Fry v. . Currie

91 N.C. 436
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 91 N.C. 436 (Fry v. . Currie) 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
Fry v. . Currie, 91 N.C. 436 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

*437 Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff claims the land described in his complaint under a grant from the state issued for 100 acres to Thomas Bryant on November 30th, 1820, and successive conveyances from him and others, terminating in a deed made by the sheriff of Moore in the year 1841 to the plaintiff, pursuant to a sale under execution against the heirs at law of John Ray, the last bargainee in the series.

The defendant objected to the introduction of this deed as evidence, which objection has since been waived, to the sufficiency of its description of the land and to the efficacy of the judicial proceedings which preceded and led to the sale, in divesting the estate of the intestate, John Ray, therein.

The most prominent among the exceptions to the adverse rulings of the court in reference to the action against the heirs, of whom there were-two in number, all under age, to subject the descended lands to the debts of their ancestor, is to the sufficiency of the service of process upon their guardian ad litem, without actual service of the scire facias upon them.

After the repeated adjudications against the force of a similar objection to a practice which has long prevailed and upon the validity of which so many titles depend, and especially, taken by one not interested in the judgment, and in a proceeding wholly collateral, the law must be considered settled upon the point. We are content to refer to but two cases. White v. Albertson, 3 Dev., 241; Matthews v. Joyce, 85 N. C., 258.

Nor is the sheriff’s sale ineffectual by reason of any of the other defects in the proceedings pointed out in the other exceptions. Indeed they are unusually' full and specific. There is a judgment against the administrator ascertaining the debt; the value of the assets in his hands and its insufficiency to discharge the judgment by more than one hundred dollars, besides costs ; the appointment of a guardian *438 ad litem to the heirs of the intestate designated by name; the award of the writ of scire facias against them; the service upon the guardian ad litem; the adjudication of sale; the issue of execution after twelve months delay, reciting the previous action of the court and directing the sheriff to’sell “all lands which descended to the heirs of John Ray, deceased, situate in his . county, for the residue of the debt above the value of the ascertained assets and costs, which had been adjudged to Thomas Bryant for debt and $6.05. for costs and charges in said suit expended, wherefore Majory Ann Eliza and John Alex Ray, heirs at law of John Ray, deceased,.are liable as appears to us of record.”

The sheriff made return to this execution and executed his deed to the plaintiff with full recitals of the action of the court and his own proceedings under the writ, conveying the tracts of land sold and describing them by metes and bounds.

We are unable to discover any defect in these proceedings, obstructing the transfer of the title to the intestate’s lands which, at his death, vested in the said heirs, to the plaintiff who made the purchase.

The case of Raiford v. Peden, 10 Ired., 466, is not in conflict but rather supports this conclusion, nor are those of Bonner v. Tier, 3 Dev., 353, and Roberson v. Wollard, 6 Ired., 90, since the heirs are named in the execution.

2. The appellant’s next exception is to the admission in evidence of a deed from Alexander McIntosh to George Graham, made on August 22nd, 1821, as incompetent to aid in locating the land granted in the year before to Thomas Bryant, because it is of posterior date.

This exception was sustained, the court holding that it could not be used for that purpose and so charged the jury according to the appellant’s prayer.

We cannot' see how an exception can lie to this ruling, made at the defendant’s request and in most explicit terms. *439 We must assume that the jury acted in accordance with this instruction,- and if it can be supposed they did not, the remedy must be sought, in the application' for a new trial addressed to the discretion of the presiding judge. We cannot entertain an assignment of error in that the jury may have been influenced in arriving at a verdict, by giving weight to evidence they were expressly directed not to consider, in fixing the boundaries of the Bryant grant.

But it is not so clear that the deed executed by McIntosh to Graham was not admissible to aid in fixing the beginning of the boundary of the Bryant tract which is, or is supposed to be by the calls of the grant, at “ McIntosh’s corner.” His deed is an assertion of ownership of the land defined in it and is his declaration of the locatian of its lines and corners, used by a contiguous proprietor to determine the place of a corner common to both. Would not his declarations made when alive, be competent, as hearsay, not to locate his own, but the boundary of an adjacent tract that calls for and touches it ? The evidence does not come from an interested party to subserve some purpose and to secure some advantage to himself, but it is a concession in disparagement of his claim to a wider boundary for his own land.

In Mason v. McCormick, 85 N. C., 226, where such declarations were received and held to be competent, it is said they are “ not used to ascertain and fix the limits of the defendant’s own land, but the corner of an adjoining tract, to determine its location, and the evidence is not rendered inadmissible because that corner is coincident with one of his own boundaries.”

Such declaration when found in deeds, stands very much upon the footing of an oral utterance to the same effect from one who is dead. Sasser v. Herring, 3 Dev., 340, and other cases cited in the opinion.

But it is not necessary to determine the point since the *440 ruling was unfavorable to the plaintiff who does not complain, and the defendant cannot.

In order to cover the disputed land with an older title and displace the plaintiff’s claim, the defendant exhibited a grant made on May 17th, 1795, to David Allison, and, to fix the location of the land it conveys, proved numerous delarations of old persons since deceased, as to the position of the beginning comer, and showed that its lines from that point run according to the defendant’s contention would enclose the part in controversy.

A copy of the grant is not found in the transcript but it is stated that it calls for the “ Lewis land,” and the “ Black land,” both of which adjoin.

Starting at the corner understood to be designated by the evidence and marked 42 on the map, and running thence in conformity with the provisions of the grant, the surveyor says “ he did not think he made any real connection with the Lewis land or the Black line called for — Lewis line at 6 and the Black corner at 11,” though he did not run the lines of either of those traets.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.C. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-currie-nc-1884.