Weeks v. Wilkins.

47 S.E. 24, 134 N.C. 516, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 29, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 24 (Weeks v. Wilkins.) 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
Weeks v. Wilkins., 47 S.E. 24, 134 N.C. 516, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 125 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

*517 OoNNOR, J.

This action is prosecuted, by the plaintiff against the defendants for the recovery of the land described in the complaint. The defendants in their answer denied the plaintiffs title. The plaintiff introduced the original entry book of Sampson County, containing the following entries: “May 12, 1791. No. 256. Arch Carraway enters 200 acres of land on Rye Branch, joining Elizabeth Bass line.” Grant from the State to Arch Carraway, Grant Book “B,” p. 27, reading as follows: “No. 417. Arch Carraway, 200 acres. This grant to Arch Carraway for 200 acres of land are in same form as the aforesaid registered grant in this book, pages 1 and 2, only the persons named and the various courses of the same, to-wit:” (Then follows a description of the land by metes and bounds). “At New Bern, the 1st day of January, in the seventeenth year of our independence, and in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three. (Then follows the signature of the Governor and Secretary of State. This grant is registered March 10, 1798).” Defendants objected upon the ground that the registration was imperfect, that the registrar should have copied the entire grant instead of a part of it, and referring to the registry of other grants for the evidence. Plaintiff then offered in evidence the grant referred to in the Carraway grant which is the first grant in said book, and registered in full; the others are registered like the Carraway grant by reference to said first grant. Said first grant was admitted to be correct in form and correctly registered. The objection was overruled and the defendants excepted. We think the objection was properly overruled and that the registration was sufficient.

The plaintiffs then introduced deeds showing a chain of title from Carraway to Richard Warren and the will of Richard Warren devising the land to Hester Weeks and her children.

*518 It was in evidence that Hester Weeks and her obi] dren, resided on the land in controversy until tbe execution of the deed to Brittain A. Edwards, June 1, 1863. The plaintiff, by way of estoppel, and for the purpose of attacking the same, offered in evidence a deed from Hester Weeks and her children to Brittain A. Edwards, dated June 1, 1863. This deed is signed by Hester Weeks and all of her children except Betsy Ann Raynor. At the time of executing said deed, Susan Catherine Williford, Phosbe Williford and Mary J. Jones were married women, they were not privily examined touching their execution of the deed. Minta Tew was a widow and more than twenty-one years of age. The jury found upon the issues submitted to them that Martha Weeks and Hester C. Weeks were also minors at the time of executing said deed. It was admitted that the plaintiff Sampson Weeks was a minor at the time he signed said deed. This deed was probated and registered upon the oath and examination of the subscribing witnesses thereto. There was evidence tending to show that the defendants claimed portions of said land under Brittain A. Edwards. The complaint does not set out what portions of said land were claimed by the several defendants nor does their answer throw any light upon this question. Much confusion grows out of the indefinite allegations in the pleadings. The complaint should have set out in full the tracts of land of which the several defendants were in possession.' We are not sure that in the confused condition in which this record is sent to us, we have been able to fully understand and pass upon the large number of exceptions. As the case must be sent back for a new trial, we think, upon the pleadings being properly amended, many of the exceptions now in the record will not again be presented. Eor the purpose of deciding such questions as are fairly presented, we understand the condition of the title to be as follows: *519 Tbe land in controversy belonged to Hester Weeks for life, with remainder to ber eight children, by virtue of the will of Eichard Warren as construed by the Oourt in partition proceedings. On June 1, 1863, Hester Weeks and seven of her eight children executed a deed for said land to Brittain A. Edwards, one daughter, Betsy Ann Baynor, not joining therein. At the time of the execution of this deed three of her daughters were married women, and as to them, no privy examination being taken, the deed is void. Two of the daughters were minors; one daughter, Minta Tew, a widow, more than twenty-one years of age. Her interest therefore passed under the deed and need not be considered. The plaintiff Sampson Weeks was a minor. The three undivided shares of the married women are eliminated, the deed being, as to them, void.

It appears from the record that Hester 0. Weeks has since the date of the deed intermarried with Asher Me-Cullen; her age at the time of her marriage does not appear. Martha Weeks is still a feme sole. Upon these facts Brit-tain A. Edwards took the life-estate of Hester Weeks and the one-eighth undivided interest of Minta M. Tew. As to the married women the deed was void. In respect to the shares of Sampson Weeks, Martha Weeks and Hester 0. McCullen, the deed was voidable upon their arriving at full age. Hester Weeks, the life-tenant, died July 10, 1896. On the first day of June, 1899, all of the living children, together with the heirs of Susan Williford, deceased, executed a deed conveying the land to plaintiff Sampson Weeks. We find in said deed the following language: “And the parties of the first part do hereby disaffirm and repudiate a certain paper-writing, purporting to be a conveyance of a portion of the land described in said will to one Brittain Edwards, dated June 1, 1863, and registered in Book 35, p. 398, in the registry of Sampson County.”

*520 The plaintiff testified that he was thirty-five years old at the date of the deed made to the defendant J. T. Wilkins, October 1, 1891. He was asked if he knew about that and other trades in regard to the land and whether he ever objected or warned purchasers. These questions were asked with a view to showing that plaintiff’s disaffirmance of the deed of 1863 to Edwards was. not in a reasonable time and with a due regard to the rights of purchasers. The Court intimated that it would hold that mere silence on the part of those in remainder during the continuance of the life-estate did not amount to an affirmance. The plaintiff was asked if he knew of any acts done on the land in the nature of waste. He replied that he thought McPhail cut some saw-mill logs and that he hauled some of these logs by team, and that D'aughtry cleared some of the land, but that clearing up the land improved it. That he never objected to such acts. The defendants contended that the deed from the children of Hester Weeks to the plaintiff was void as to two of them upon the ground of fraud in the. factum. His Honor ruled that, upon all of the testimony, there was no evidence, competent to be considered by the jury, to sustain this allegation, and we concur with him therein. The only question which we are unable to decide from this record is presented by his Honor’s instruction, as follows: “As to the share of Sampson M. Weeks, the plaintiff, it being admitted that he was not twenty-one years old at the time he signed said deed, the plaintiff’s right to recover that share depends upon his affirmance of said deed after becoming of full age.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 24, 134 N.C. 516, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weeks-v-wilkins-nc-1904.