Hughes v. Clark.

46 S.E. 956, 134 N.C. 457, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 956 (Hughes v. Clark.) 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
Hughes v. Clark., 46 S.E. 956, 134 N.C. 457, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 118 (N.C. 1904).

Opinions

The purpose of this action is to compel specific performance on the part of the defendant of a contract entered into in February, 1902, for the sale by the plaintiffs and the purchase by the defendant of a parcel or lot of land and its improvements situated in the town of Greenville. In conformity with the written agreement between the parties the plaintiff executed in due form a deed to the property and tendered it to the defendant, who declined to accept it and pay the agreed purchase price on the ground that the plaintiff had no good and sufficient title to that part of the lot of land described in the deed upon which was located a leaf tobacco factory and machinery necessary for its operation. The (458) only question in the case then is this, "Did the plaintiffs have at the time they tendered the deed to the defendant a good and sufficient title to that part of the lot on which was situated the factory and machinery and equipment?"

In 1892 the Greenville Land and Improvement Company, being the owner of a tract of land known as the "Moore land," lying to the southeast of Greenville and adjoining the town, had the same laid out by P. Matthews, a surveyor, into building lots and streets, Matthews at the same time furnishing a map on which the streets were designated by names and the lots by numbers. Numerous deeds, in each of which one or more of the lots was embraced, to various purchasers, were executed *Page 333 by the Greenville Land and Improvement Company, its successor, the Greenville Lumber Company, and Lovitt Hines, receiver of the last-named company, and duly registered prior to the sales made by said Hines, receiver, of lots numbers twenty-one, thirty-four and thirty-five, and in all those deeds reference was made, as to the description of the property conveyed, to the names of streets and numbers of lots as shown on the map of Matthews. Thehabendum was in these words: "To have and to hold the above-described parcel or lot of land, together with the rights of ingress and egress on all the streets leading to the same, and all other rights and privileges thereto belonging." The lots numbers twenty-one and thirty-five with several others were conveyed by Hines, receiver, to L. C. Harper, and lot thirty-four was conveyed by Hines, receiver, to Strause, who in turn conveyed it to Arthur. In the deed from Hines to Arthur is also conveyed all the right, title and interest which the Greenville Lumber Company might have in and to any or all of the streets included in the lands or dividing the lots therein conveyed. Arthur and wife, in 1901, conveyed lots twenty-one, thirty-four and thirty-five to the plaintiffs, together with a strip of land ten feet wide and running along the southern side of the above-mentioned lots, the said ten feet (459) being at the time a part of Eleventh street on the map of Matthews. The property mentioned and described in the deed which the plaintiffs tendered to the defendant embraced lots twenty-one, thirty-four and thirty-five and also the ten-foot strip of Eleventh street, upon a part of which the plaintiffs afterwards built one end of their tobacco factory. Eleventh street at the time of the Matthews survey was set apart and staked off with iron stakes, but that part of the street which was between Clark and Pitt streets, upon which lots thirty-four and thirty-five abutted, was not actually put in a condition for general use at the time of the sale of lots thirty-four and thirty-five, although people could and did pass over the same.

Did Arthur's deed to the plaintiffs have the effect of vesting the title to the ten-foot strip of Eleventh street in the plaintiffs? Or, to state the question in another form, could Hines, the receiver of the Greenville Lumber Company, by his deed to Arthur, enable Arthur or his grantees, the plaintiffs, to obstruct Eleventh street by building on a part of it a tobacco factory, as against purchasers of lots according to the plan of the Matthews' survey? The decisions of this Court are to the contrary. In Rivesv. Dudley, 56 N.C. 126; 67 Am. Dec., 230, Judge Pearson, in illustrating the question decided in that case, said for the Court: "What is the principle? It is this: If the *Page 334 owner does an act whereby he signifies his intention to appropriate land to the use of the public as a highway or street or square to be used by the public as a pleasure ground or the like, and individualsin consequence of this act purchase property or build houses withreference to its being so used by the public, and become interested tohave it so continue, he is precluded from resuming his private rights of property over the land, because it would be fraudulent in him to do so. When individuals have become interested in (460) reference to the use of the land by the public the dedication takes effect immediately." And again, in Moore v.Carson, 104 N.C. 431; 17 Am. St., 681; 7 L.R.A., 548, the Court declared it to be a well-settled principle that where a corporation or an individual, by laying off streets, has induced third persons to buy lots adjacent to them, the dedication to the public use of the streets was irrevocable, and that even in cases where they have not been formally accepted by the authorities of a town in which they lie. In Conrad v. Land Co., 126 N.C. 776, the Court said: "If the owner of land lays it off into squares, lots and streets with a view to forming a town or city, or as a suburb to a town or city, certainly if he causes the same (the map) to be registered in the county where the land is situate and sells any part of the lots and squares, and in the deed refers in the description thereof to a plat, such reference will constitute an irrevocable dedication to the public of the streets marked on the plat. Meier v. Portland, 16 Ore., 500; 1 L.R.A., 856. We think the same principle would apply to the piece of land which was marked on a plat as squares or courts, or parks, and that streets and public grounds designed on said map should forever be opened to the purchaser and the public." It is true that in Moore v.Carson, supra, the defense of the defendants was that their ancestor had bought lots abutting the particular street in Taylorsville in Alexander County, and which street the commissioners had afterwards attempted to sell and convey to the plaintiffs; and in Conrad v. LandCo. the action for a perpetual injunction to restrain the defendant from selling for private purposes a part of "Grace Court" was brought by persons who had bought lots abutting Fourth street as it ran alongside the court. Nevertheless in the last-mentioned case the Court held, as we have seen, that all the streets marked on the (461) plat were irrevocably dedicated to the public. And in Collins v. Land Co., 128 N.C. 563; 83 Am. St., 720, although the streets which the defendants were obstructing and closing were in a remote and sparsely settled and comparatively less valuable section of the lands which had been laid off into *Page 335 streets and lots, the Court held that the scheme of sale as indicated by the map was a unity, and that there was a presumption that all the public ways had added value to all the lots embraced in the scheme.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 956, 134 N.C. 457, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-clark-nc-1904.