Smathers v. . Jennings

87 S.E. 534, 170 N.C. 601, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 12, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 534 (Smathers v. . Jennings) 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
Smathers v. . Jennings, 87 S.E. 534, 170 N.C. 601, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 202 (N.C. 1916).

Opinion

AlleN, J.

There are numerous exceptions in the record, but those relied on in the briefs may be considered under four heads:

■ (1) Plaintiffs introduced as a part of their title original deed of release from Charles F. Mayer to Thomas M. Lanahan, dated 23 April, 1856, and duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Jackson County, in Book TT, at page 351, 25 May, 1910, the description in which wa.s as follows, to wit: “All those lands, tracts and parcels situate in Jackson County, State of North' Carolina, Thomas B. Lemon conveyed to Mayer by deed dated 17 October, 1855, and registered in said county, in Book A 1, pages 498, 499, 500, said lands consisting of twelve parcels, each of 640 acres, and containing in the aggregate 7,600 acres.”

This deed was also recorded in Book A 1, page 753, 17 'September, 1856.

For the purpose of aiding the description in the deed of Mayer to Lanahan, recorded, as aforesaid, in Book TT, page 351, plaintiffs offered *603 certain sheets numbered 498 and 499, which were admitted to have been a part of old Book A of the office of the register of deeds for Jackson County, and on which there purported to have been copied the deed from Thomas B. Lemon to Charles F. Mayer, dated 17 October, 1855, and the probate appearing upon these sheets, and upon which the deed purported to have been recorded, was in words and figures as follows, to wit:

State oe MabylaNd — City of Baltimoee.

On this the 17th day of October, A. D. 1855, before me, Jabez D. Pratt, a commissioner of North Carolina for the State of Maryland, to take the acknowledgment of deeds and to be used or recorded in North Carolina, personally appeared Thomas B. Lemon, personally known to me to be the person named in the aforegoing instrument of writing, and acknowledged the signing and sealing the same to be his voluntary act and deed and desired the same to be recorded as such, and did also acknowledge the memorandum subjoined to said instrument.

"Witness my hand and official seal affixed the day and year last aforesaid. Jabez D. Pkatt,

(Seal.) Commissioner of North Carolina,.

Witness: W. E. BuchaNAN.

To which said record the defendant objected; objection overruled, and the defendant excepted, the court stating that the record was admitted, not because of the sufficiency of the probate, but in order to aid, in so far as it did aid, in the description of the deed offered in evidence upon the probate and registration of 25 May, 1910, and not in itself as a link in plaintiffs’ chain of title, but only as evidence of the document referred to, for description in the release deed from Charles F. Mayer to Thomas M. Lanahan.

This deed from Thomas B. Lemon to Charles F. Mayer was after-wards registered in 1909, upon a probate to which there is no objection.

The exception to the introduction of the deed from Lemon to Mayer when first registered upon a defective probate becomes immaterial in view of the fact that it was afterwards registered upon a .probate free from objection; but if the probate had not been perfected we are of opinion the record where it was first registered was competent for the purpose for which it was offered, the identification of the land conveyed in the deed from Mayer to Lanahan.

When one deed refers to another for a description, the description in the first deed must be considered as if it had been inserted in the second, and the latter must be construed with that description in it (Gudger v. White, 141 N. C., 515), and-this is true although the first deed may not be registered. Collins v. Asheville Land Co., 128 N. C., 563; Watson v. Hinson, 162 N. C., 72; 13 Cyc., 634; 8 Ruling Case Law, 1078.

*604 In the first of these cases it was held that a plat referred to in a deed executed since 1885 was competent to aid the description, although unregistered, and in the second that a writing recorded as a will upon a defective probate might be incorporated in a subsequent will, properly probated, by reference to it.

It is said in 13 Cyc., 634, “Where a plat is referred to in a description in a deed it may be used to identify the land conveyed, although it does not conform to the statute,” and in 8 R. C. L., 1078, “Real estate is sufficiently described in a conveyance by reference for identification to another deed or record specifically mentioned therein which accurately describes it. The map or plat referred to need not be registered.”

(2) The plaintiffs introduced as a part of their title the wills of Israel M. Parr and Mary Bowen Parr, probated before the Orphan’s Court of the city of Baltimore and recorded in Jackson County. The defendant objected upon the ground that the record was not properly certified, relying on Riley v. Carter, 158 N. C., 484.

An examination of the record in the Riley-Carter case shows that no defect there pointed out is apparent in this record.

The probates of the wills before us appear to be in due form; the register and custodian of wills certifies under seal that it is a true copy; the presiding judge certifies that the certificate of the register is in due form, and the register certifies under seal that the person signing the last certificate was the presiding judge of the court. The wills were properly admitted in evidence.

(3) T. A. Cox, a witness for the plaintiffs, testified, over the objection of the defendant, that there was a general reputation that the three books from the register’s office, A, B, and C, were taken during the war by the then register of deeds and hid under a log; that he forgot the log and had to search a long time before they were found, and that they were badly damaged, etc.

We cannot see that this evidence affected the result upon the issues submitted to the jury, and as it appears to have been admitted for the purpose of identification, it became immaterial upon the abandonment by the defendant of his objection to the introduction of the grants upon which the plaintiffs rely, and upon the admission of the genuineness of the sheets offered from Book A.

(4) Hi.s Honor charged the jury on the first issue: “The burden of this issue is fixed by the law upon the plaintiffs, which requires them to satisfy you by the greater weight of the evidence that they are the owners of the land described in these two State grants, and that it is as located on these court maps. The plaintiffs are relying upon a paper title to establish their contention of ownership. They take the position here that they have shown a grant from the State of North Carolina to both of these tracts of land, 190 and 191, and that they have connected *605 themselves by mesne conveyances, which they say give to these plaintiffs, and down to the "Wolfe Mountain Lumber Company, the title which the original grantee from the State had in these lands.”

He then called the attention of the jury to the deeds in the plaintiffs’ chain of title down to a deed to Israel M. Parr, George 1J. Porter, and Thoma.s N.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 534, 170 N.C. 601, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smathers-v-jennings-nc-1916.