defective that it is impossible by rhe aid of parol evidence to locate the land? It is in a certain couuty, and in a certain school district, which has definite boundaries, is parcel of the tract upon which stood the residence of Benjamin I. Edwards; contains three acres and is described by metes and bounds, and by visible monuments, to-wit: the grave-yard, the school-house, the highway, corner stakes and an initial tree from which to start. And defendant had gone into possession. A competent surveyor could have found the land without much difficulty.

In conveyancing lawyers commonly follow the system of notation established by the general government, distinguishing lands'according' to their legal subdivisions. This furnishes a description at once convenient and accurate. But it is not necessary to mention the section, township and range, Cooper v. White, 30 Ark., 513.

When the land' lies in a city or town, the description is usually by reference to the lots and blocks of a recorded plat.

In Brown v. Coble, 76 N. C., 391, the description was by metes and bounds, reference being made for the purpose of locating the calls, -to the order of sale granted in a proceeding for partition. It was there described as a tract of land, of which John Brown died seized and possessed, in the county of Guilford, on the waters of Stinking Quarter, adjoining the lands of --. And the description was held sufficient.

Did the Circuit Court permit the unrecorded deed of Edwards to the defendant’s trustee to be read in evidence without due proof of its execution?

It is a peculiarity of our law that the officer’s certificate to the acknowledgment of a deed has not evidential force until the instrument has been recorded. Gantt’s Dig., sec. 854; Wilson v. Spring, 38 Ark., 181.

There was no attesting witness. Edwards was dead and no attempt was made to prove his handwriting. But the Justice of the Peace, who certified to the acknowledgment and whose certificate could not be read in evidence without record testified that Edwards had in 1870 acknowledged the execution of the deed before him. Upon this the Court'allowed the deed to go to the jury to show the extent of defendant’s possession.

It seems when a document is offered in evidence for a collateral purpose, the admission of the party by whom it purports to have been executed is prima facie proof of execution. Wharton on Evidence, sec. 689.

Color of title may arise under a void or worthless deed. "Yet the deed may be used to explain and define the possession. Roberts v. Pillow, Hempst. Rep., 624, affirmed in error; 13 How., 472; Hamilton v. Boggess, 63 Mo., 233.

Upon the same principle may be justified the admission of the preliminary survey of 1868. True the plat and survey were not annexed nor referred to in the deed, and considering the deed as the sole muniment of the defendant’s title, could afford no evidence in aid of the description of the property. Shirras v. Caig, 7 Cranch, 34.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ark. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorr-v-school-district-no-26-ark-1882.