Herod v. Robinson

115 So. 40, 149 Miss. 354, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 106
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketNo. 26512.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 115 So. 40 (Herod v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herod v. Robinson, 115 So. 40, 149 Miss. 354, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 106 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.

The appellee, Mrs. Robinson, filed her hill in the chancery court to confirm her title to certain lands therein described, the material part of the description reading, “one hundred forty acres in south part of section 31, township 5, of range 3 west, lying south of Raymond and Port Gibson road, and bounded on east by land of J. R. Bryant,” claiming title through her *356 mother, who formerly owned the lands. Subsequent to the execution of this deed to Mrs. Robinson, her mother, Mrs. Julia A. Herod, deeded all of the rest of the lands owned by her in said section 31 to the three appellants, her sons, in which deed the conveyances to Mrs. Robinson and to J. R. Bryant were referred to and were excepted.

The appellants contend that there were' more than one hundred forty acres lying south of the Raymond and Port Gibson road, and bounded on the east by the land of J. R. Bryant, and that they are entitled to the excess over . one hundred forty acres contained in said tract of land.

At the instance of the parties to the suit, the chancellor appointed the county surveyor and another civil engineer to make a survey of the land in question, and to report to the court the result thereof. These surveyors proceeded to the premises, and found a corner which had been established by one Stone, a surveyor, about the year 1870, and from that line ran out the lands involved, and reported to the court there were one hundred forty-five acres in said tract. These surveyors, however, did not locate the section corners, and did not run off the sections, but assumed that said corner marked by Stone was the correct corner. The survey, as made by Stone ábout the year 1870, showed there were one hundred forty-two acres in this body of land. Subsequent to the Stone survey, one Pearce made a survey of this land and calculated the acreage in the tract as one hundred thirty-nine and a fraction acres.

Considerable testimony was introduced with reference to the intention of the grantor and certain conversations made by her in her lifetime, she being dead at the time the suit was tried; also a corrected deed made in 1921, in which it is recited that the purpose of giving same was to correct a former deed, so as to embrace all the lands in said section lying south and east of this road.

The chancellor, after hearing, decreed for complainant, awarding her the entire tract, in which opinion, which is *357 made a part of the record, he states that the description ■without the aid of parol testimony would be uncertain and void. He adopted the old Stone snrvey as being the correct one, and decreed that, although there was surplus acreage, it was the intention of the grantor to convey the entire tract, and that the appellee would get the surplus acreage.

Prior to making the corrected deed in 1921, Mrs. Herod had conveyed to her sons all her property not already conveyed to Mrs. Eobinson.

The case comes here then for consideration on appeal of the appellants, who contend that the description in the deed is certain and definite, that there is no ambiguity, and that the lands can be located by a simple survey, and that it was the intention of the deed to grant to Mrs. Eobinson only one hundred forty acres.

We think the deed is not void for uncertainty, and, as it conveys one hundred forty acres in the south part of section 31, lying south of the Eaymond and Port Gibson road, and bounded on the east by the land of Bryant, that the only proof needed to make the conveyance perfectly certain, and to locate the land definitely, is to locate the land owned by Bryant, and the Eaymond and Port Gibson road, and the south boundary of the section, and, proceeding from the boundary line of the Bryant tract as the east boundary of the one hundred forty acres conveyed, lay off one hundred forty acres, making this line the east boundary of the one hundred forty acres. The record shows that the Eaymond and Port Gibson road enters the eastern side of the southwest quarter a little south of the central dividing point on said quarter section line, and runs southwest in an irregular line, varying at different parts of the line in degrees, and crosses the south line of section 31 east of the sonthwest corner approximately one-fourth of the distance between the southwest corner and a dividing line between the land “conveyed and the Bryant tract.

*358 In our opinion, the chancellor erred in holding that the deed intended to convey more than one hundred forty acres, provided there was more in said body of land. The deed, on this point, is specific, and its grant is positive and unequivocal as to the acreage. This being true, we cannot interpret into the deed an intent to grant more than the land it conveyed, where the land is not definitely described by metes and bounds, and its bounds fixed.

Generally speaking, a description of land in a deed is not void if it contains sufficient indicia to indicate what was conveyed, so that, with the deed and the information indicated by it, the land can be located with certainty; and a defect in the description may be cured by aid of parol evidence giving the identity of the premises intended to be conveyed.

Jenkins v. Bodley, Smedes & M. Ch. 338; Bingaman v. Hyatt, Smedes & M. Ch. 437; Tucker v. Field, 51 Miss. 191.

“A description of land in a deed as the ‘E. p’t S. W. % sec. 38, T. 1, R. 1, W., twenty acres,’ is good. The twenty acres may be laid off on the east side by a straight line from north to south.across the quarter section.” McCready v. Lansdale, 58 Miss. 877; Bowers v. Chambers, 53 Miss. 259; Enochs v. Miller, 60 Miss. 19; Goodbar v. Dunn, 61 Miss. 618; Tierney v. Brown, 65 Miss. 563, 5 So. 104, 7 Am. St. Rep. 679.
“A description in the deed of land of a specified number of acres ‘more or less’ off the southwest corner of a quarter section is a conveyance in gross of fifteen acres, and is not rendered uncertain by the words ‘more or less.’ ” Early & Co. v. Long, 89 Miss. 285, 42 So. 348.
‘ ‘ A deed conveying ‘ the land described as the north end of fractional southwest quarter of southwest quarter of section SS, township 18, range 15, containing four acres, with the house on it,’ sufficiently described the land,” in the case of Harris v. Byers, 112 Miss. 651, 73 So. 614. See, also, Riggin v. Hogg, 203 Ala. 243, 82 So. 341.

*359 In Morrison v. Hardin, 81 Miss. 583, 33 So. 80, a deed made by one Widener, who owned the southwest quarter of section 30 in Pontotoc county, containing one hundred sixty acres of land, conveyed it all to the appellee, Hardin, except thirty acres, and described the excepted thirty acres by metes and bounds.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 40, 149 Miss. 354, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herod-v-robinson-miss-1927.