Parish v. East Coast Cedar Co.

45 S.E. 768, 133 N.C. 478, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 768 (Parish v. East Coast Cedar 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
Parish v. East Coast Cedar Co., 45 S.E. 768, 133 N.C. 478, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 85 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

In this cause, a jury trial being waived, the following facts are found by the Court:

“1. Before the bringing of this action the State Board of Education, for value, executed and delivered to plaintiff a deed conveying in fee-simple to plaintiff the tract of land described in the complaint, said deed being properly probated and registered before this action was started in the county in which said land is situated.
“2. That all of said land is swamp land, containing more than two thousand acres in that body, and plaintiff has no source of title to it except by virtue of said deed.
“3. That after plaintiff procured said deed, before the suit was started, defendants entered upon said land and cut and removed therefrom timber trees worth —— dollars, under deed purchased by defendant before said Board made deed to plaintiff.
“4. That about one hundred years ago said land was granted by the State to one Hunnings, which grant was registered in the county said land was in as soon as same was issued.
“5. That the taxes for several years before and up to and including the year 1891 have never been paid to the State upon said lands. Defendant owns whatever title the heirs of said Hunnings had at the time their deed was made to defendant.
“6. That said Board of Education had never had said land surveyed nor exercised any control over it before making said deed to plaintiff.
“Defendants admit that plaintiff owns said land if said *480 deed was sufficient to convey the title — that is, if said Board of Education owned said land, under The Code, Yol. II, ch. 15, and laws amending same, then plaintiff was owner of same at the time defendants cut timber from same.
“Plaintiff admits that defendants own said land if said deed to plaintiff did not in law convey a good title to plaintiff.”

Upon this state of facts the Court below adjudged that the defendants were the owners of the land in question.

The single question presented for our consideration is the constitutionality of chapter 243 of the Laws of 1889, amending section 2522 of The Code. Section 2522, before the amendment, was as follows: “Any person, his heirs or assigns, having at any time obtained a grant from the State for any swamp lands which have been surveyed or taken possession of by the State Board of Education or their agents, and shall not have regularly listed the same for taxation and paid the taxes due thereon to the persons entitled to receive the same, such grantee and his heirs or assigns shall forfeit and lose all right, title and interest in the said swamp lands, and the same shall ij.so'facio revert to the State and be vested in the said Board upon the same trusts as they hold other swamp lands, unless such person, his heirs or assigns shall have paid to the sheriff of the county in which said lands lie, prior to the 21st day of January, one thousand eight hundred and forty-four, all the arrearages of taxes due on said land, with interest thereon, from the time the taxes ought to have been paid.”

The part of the amending act necessary for our present, consideration is as follows: “Upon the failure of any such grantee or grantees, their heirs or assigns, to pay to the sheriff or other person authorized to receive the same all arrearages of taxes which were levied and assessed, or which ought to have been levied and assessed, with lawful interest due thereon, on or before the said 21st day of January, 1890, all *481 the right, title and interest in said swamp land belonging to or vested in snob grantee or grantees, tbeir heirs or assigns shall become forfeited and vested in the State Board of Education; and no suit, action, proceeding, order, decree or judicial determination shall be necessary to such forfeiture, but it shall be absolute at the expiration of the time herein prescribed, upon the non-payment of the aforesaid taxes and interest.” The italics are ours. This act is apparently intended, at least by the draftsman, to evade the construction placed upon the old act by the eases of Phelps v. Chesson, 34 N. C., 194, and Land Co. v. Board of Education, 101 N. C., 35. In the former case this Court held that, although the act provided that the lands should "ipso facto revert to and be vested in the State” unless all arrearages of taxes were paid within twelve months of the passage of the act, the said lands were not forfeited in the absence of any procedure to declare and enforce forfeiture. The Court, by Pearson, J., says: “Admit that this act has the force of inserting in the original grant a condition that if the taxes are not paid when due, but shall at any time be in arrear, ithe land shall ipso facto revert to and be vested in the State” according to the well-settled principles of law if the taxes were in arrear at any time the estate created by the grant would not be defeated and revert to the grantor unless some solemn act was done by which to enforce the condition; for the estate, having commenced by a solemn act, viz., a grant, must be defeated by an act equally solemn, upon the maxim of the common law, ‘eo ligamine quo ligatur.’ If a feudal tenant failed to perform the services his estate was not defeated until the lord had judgment in a writ of cessavit. If a subject incurs a forfeiture by committing treason his estate is not defeated until ‘office found.’ If a feoffment is made on condition, and the condition is broken, the estate continues until it is *482 defeated by tbe entry of tbe feoffor or bis beirs. Coke on Littleton, chapter on Conditions. Tbe law hooks teem with cases fixing tbe principle that an estate once vested cannot be defeated by a condition or forfeiture without some act on the part of tbe grantor or bis beirs by which to take advantage of tbe condition or forfeiture, even, when tbe words of tbe condition are Tbe estate shall therefore be void and of no effect/ which words have tbe same legal import as ipso facto void/ ”

Tbe Court expressly declined to pass upon tbe constitutionality of tbe act on tbe ground that it became unnecessary in view of tbe construction placed upon it. In Land Co. v. Board of Education, 101 N. C., 35, tbe Court, in approving tbe interpretation placed upon tbe statute in Phelps’ case, says: “Tbe counsel for the appellant seems to question tbe correctness of that interpretation. We think it is reasonable and just, and it seems to us fully warranted, certainly by tbe spirit and reason of tbe statute. It is not to be presumed or merely inferred that tbe Legislature intended to deprive tbe grantee of bis estate without affording him opportunity in some affirmative way that actively puts him on notice to-defend his right if be shall see fit, and an intention to do so could only appear by clear and explicit terms, leaving no doubt as to such intent, and we forbear to say here whether such an enactment would or would not be of force for any purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 768, 133 N.C. 478, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parish-v-east-coast-cedar-co-nc-1903.