Nash v. . R. R.

67 N.C. 413
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 N.C. 413 (Nash v. . R. R.) 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
Nash v. . R. R., 67 N.C. 413 (N.C. 1872).

Opinion

The action was brought in 1858, to recover possession of three lots outside of the old, but within the limits of the present city of Wilmington. The description in the declaration is: Bounded by lands of ______ but lying between north boundary on Water Street and the railroad, on the east by 5th street and on the west by 4th street, said lots being parcel of a certain tract of land conveyed by T. D. Meares, C. M. E., to W. S. Campbell, on 17 day of May, 1845, the said three lots being designated on the plat which forms a part of said deed as Nos. 85, (414) 86 and 87. There were counts on the demise of W. S. Campbell, Solomon and John Nash, and W. S. and James Campbell, heirs-at-law of Marsden Campbell.

The plaintiff showed title in Marsden Campbell, to a tract of land north of and adjoining the old limits of Wilmington, which embraced the land in dispute, and proved that he died in 1842, and the lessors, W. S. and James Campbell, were his heirs-at-law. He proved the destruction of the records of New Hanover during the war, and offered a copy of a deed from T. D. Meares, C. M. E., to W. S. Campbell, with a plat of survey annexed. The only evidence, to show by whom the plat *Page 300 attached to the deed was made, was the written description accompanying the plat, and which was referred to in the deed as a plat made by Alexander McRae, and the testimony of John McRae, who testified that his brother, Alexander McRae, made a survey of lands for Marsden Campbell, about the time he moved away in 1834, and he thinks he made a plat of the survey, though witness cannot say he ever saw the plat.

Plaintiff's counsel insisted that this testimony, together with the numerous deeds offered by the defendant was some evidence that the plat shown was a copy of the one made by Alexander McRae. Plaintiff showed a deed from W. S. Campbell to Solomon Nash, dated in 1845, and proved that Solomon Nash was dead, and the lessors, Solomon and John Nash, were his heirs-at-law.

The defendant claimed likewise under Marsden Campbell, and showed a deed from him to one London, dated in 1834, and from London to the defendant. The description in the deed was as follows: "All those five lots recently surveyed and plotted by Alexander McRae and filed in the Register's office and known as lots Nos. 88, 89, 90, 91 and 92, together with that portion of Hanover street intersecting between lots 89 and 90, the lots being bounded on the west by 4th street, on the east by 5th street, on the north (415) by Brunswick and on the south by the town of Wilmington, as laid down in said plat, as will more fully appear by reference thereto." The principal question in the case was the location of the land described in this deed. Plaintiff introduced one John H. Brown, who had surveyed the lots in dispute under an order of the Court. He testified, in substance, that the defendant's deed from London was located according to the general description and calls for the streets, it would embrace the three lots in question, but if located according to the numbers of the lots it would not embrace these three lots. There was other testimony as to this point.

Defendant's counsel asked the Court to instruct the jury, that the deed from Marsden Campbell to London, conveyed all the lands between 4th and 5th streets on the west and east, and Brunswick on the north, and the town of Wilmington on the south, as those streets and the boundaries of the town existed or were known in 1834, at the time the said deed was executed. His Honor declined this instruction, but told the jury, that the location of the deed from Marsden Campbell to London was exclusively a question for them; that the deed calls for a plat on which the land conveyed is designated by certain numbers, and it is then described by general boundaries. That the defendant says, that in the absence of the plat the particular description must be controlled by the general. The plaintiff insists that the plat attached to the deed from *Page 301 Meares is the same as that referred to in the deed from Campbell to London. That it appears from deeds read by defendant's counsel, from Marsden Campbell to other persons, that Alexander McRae made surveys of these lands and a plat of them, prior to 1834, and it is for you to decide whether the two plats are the same, and if they are the same, then according to the evidence of the surveyor Brown, the deed from Cambell to London, or the lots as shown by the numbers set forth in that deed, would not include the land in controversy. The plaintiff's counsel, in his argument to the jury, used the plat annexed to the deed from Meares to Campbell, as evidence to locate the deed from Campbell to London, (416) insisting that they were the same, and that both plats were made by McRae and that the jury must so conclude; that the plat referred to in the latter deed was identical with the plat before them, on which the lots Nos. 88, 89, 90, 91 and 92 did not constitute any part of the land in controversy. Defendant's counsel protested against the use of this plat, and this course of argument. 1. Because there was no evidence that the plat exhibited was made by Alexander McRae. 2. Because the description accompanying the plat and made part of the deed was not made until December, 1843, and after the death of Marsden Campbell, and there was no competent evidence to show that this plat was a copy of the plat referred to in the deed to London. His Honor declined to interfere with the counsel in his argument. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. Motion forvenire de novo. Motion refused, and appeal by defendant.

The diagram shows the location of the lots in controversy, numbered 85, 86, 87, as also the locality of the different streets called for in the deeds. This diagram or plat is a copy of the one referred to, in the case, as the McRae plat. Both parties claim under Marsden Campbell. The plaintiff established the fact by the aid of the plat referred to, and made a part of the deeds under which he derived title; that his title covered the land sued for, to wit: lots Nos. 85, 86 and 87, as designated on the plat.

The deed under which defendant derives title purports to convey lots Nos. 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, as designated on a plat made by Alexander McRae, and also sets out that the land is bounded by Brunswick street, 4th and 5th streets, and the north boundary of the town of (417) Wilmington, as designated on the plat referred to. *Page 302

There was evidence, which justified his Honor in submitting the question to the jury, "Is the plat referred to in the deed, under which the defendant derives title, the same plat as that referred to in the deed under which the plaintiff derives title?" The jury find the plats to be the same, so that matter is disposed of. Indeed, we are not able to see how the defendants could have located the deed, under which it derives title, otherwise than by the aid of this plat, as no other was offered in evidence, and without some plat the location of Brunswick street and 4th and 5th streets could not be made any more than the location of lots Nos. 88, 89, 90, 91, 92. So the defendant's deed could not be located, either by the one description or by the other, without the plat.

The case turns upon the point, does the deed of Campbell to London cover the land sued for. That depends upon the question, Which is to prevail, the description of the land by the number of the several lots, or the description by the reference to the streets? No direct authority was cited on either side, the solution consequently must be made by principle and general reasoning.

The terms of the deed are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.C. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-r-r-nc-1872.