Lumber Co. v. . Lumber Co.

49 S.E. 946, 137 N.C. 431, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 946 (Lumber Co. v. . Lumber Co.) 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
Lumber Co. v. . Lumber Co., 49 S.E. 946, 137 N.C. 431, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 190 (N.C. 1905).

Opinions

PLAINTIFF'S APPEAL. DEFENDANT'S APPEAL. After stating the case: When this case was before us at a former term, the learned justice who wrote the opinion of the Court assumed in the course of the argument that the first issue, as prepared at the time of the agreement of counsel, embraced all the land described in the complaint and called for a finding of the jury as to whether the plaintiff was the owner of all, and not merely the owner of a part thereof, and that, afterwards, the issue was so divided as to require the jury to determine, not only whether the plaintiff owned all the land, but, if it did not, whether it owned any part thereof. And so the Court thought at the time. It now appears that no change was ever made in the first issue. It is in precisely the same language now as it was when (435) the agreement was made. The erroneous assumption of the Court led to the conclusion that the agreement of the counsel had been annulled, as the change in the form and substance of the issue rendered the contingency upon which the admission was to operate impossible. *Page 323 The fact is, that as the agreement and the first issue were drawn, the parties intended, as the law construes their agreement, that if the jury answered "Yes" to the first issue, that is, if they found that the plaintiff was the owner of the land or any part thereof, the defendant had trespassed upon the land described in the complaint, and in that event there should be a reference to assess the damages. The Court was led into a misapprehension of the true state of the issues, we suppose, by reason of the fact that the second issue required the jury to find what part of the land was owned by the plaintiff, if it owned not all, but only a part thereof. But that was one of the issues when the first issue was prepared and when the agreement was drawn, and was intended only to complete and perfect the finding under the first issue, if the jury answered that the plaintiff was the owner only as to a part of the land. It now appears most clearly that the first issue was never so drawn as to be confined to all the land and require a response only as to the entire tract, but has remained intact from the beginning to this time and required the jury to find whether the plaintiff was the owner of the land or any part thereof. The jury answered that issue "Yes," and therefore the agreement between the parties became operative, but, as we will presently see, not in its entirety.

The defendant contends that we should not enforce the agreement, as the parties contemplated, at the time, that the question of trespass should be tried under the first issue, or, in other words, should be considered as of the substance of that issue and a material part of it. We cannot so hold. We are not permitted to introduce any new provision into the agreement of the parties without the consent of both, nor can we embody in the issue something that in law constitutes no part of (436) it, without a like consent of the parties. We cannot make a contract for the parties, but only construe it as they have themselves made it. Their words must be given their natural and ordinary meaning, and, in this case, the issue referred to in the agreement must be interpreted according to its plain legal import. How an issue as to ownership can involve the question of a trespass on the land we are unable to conceive. If the plaintiff is the owner of the land, he has the constructive possession of it, which will support an action of trespass to recover damages for an unlawful invasion of his right; but this does not include the idea that the defendant has made an unlawful entry on the land. Therefore, it follows that the question of trespass was not germane to the first issue, and we cannot consider it in passing upon the agreement of the parties. The fact, if conclusively established, that the parties actually intended to try that question under the first issue would not help the defendant. It is not the understanding, but the agreement, of the parties that controls, *Page 324 unless that understanding is in some way expressed in the agreement. Even if the defendant had clearly shown that it so understood the agreement, it will not do, as the court proceeds, not upon the understanding of one of the parties, but upon the agreement of both. No principle is better settled. Brunhild v. Freeman, 77 N.C. 128; Pendleton v. Jones, 82 N.C. 249;Prince v. McRae, 84 N.C. 674; McRae v. R. R., 88 N.C. 534; King v.Phillips, 94 N.C. 558. In Bailey v. Rutjes, 86 N.C. 520, it is held that however reasonably one of the parties to an agreement may be induced to act with reference thereto in a particular way by the conduct of the other, the latter is not bound by such conduct as evincing the measure of his contractual duty or obligation, unless there is some equitable element or an estoppel involved, which in law binds him (437) by his conduct to assume that duty or responsibility as if he had expressly promised to do so. To the like effect isThomas v. Shooting Club, 121 N.C. 238. The same idea is differently expressed in Gregory v. Bullock, 120 N.C. 262, namely, when the terms of an agreement are ascertained its effect is determined by the law, and does not depend upon the uncertain or undisclosed notion or belief of either party. But Stump v. Long, 84 N.C. 616, would seem to be conclusive against the defendant upon this point. In that case the plaintiff had instituted proceedings supplementary to execution against the defendant. During the course of those proceedings the parties agreed to the appointment of a receiver, and an order by consent appointing a receiver to take charge of defendant's assets and apply the same to the payment of his debts was accordingly entered, nothing being said therein about defendant's exemption. He afterwards asked the court to modify the order by providing for his exemptions, upon the ground that his counsel had misunderstood him, and that he did not intend to waive his exemption and did not believe that he had done so. The court refused the application, and, after holding that the defendant was bound by the act of his attorney, who had implied authority to consent to the order, it proceeded, by Ruffin, J., who wrote the opinion, to say: "We are bound, then, to treat the case as if the petitioner had been actually present and given his assent to the order as drawn. He agreed to it, because his attorney did. Can a party, after having given his assent to a judgment or order of the court, be afterwards heard to say that such assent had proceeded from a mistake, on his part, as to the effect thereof, and for that reason have the same modified? If so, then the court would be making a consent judgment for the parties, not according to the agreement of both, but according to the understanding of one of them. If this was a bill for the correction of a mistake in a deed, the plaintiff could get no relief upon the facts stated (438) in his application, for in such *Page 325 a case one of two things must appear, either that the mistake was that of both the parties, or that of one with a fraudulent concealment on the part of the other. There is no pretense here of any fraud or mutuality of mistake, and we cannot see why the same principle does not apply." That the parties are bound by the acts of their attorneys of record in making agreements is too well settled to be now disputed. Morris v.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 946, 137 N.C. 431, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumber-co-v-lumber-co-nc-1905.