Johnson v. Cameron.
This text of 48 S.E. 640 (Johnson v. Cameron.) 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.
Opinions
This was an action for partition. The plaintiffs, children and grandchildren of George W. Cameron, deceased, claim title under two deeds to him, dated 2 January, 1869, but which have never been probated or recorded, and which were found in possession of W. M. Cameron, who was sole grantor in one deed and joint grantor in the other, and under whom the defendant, Cleopatra Cameron, claims. Said W. M. Cameron died in 1901. George W. Cameron died more than twenty years ago. The widow of W. M. Cameron, having interpleaded and claimed an interest in the land, (244) was made a party defendant. The sole issues submitted were as to the delivery of these two deeds. The widow of George W. Cameron was allowed to testify that she saw W. M. Cameron hand said deeds to her husband.
The Code, sec. 590, disqualifies a party to an action, or one interested in the event thereof, from testifying in his (or her) interest against the person claiming adversely as to "a personal transaction or communicationbetween the witness and the deceased person or lunatic," except when the executor of such opposing party or the testimony of the deceased person or lunatic is given in evidence concerning the same transaction or communication. But here the witness testified as to no transaction or communication between herself and W. M. Cameron. It was a transaction between W. M. Cameron and her husband, and as to that she is a competent witness notwithstanding her interest. Dobbins v. Osborne,
This case does not turn upon the witness being a party or interested in the event — she is both. Nor does it make any difference that she is in form a party defendant. Redman v. Redman,
But the Court erred in instructing the jury that if they believed the evidence of L. A. Cameron (widow of George W.), to answer the issue (of delivery) "Yes." The evidence of Mrs. Cameron was that she saw the deceased grantor "hand the deeds" to her deceased husband. But that fact, taken alone, does not constitute a delivery. It must be delivered as the grantor's act and deed. Then, too, there was the countervailing testimony to be considered by the jury that the deeds, unprobated and unregistered, were found at the death of the grantor in his possession, and that none of the plaintiffs, nor George W. Cameron, have ever been in possession of one of the lots, and the widow of George W. Cameron testified that her husband and herself lived, up to his death, with W. M. (246) Cameron on the other lot. The Court erred, also, in rejecting evidence that the grantor by his will disposed of this land, it being competent as tending to throw light upon the nature of his possession of the deeds and of the land. It may be that the deeds were merely handed to George W. Cameron for inspection. Certainly, the mere evidence that they were "handed" to him without any declaration of the purpose, taken in connection with the failure to take possession of the land and the failure to probate and record the deeds and their being found years later in possession of the party named therein as grantor, did not empower the Judge as a matter of law to instruct the jury that upon the evidence of the widow, if believed, they should respond "Yes" to the issue.
Error. *Page 180
WALKER, J., concurs in result.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
48 S.E. 640, 136 N.C. 243, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-cameron-nc-1904.