Thompson v. . Buchanan
This text of 151 S.E. 861 (Thompson v. . Buchanan) 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.
Opinion
1. Are declarations of a. deceased owner of land as to the beginning corner, made during the period of his ownership, competent against those claiming under him?
2. Are the declarations of such deceased owner, made after he had parted with his title, competent against those who claim under him?
It appears from the evidence that Pat Abemethy owned an interest in the land or a mineral interest in it up to 7 September, 1909, and that on that day he conveyed his interest to one of the plaintiffs. It does not appear when Abernethy acquired the interest. The defendants offered testimony to the effect that surveys of the land had been made *280 in 1922 and in 1924, and that Abernethy, now deceased, was present at the time of these surveys, and that he pointed out the corners of the Irby lease and stated that such corner was “a walnut standing on the bank of the road.” The defendants further offered the declaration of Abernethy at the time of such survey, with respect to the walnut, as follows: “He said it looked natural; that it was standing right where it always was.”
Another witness for defendants testified with reference to the walnut, as follows: “Yes, Mr. Pat Abernethy pointed it out to me at one time. I believe it was in the year 1918. I was out there. I got him to go with me the year after my wife’s father died, as well as I recollect. It was up to me to kinder look after the property, and I got him to go with me and point out the boundary lines of that Hawk Mining tract, and we went up the ridge to a hole in the ground. I'asked him to go in front and point out to me where the corner was.’ . . . He went and looked around a little and finally located that hole in the ground, figure 2, and told me that was the corner between the Heap and Clapp contention and the Burleson contention. He pointed out the oak that was marked there, he said in 1885, when they had a survey after they got up a dispute between the parties mining under Heap and Clapp and the parties mining under Burleson as to the location of the underground workings, and that he went after a surveyor, and it was one of the coldest days he ever saw in his life, and they got up there and surveyed to that point and then had an underground survey to determine where the workings were and that they marked that tree that was there as a more permanent mark, and that he took a memorandum of those marks and the distance from the chestnut stump and the shaft that was there, and that he had it at home in his safe, and that he would send it to me, but he never did.” The witness was asked if he and Abernethy went down to the walnut tree claimed by the defendants as a beginning point of the Burleson lease and the Bowman deed. The witness answered: “Yes, we went on up there, and he looked around a little on the ground and said that comer was standing there then, above the road, the beginning corner, 1, as laid down on the map was the corner.”
The plaintiffs objected to all the foregoing evidence. The objection was overruled and the plaintiffs excepted.
It appeared that Abernethy had conveyed his interest in the land to one of the plaintiffs in 1909, and that some of these declarations having been made in 1918, in 1922, and in 1924, were made after Abernethy had parted with his interest in the land. The general rule is stated in Singleton v. Roebuck, 178 N. C., 201, 100 S. E., 313, as follows: “It is the law in this State that under certain restrictions both hearsay evidence and common reputation are admissible on questions of private *281 boundary. . . . The restrictions on hearsay evidence of this character — declarations of an individual as to the location of certain lines and corners — established by repeated decisions, are: That the declarations be made ante litem motam; that the declarant be dead when they are offered, and that he was disinterested when they were made.” However, it was held in Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 169 N. C., 80, 85 S. E., 438, that: “It may be said that where the.declarant has parted with his interest, what he has afterwards said about lines and boundaries cannot be used against .those claiming under him to disparage their title. . . . It may be added that the testimony of Bent Cook as to declarations of Bryson was incompetent, as they were made after Bryson had disposed of his interest, and would disparage those claiming under him. 16 Cyc., 979.” But the record shows the following entry: There was.“testimony on the part of witness, R. E. Wiseman, and of the witness, Fate Wilson, that P. H. Abernethy had pointed out the lines and corners of the land in controversy as the lines and corners thereof, which was admitted without objection or exception prior to the objection and exception to the testimony, which is the subject of the first, second, third, fifth and. sixth exceptions. There was also testimony to the same effect from another witness, Robert Buchanan, tending to show, that in 1885, P. H. Aber-nethy had pointed out the lines and corners of the land in controversy, a.nd there was no objection or exception to the admission of this evidence.”
The declarations of Abernethy in 1885, while he was the owner of an interest in the land, would be competent against him and those claiming under him. Smith v. Moore, 142 N. C., 277, 55 S. E., 275; Roe v. Journegan, 175 N. C., 261, 95 S. E., 495; Singleton v. Roebuck, 178 N. C., 201, 100 S. E., 313; Carr v. Bizzell, 192 N. C., 212, 134 S. E., 462. Moreover, if the declarations of Abernethy made subsequent to 1909 were incompetent, it clearly appears from the portion of the record quoted above, that testimony of like nature, effect, and' character had been offered in evidence without objection. It has been repeatedly held by this Court that if testimony of the same nature as that objected to, is given by a witness in other portions of his testimony, without objection, that the exception thereto cannot be sustained. Marshall v. Tel. Co., 181 N. C., 410, 107 S. E., 498; Shelton v. R. R., 193 N. C., 670, 139 S. E., 232; Tilghman v. Hancock, 196 N. C., 780, 147 S. E., 300.
The record further shows the following: “For the purpose of showing that the white walnut, contended by the plaintiffs to be their corner, is on the south side of the old Turnpike Road, was there in 1881, the defendants offered a deed from Charles Burleson and wife to Elizabeth Young, dated 19 December, 1881. Plaintiffs objected to the introduction of this deed. Objection overruled; plaintiffs excepted.” Charles *282 Burleson was the grantor in the Bowman deed under which plaintiffs claim and was dead at the time of the trial. It does not appear from the record what the wording of the declaration in the deed was. Apparently it was the declaration of an adjoining owner. In Sullivan v. Blount, 165 N. C., 7, 80 S. E., 892, this Court held that: “The fact that the declarant owns an adjoining tract of land does not render the declarations incompetent, . . . unless made in his own interest.” The record does not disclose that Burleson was claiming any interest in the land in controversy.
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151 S.E. 861, 198 N.C. 278, 1930 N.C. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-buchanan-nc-1930.