Guilford v. . Porter

83 S.E. 564, 167 N.C. 366, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 25, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 564 (Guilford v. . Porter) 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
Guilford v. . Porter, 83 S.E. 564, 167 N.C. 366, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 130 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

Civil action. From a judgment sustaining motion to nonsuit, the plaintiff appealed. This is stated to be an action to remove a cloud from the plaintiff's title to part of the courthouse square in Guilford County, but as the alleged cloud was placed thereon by the act of plaintiff, we prefer to treat it as a proceeding under section 1589, Revisal, to determine the title to the property described in the complaint growing out of the adverse claims of the defendants.

The courthouse of Guilford County was burned in 1872, and by virtue of chapter 16, Laws 1872, the commissioners proceeded to acquire additional ground adjacent to the old site for the purpose, as set forth in the act (section 6), of enlarging the public square, and authority was conferred by said act upon the county commissioners "to buy, sell, and exchange real estate surrounding said courthouse, upon such terms as they may deem just and proper and for the best interests of the county." The courthouse was rebuilt on the old site and the commissioners proceeded to acquire land surrounding it for the public square.

Thereupon, on 5 February, 1873, the commissioners acquired a frontage on West Market Street of 23 feet and 8 inches from W. C. Porter, under a deed in fee containing this clause: "Provided, however, and it is understood and agreed, that the said lot herein conveyed shall be used by the said parties of the second part as a public square and be forever *Page 413 kept open for that purpose, and should any building or structure of any character inconsistent with said purpose be erected thereon, the said party of the first part, his heirs or assigns, may enter upon the land herein conveyed and abate and remove any and all buildings or parts of buildings inconsistent with its use as aforesaid."

On the same date the commissioners, by exchange for other land, acquired from W. A. Caldwell an additional 20 feet on West Market Street, under a similar deed containing a similar proviso. On 3 February, 1873, the commissioners acquired, by exchange for other land, 24 1/2 feet frontage on Elm Street from Waller R. Staples under a deed of exchange in fee, with full covenant of warranty.

On the same date the commissioners, in exchange for his land, conveyed to Waller R. Staples a strip of land on N. Elm Street immediately adjacent to that acquired from Staples, by deed in fee containing the following covenant immediately following the habendum: "The said party of the first part (the board of commissioners) doth further covenant and agree with the said party of the second part that the lot or parcel of ground lying between said brick building and the courthouse, on which formerly stood the office of C. P. Mendenhall, shall forever be kept open as vacant and unoccupied ground, except such (368) obstruction as may be made by shade trees thereon planted, and they shall not be planted within 20 feet of said brick building, and then only in such a manner as will leave free ingress and egress to said brick building on the south side thereof."

The purpose of this action upon the part of the plaintiffs is to get rid of these restrictions upon the use of the property so they can sell it to their coplaintiff, the Jefferson Insurance Company, for purpose of erecting thereon a large structure.

It is contended by the plaintiff that the provision in said deeds is void:

First. Because the condition is repugnant to the estate in fee simple already granted, and that such condition should be rejected and treated as surplusage. This position is untenable. If such a construction of a deed ever obtained in this State, it does not now. The narrow rules of the common law in construing deeds and other instruments, as expounded inHafner v. Irwin, 20 N.C. 570, taken from Coke and Blackstone, have given way to a more enlightened and broader doctrine. The whole of a deed is now so construed as to effectuate the plainly expressed intention of the grantor, and to carry out the manifest purposes of the parties. The technicalities of the common law will not be permitted to override the intention so expressed. 1 Dev. on Deeds, sec. 215; Triplett v. Williams,149 N.C. 394; Beacon v. Amos, 161 N.C. 365.

Second. Because the commissioners had no power to accept deeds containing such restrictions. This position is likewise untenable. The case *Page 414 of School Comrs. v. Kesler, 67 N.C. 443, relied on by plaintiffs, does not sustain their contention, assuming that it is not practically overruled by Hall v. Turner, 110 N.C. 305. The decision in the Kesler case is based upon the theory that the condition or qualification contained in the deed accepted by the school committee is inconsistent with and repugnant to the very object and purpose for which the deed was made and the property acquired.

In acquiring the property, the commissioners of Guilford were acting under a statute expressly authorizing them "to buy, sell, and exchange real estate surrounding said courthouse upon such terms as they may deem just and proper, and for the best interests of the county." They were not acquiring property as a site for a courthouse building, but solely, as recognized in the statute, "for the purpose of preventing the erection of any building near the courthouse, and thereby lessen the danger of fire" and "to enlarge the public square."

The county had a site for the building, conveyed to it by Solomon Hopkins in 1858. The courthouse was again erected on that site, and the purpose of the act was, not only to provide a new courthouse, (369) but to provide a public open space or square around it for its protection as well as public convenience. And it was for this latter purpose only that they acquired the land subject to these restrictions.

Instead of such restrictions being at variance with the purpose for which the property was acquired, they are wholly consistent with and in furtherance of it.

The grantee as well as the grantor is bound by the stipulations or agreement in these deeds, there being no suggestion of fraud or collusion (Herring v. Lumber Co., 163 N.C. 483), and it would be inequitable and unjust to set aside the restrictive agreements in them without setting aside the entire deed — something the plaintiff evidently does not desire.

The case of Edwards v. Goldsboro, 141 N.C. 60, in our opinion, has no application to the facts of this case. The judgment in that case is based upon an evident fraud on the public, because the plaintiff had subscribed and paid to the city a sum of money for the purpose and with the intent of inducing the city officials to locate its city hall and market house near the plaintiff's property with the view of enhancing its value. The contract was illegal and against public policy. The parties, being in pari delicto, the Court refused to enforce the contract. We fail to see any similarity between the two cases.

In taking these deeds, the commissioners were acting directly in line with the purposes of the statute, and every restriction contained in them *Page 415 is consistent with the purpose to provide an open space around the courthouse building.

The purpose of the statute, to provide an open space around the courthouse, manifestly could not be executed without acquiring this land, as it adjoined the courthouse site. No other land would answer the purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 564, 167 N.C. 366, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilford-v-porter-nc-1914.