Gore v. . McPherson

77 S.E. 835, 161 N.C. 638, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 2, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 77 S.E. 835 (Gore v. . McPherson) 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
Gore v. . McPherson, 77 S.E. 835, 161 N.C. 638, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 293 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

This is an action to recover land.

The plaintiff offered in evidence a grant to Andrew McMillan for 6,000 acres of land, of date 31 January, 1853, and mesne conveyances from the said McMillan to himself.

In the deed to the plaintiff there is an exception of 200 acres, as being owned by the defendant, Duncan McPherson, which is described by metes and bounds.

The plaintiff also offered evidence locating his paper title and identifying the land therein described as the land described in the complaint.

The defendant claimed that he was the owner of 335 acres of land within the boundaries of the grant, and not 200 acres, as contended by the plaintiff, and admitted that he was in possession of the same. *Page 520

A survey was made under order of court, and the contention of the defendant as to the location of the 335 acres is represented on the plat by the figures 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13.

The greater part of the 200 acres, as shown on the plat, is within the claim of the defendant, but a part is not. The home and outbuildings of the defendant are on the 200 acres as located on the plat.

The defendant introduced a deed from Mary Gordon and others to his grandfather, John McPherson, of date 9 February, 1818, and registered in 1912, purporting to convey five tracts of land by separate descriptions, which aggregated 335 acres.

The testimony of the defendant in his own behalf and the exceptions to the rulings during his examination are as follows:

(640) "I have heard this deed read, and am familiar with the lands described in deed Gordon to McPherson. I reckon I am. I don't reckon anything about it; I know it. I am not familiar with all the lines in these tracts; no, sir, not all of these tracts. It is all run in together, the way I understand it. This land is located at lines all around my place there. I could not tell you exactly where. It lies around my house, on the place there. I claim 335 acres. I don't understand this map. I have seen the lines run, starting at 1 to 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, and back to 1."

Q. Are those the lines, outside lines, called for in this deed? (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts.)

Q. What lines are those? (Plaintiff objects.)

Counsel for defendant here states that he proposes to show by the witness that these lines (1 to 13 and back to 1) indicate the outside lines called for in the deed to John McPherson. (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts.)

Q. What are the lines in your deed? Point them out on that map. (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts.)

"I pointed out the lines I claim to Mr. McLean. I think this was about sixteen years ago. He gave me this map."

Q. What are the boundaries in this deed — that you claim under this deed? (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts.)

"I can go around the boundary of my land. My boundaries begin 100 yards of the old cotton house and run thence to the corner, up to Briar Branch; thence corners, and runs another straight line across to the mouth of Tars Fork. These boundaries are marked with blazes and chops. The beginning corner is on a little knoll about 50 yards of Briar Branch. Corner was there at one time, but when McLean surveyed, no corner was there then, and he hit another corner and then found the corner. It run out about a quarter of a mile of my house, on the south *Page 521 side, and crossed Tars Fork and down the branch a quarter of a mile, and crossed it again, and come back inside the edge of my old field. It went nearly a quarter of a mile altogether, and came to a corner. A lightwood knot stuck down in the ground indicates my corner. I don't know how long it has been in the ground, but it has been a good while — twenty-five (641) or thirty years — I don't know exactly how long. I was at home the last day McLean surveyed the land. He surveyed it two or three times. I was with him when he surveyed it the last time. I did not point out to him the lines to survey. He surveyed by nothing that I could see. He did not survey the lines I had previously pointed out to him as my contentions."

Q. Point out to the jury what lands you have been claiming or been in possession of. (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts.)

Q. Of the lands that you have just described a little bit ago, where your lines run, what use have you been making of those lands? (Objection by plaintiff; objection sustained; defendant excepts.)

"My house is within the boundary of that deed. I live on the 100-acre tract, in the southwest corner of the square 200 acres. Besides this lightwood knot that I spoke of, there are some blazes on a tree. I don't know exactly how many blazes, but blazes and chops. I don't think there is any marked tree around the beginning corner. I don't think any tree is close to the beginning corner. I don't know that I can describe the lines around those tracts that I have seen — tell how any one can distinguish them and find them. It starts at foot of Briar Branch and runs — I don't know exactly how far — to a corner, and turns and goes in that direction. There are pines, blackjack pointers, and lightwood stobs, blazed and chopped, three chops on them. The next line is blazed and chopped; has a lightwood knot corner, a little pine and a little blackjack pointer; they are chopped three chops. The next line is a little more than one-half mile long. It is marked in chops, and about halfway on that line is an old corner, and there is another light-wood knot there and some chopped trees. I don't think but two chopped trees, one on each side on a straight line. The next line, chops and blazes. Then you strike Martin McPherson's land. Last line is not marked at all; it lapses. There it strikes another corner and a dead pine, and lightwood knot is struck up there. Nothing else, only blackjack pointers. Next line comes on back towards the beginning corner; one lightwood knot struck up there, about halfway to the beginning corner. I don't know how long I've been in possession of that land — I reckon you call in possession — ever since I (642) was big enough. Me and my father lived there. I have lived there sixty-five *Page 522 years. I have planted it in corn, cotton, worked it in turpentine, and cut cross-ties on it. I farmed on it ever since I was big enough to farm. I worked turpentine about four years. That has been thirty-five years ago, I reckon. I have been farming on it, working turpentine and cutting crossties, all I could, on it. I have been doing all that. That has been going on between forty and fifty years. No one else has been in possession besides me. I don't know exactly how long it was the first time I saw the land in this deed survey. Thomas Gibson surveyed it. I was a boy at the time, and don't recollect exactly what surveying he was doing. He surveyed mine and my father's lands around there; surveyed the entire tract of 335 acres."

Q. How did he mark it as he surveyed this land? (Objection by plaintiff.)

Defendant's counsel here states that he proposes to show by the witness that Thomas Gibson, the surveyor, had the lines marked by chopping the trees along same and blazing the line trees, and establishing corners at the time of his survey, covering the lands now in dispute. (Plaintiff objects; objection sustained, and defendant excepts).

"I have built two houses on the land — first one about fifteen years ago; then there is the old one that has been there twenty or twenty-five years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 835, 161 N.C. 638, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-mcpherson-nc-1913.