Etheridge v. . Vernoy

70 N.C. 713
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 70 N.C. 713 (Etheridge v. . Vernoy) 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
Etheridge v. . Vernoy, 70 N.C. 713 (N.C. 1874).

Opinion

The action was brought by the plaintiffs as assignees of a penal bond of the defendant given to one Lewis T. Bond, to recover the residue of the moneys due thereon and for foreclosure of a mortgage executed at the same time, to secure the payment of the bond. The bond was in these words:

"Know all men, by these presents, that I, Milford Vernoy, of the town of Rochester, county of Ulster and State of New York, (714) am held firmly bound unto Lewis T. Bond, of the county of Bertie and State of North Carolina, in the sum of eighteen thousand dollars, to be paid to the said Lewis T. Bond, or to his certain attorney, executors, administrators, or assigns, for which payment well and truly to be made, I bind myself, my heirs, executors or administrators, jointly and severally, firmly by these presents. Sealed this 26th day of February, 1866.

"The condition of this obligation is such that if the above bounden Milford Vernoy, his heirs, executors or administrators, shall and do well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto the above named Lewis T. Bond, his certain attorney, executors, administrators or assigns, the sum of nine thousand dollars in the following payments, viz: two thousand five hundred dollars, with interest, in one year from the date hereof, according to the conditions of a certain mortgage bearing even date herewith given for the better securing of the aforesaid nine thousand dollars, which said sum and interest, if paid without fraud and delay, then the preceding obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.

Sealed and delivered in the presence of N. Williams, MILFORD VERNOY, (Seal.") *Page 573

On said bond were endorsed sundry partial payments as follows:

Received of Milford Vernoy twenty-five hundred dollars on account of this bond. May 15th, 1867. $2,500. W. A. MEBANE, Per L. S. WEBB. Received the interest also, $182.50 L. S. WEBB, For W. A. MEBANE.

Received of Milford Vernoy five hundred dollars, on amount due Mrs. H. A. Benbury, as Administratrix. April 10th, 1869.

The bond was on the 18th day of February, 1867, and before any payment become due, in writing, assigned by the said Lewis T. (715) Bond to the plaintiffs for full value paid him without notice of any counter claim or deduction demanded of the amount due then.

Other payments were also made by defendant which are not endorsed on the bond, but are stated in the answer and admitted in the pleadings.

The bond of defendant was secured by a mortgage made by the defendant at the same time and conveying certain lands lying in Bertie and Martin, which was properly proved and registered in those counties, a copy of which accompanies this case marked "A," the separate tracts, are herein stated to contain one thousand acres more or less. The defendant claims an abatement from the amount due on his bond by reason of an alleged deficiency in the number of acres in each of the tracts, which he had bought from said L. T. Bond, which Bond conveyed to him by deed dated _____ day of _____, 186_, duly proved and registered in said counties, a copy of which is herewith filed and made part of the case. In the deed last named, the tracts are described as containing respectively 1226 and 1,200 acres more or less, and they are the same tracts conveyed by the mortgage. The contract price for both tracts of land was $13,000, of which $4,000 was paid in cash, and the residue secured by the bond and mortgage aforesaid. Certain issues, filed with the record, were submitted to a jury.

It was in evidence that the sale was made and the price agreed upon, upon the representation by the vendor, Bond, that each tract contained a thousand acres, but the execution of the deed was deferred until a survey of the Bertie tract could be made. Before that survey was made the defendant executed his bond for the purchase money and his mortgage securing its payment and delivered them to the plaintiff, when the mortgage was immediately proved and registered. Thereafter a survey of the Bertie tract and the deed from Bond to the *Page 574 defendant executed, describing that tract to contain 1,226 acres, as reported by the surveyor. The deed from Bond to the defendant was (716) not executed until two months after the execution of the bond and mortgage, though it bears the same date. The Bertie tract in fact contains 1,124 acres only. It did not appear that any survey of the Martin tract had been made as described in Bond's deed, but a survey was made of a tract called the Bond tract, which was proved to contain 714 acres; that the lines as surveyed were part of those designated in the deed of Bond, and that after running out the first line, the second line was not run east, nor along any lines called for, nor marked trees, but directly to the southern terminus of a line of a patent not called for nor in any manner referred to in the deed, that the lines of adjoining tracts called for in running the second line were not found nor regarded, and that if the second line had been run due east to a point opposite and nearest to the Bond and Thompson line, which is called for and known, and then direct to that line the tract would contain nine hundred and forty-five acres, that it had once been thus surveyed and run, and was found to contain 945 acres as stated. The defendant admitted there was no fraudulent misrepresentation made by Bond as to the quantity of the land at any time, nor was there any evidence tending to show that he did not honestly estimate and believe the tracts to contain the full number of acres as described in his deed. At Spring term, 1872, of the Court an order in the case was made directing a survey of the lands and appointing one J. E. Moore, a surveyor, to make the survey in order to an accurate calculation of the acres of each tract; Moore made the survey and maps thereof and returned them to the following Court. These maps represented the two tracts as containing more land than is found by the jury. Moore was not present at the trial. He had been paid for his survey by order of the Court.

The plaintiff proposed to exhibit the maps to the jury as evidence of the quantity of the land as therein estimated by the surveyor. This evidence was objected to by the defendant and ruled out. The plaintiffs excepted thereto.

The defendant offered evidence of the present value of each tract, with a view to ascertain its value in 1866 when sold. This (717) evidence was objected to by plaintiffs and admitted. Plaintiffs excepted.

The defendant also proposed to prove by one Stone, a witness, that witness during the summer of 1872, on the swamp land in Martin county, cut and carried off a certain number of logs from 16 acres of the *Page 575 land, which logs he hauled to the river bank and thence transported and sold in market, and after deducting expense the proceeds of sale left a profit of about $15 per acre. This evidence was objected to by plaintiff and admitted by the Court. Plaintiffs excepted.

The defendant further proposed to show that there was a large quantity of cypress and ash timber on this Martin tract and its market value upon measurement by the foot, when cut and conveyed to market. This evidence was objected to by the plaintiffs and admitted by the Court. Plaintiffs excepted.

The plaintiffs insisted:

1st. That upon the fact, and notwithstanding the finding upon the issues, they were entitled to recover the entire amount due on the bond.

2d. That if any abatement were to be allowed, it should be only on the deficiency in the acres of the Martin tract, the deflciency [deficiency] in the acres of Bertie tract not warranting any claim for deduction.

3d.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.C. 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etheridge-v-vernoy-nc-1874.