Ratliff v. Ratliff.

63 L.R.A. 963, 42 S.E. 887, 131 N.C. 425, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 63 L.R.A. 963 (Ratliff v. Ratliff.) 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
Ratliff v. Ratliff., 63 L.R.A. 963, 42 S.E. 887, 131 N.C. 425, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 308 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

Clark, J.

There is no valid objection to the issues, as every ground of contention could be presented by appropriate evidence upon the issues submitted by the Court. Patterson v. Mills, 121 N. C., 266; Coley v. Statesville, Ibid., 315.

There was no error in admitting the records from the Register of Deeds, showing the deed, as there recorded, from Horne and wife to Ratliff, dated 11 September, 1869, and in not requiring the introduction of the original deed. The Code, Sec. 1251, provides: “The registry, or duly certified copy of the record, of any deed, power of attorney or other instrument required or allowed to be registered or recorded, may be given in evidence in any Court, and shall be held to be full and sufficient evidence of such deed, power of attorney or other instrument, although the party offering the same shall be enti *427 tled to the possession of the original, and shall not account for the non-production thereof, unless by a rule or order of the Court, made upon affidavit suggesting some material variance from the original in such registry, or other sufficient grounds, such party shall have been previously required to produce the original, in which case the same shall be produced or its absence duly accounted for, according to the course and practice of the Courts.” Here, there was no affidavit, nor suggestion even, that the registration was not correct, and m> rule of Court requiring the introduction of the original deed. The production of the original at the trial can not be required when such rule of Court has not been previously obtained. Devereux v. McMahon, 108 N. C., 134; 12 L. R. A., 205.

This disposes, also,, of the exception, to the introduction of the registration of the agreement of 10 September, 1869, if the probate is legal. As to this, the defendant excepts on the ground: 1. That it does not appear from the registration that there was any revenue stamp on said agreement. This need not appear. Haight v. Grist, 64 N. C., 739 ; Sellars v. Johnson, 65 N. C., 104.

2. That the proof of the handwriting of the subscribing witness was insufficient. This instrument was not recorded till 22 March, 1901. It appears from the probate that the parties and the subscribing witnesses were then all dead, and the probating witness testified that he “was well acquainted with the handwriting of M. V. Horne (the subscribing witness to said agreement), and had numerous business dealings with him during his lifetime; that to affiant’s best knowledge and belief the signature of the name of M. Y. Horne, to the aforesaid agreement as witness to the same, is in said Horne’s true handwriting, and no one else’s.” This is a compliance with The Code, Sec. 1246 (10).

The plaintiffs’ contention is that the above deed to the defendant’s father was a voluntary deed, without valuable con *428 sideration, and is to be taken in connection with said agreement, making one transaction, and that said agreement is an acknowledgment of a trust to hold said land for life, and then for his children by his first wife (who are the plaintiffs), which first wife was the daughter of the grantor in s'aid deed. The grantee, in 1893, conveyed the land, without valuable consideration, to the defendants, his children by his second wife, and has since died. The defendants contend that the agreement was not executed by their father, but is a forgery. There are several exceptions (4 to 8 inclusive) to the admission of evidence that Watt Ratliff, the grantee in said deed, and alleged signer of said “agreement,” admitted that he had received the land under an agreement to hold for his life, and then for the land to go to the plaintiffs, his children by the first wife; that he paid nothing for it, and had declined to sell it because of this trust upon it. Those exceptions are without merit. The rule is thus state in Shaffer v. Gaynor, 117 N. C., at page 24: “Declarations made by one in possession of land, characterizing or explaining his claim to ownership, or in disparagement of his own title, are competent, not only as evidence against the declarant, but against all claiming under him.” The evidence of these witnesses is of a declaration tending to disparage and qualify the title of Watt Ratliff in the land, and an admission of a trust. It is competent against him and against the defendant, who claims through a voluntary deed from him. Nelson v. Whitfield, 82 N. C., 51; Roberts v. Roberts, Ibid., 32; Nelson v. Bullard, Ibid., 37; Gates v. Gates, 76 N. C., 142; 1 Greenleaf Ev., Sec. 109.

The ninth exception, for refusal of nonsuit at the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence, is without merit, both because there was evidence to go to the jury, and because the exception is waived by the defendant himself thereafter introducing evidence. Means v. Railroad, 126 N. C., 428; Parlier v. Railroad, 129 N. C., 263.

*429 Nor did the Court err (tenth exception) in refusing defendants leave to introduce what they claimed was the original deed of 11 September, 1869, from Horne and wife to Watt Ratliff. Evidence is irrelevant, even when not incompetent, and is properly rejected, unless it tends to prove some controverted fact. Here, the said deed of 11 September, 1869, had been pleaded in the complaint and admitted in the answer, and, besides, its registration was in evidence without any suggestion of incorrectness therein, and there was no rule of Court to produce the original. But the defendants contend that they wished to introduce it for the purpose of comparing the handwriting of Martin V. Horne, the subscribing witness thereto, with the handwriting of M. V. Horne, the subscribing witness to the alleged “agreement,” but this is not the proper method to attack the genuineness of his signature. That should be done by the evidence of witnesses who are familiar with his handwriting. If there is a paper in evidence, the signature to which is proved or admitted to be genuine, another signature whose genuineness is in issue, can be compared with it, but here this paper was not in evidence, and the plaintiffs refused to admit that it was genuine. Tunstall v. Cobb, 109 N. C., 316, and eases there cited. The defendant then offered to prove that the probate ordering said paper to registration was in the handwriting of James M. Covington, formerly Judge of Probate of that county. But as the deed was irrelevant, this could not make it Ho, and to admit it for the purpose of handwriting would add to the controversy the dispute as to genuineness of Covington’s handwriting. All this has been so fully discussed in Tunstall v. Cobb, supra, that no further consideration is needed.

The evidence offered by defendants to show that after Watt Ratliff’s death, all his realty, except this and one small tract, was allotted to his widow for dower, was properly excluded as irrelevant, as were the deeds, expressed in their *430 face to be in consideration of love and affection, executed by Watt Ratliff and wife to the defendants, the children of the second marriage.

The defendants then offered to prove the bandwriting of Martin V.

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Bluebook (online)
63 L.R.A. 963, 42 S.E. 887, 131 N.C. 425, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratliff-v-ratliff-nc-1902.