Taylor v. . Meadows

95 S.E. 662, 175 N.C. 373, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 10, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 S.E. 662 (Taylor v. . Meadows) 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
Taylor v. . Meadows, 95 S.E. 662, 175 N.C. 373, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 75 (N.C. 1918).

Opinion

The plaintiffs sued for the recovery of a parcel of land in the city of Oxford 30 feet wide by 161 1-3 feet long, as shown on the map used at the trial in the court below, and in this Court at the hearing of the case.

It appears from the record that there was a sharp dispute between the parties as to the beginning corner of the larger lot, of which thelocus in quo is alleged by the defendant to be part. The deed under which the defendants claim describes it as being "at a (374) planted stone on Williamsboro Street about six feet southeast of a large red oak, the southeast corner, thence S. 59 W. 135 feet to a planted stone, thence N. 15 1/2 W. 161 1-3 feet to a planted stone, thence N. 59 E. 135 feet to a planted stone, thence S. 15 1/2 E. 161 1-3 feet to the beginning, containing one-half acre." The plaintiffs contended that this tract had for its beginning corner a point 6 feet from a standing red oak, but 11 feet from Williamsboro Street; while defendants claimed that it is where the deed described it to be, that is onthe street, near a red oak, the stump of which is there, and which they say was identified, and that if this is the true beginning corner, and the other calls of the deed are followed, the boundaries will include the land in dispute, while if the calls are run from the point *Page 398 claimed by the plaintiffs to be the true beginning corner, the deeds of defendants do not embrace the said land. There was much evidence, pro andcon, as to whether the true beginning corner was at the one or the other place, for example, the surveyor testified that if the lines are run, as claimed by the plaintiffs, the first line cuts off seven feet of the prizehouse from its southeast corner, and runs through the center of its front, and the beginning corner will not be on the street, but eleven feet from it. There was no deed, and no evidence, to show that the beginning corner was so indisputably located as to exclude parol evidence of facts and circumstances to prove where it is, for there was fair ground for controversy as to where it is, under the rule that what is a corner or line is a question of law, and where it is a question of fact.

The defendants, in this state of the evidence, proposed to prove that from 1883 until his death in 1911, J. M. Currin, under whom they claimed, and, since that time to the commencement of this action, the defendants used the land in dispute, fenced it, built a stable on it, and cut down, removed and converted to their own use several large oak trees then standing upon it; that this was done near the front door of the Taylor residence, and in full view of the Taylors, and that they made no objection, nor did they protest against the same. This evidence was, at first, admitted, and afterwards, at plaintiffs' request, stricken out, and defendants excepted.

There was a verdict for the plaintiffs and judgment thereon, from which this appeal was taken by the defendants. after stating the case: We think it was competent for the defendants to show that they held possession of the disputed land for many years, without objection from the Taylors, and, for (375) this purpose, to prove the facts and circumstances in regard to building the fence on the land, erecting a stable thereon, cutting down trees, valuable for shade, firewood, and so forth, and converting the same to their own use. There was fair ground for dispute as to the location of the beginning corner of the lot conveyed by the Taylor-Biggs-Currin deed, and, Where is that corner? is the principal question in the case, and it is not like the one decided in Davidson v.Arledge, 88 N.C. 326; S. c., 97 N.C. 172. There the dividing line between two tracts was so fixed by the reference to city map, and with such certainty and definiteness that the evidence of a possession indicating a different line was held to be inadmissible, because it tended to *Page 399 contradict the deed, and the only question was, Where were the lots designated on the city map "as Nos. 69, 70, 77, and 78, in Square No. 10, lying on Tryon and College Streets, and being the property on which said testator lived at the time of his death?" The difference in their legal aspects between that case and this one will appear from two of the headnotes, as follows:

"1. If the words simply designate the lots by number, the boundary, as circumscribed by actual use and occupation, is the one meant by the bargainor. But where they refer to the lots not only by number, but `as known and designated in the plan' of the town, which plan contains a specific description thereof, it is the same as if that description were incorporated in the deed, and the latter must prevail; and it is incompetent to show by parol that the boundaries were intended to be different." Davidson v. Arledge, 88 N.C. 326.

"2. Where there is a dispute as to the dividing line between two adjoining tracts, the acts and admissions of the adjoining proprietors recognizing one line as the true one, are evidence of its location when the line is unfixed and uncertain, but where it is well ascertained such acts and admissions are not competent evidence either to change the line or to estop the party from setting up the true line." Davidson v. Arledge,97 N.C. 172.

That is not precisely our case, for there is nothing in the deed of Biggs to Currin, that so certainly designates this lot as to exclude parol evidence, but, in one respect, the cases are alike, for it was the duty of the judge to tell the jury what, in law, are the corners and lines of the deed, and for the jury to decide where they are. He would say to them that the beginning corner of the lot is that described in the deed, viz., "At a planted stone on Williamsboro Street, about six feet southeast from a large red oak," and that wherever they found this corner to be, whether at red A, as designated on the map, or at A, would be, in law, the beginning corner. But this requires the jury to pass upon the important question of fact as to where is this corner, designated as the beginning; and in doing so, they must consider the deeds and any relevant facts or circumstances which will enable them (376) to make discovery of the true corner, after searching for it in the light of the evidence. Where is the point described in the deed as on the street about six feet southeast of the big red oak, was purely a question of fact, and in solving it the jury had the right to inquire whether the stump was that of the red oak mentioned in the deed, and if so, to consider the distance and direction from it to the corner as claimed by the defendants, and also to consider the fact that the deed fixes the corner on the street and not away from the street, and also what was said about the stone and the post, and the fence and *Page 400 trees; the building of the stable, and the fact as testified by the surveyor, that the line as claimed by the plaintiffs would cut off one end of the prize-house to the depth of seven feet and pass through the middle of the front of that house. Why are these not pertinent facts? They could also consider the declaration of any of the plaintiffs as to the true line, which was against his interest. Roe v. Journegan, at this term. This would not be changing a fixed and ascertained line, but merely determining by proof where the line is, if its true location is disputed, as it is here.

We said at the last term, in Wiggins v. Rogers, 94 S.E.

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Wadsworth v. Georgia-Pacific Corp.
247 S.E.2d 25 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1978)
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119 S.E.2d 481 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1961)
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119 S.E. 483 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.E. 662, 175 N.C. 373, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-meadows-nc-1918.