Westfelt v. Adams.

42 S.E. 823, 131 N.C. 379, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 823 (Westfelt v. Adams.) 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
Westfelt v. Adams., 42 S.E. 823, 131 N.C. 379, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 299 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

*380 Montgomery, J.

Four questions of importance are involved in the case on appeal: First, the propriety of an action to recover possession of land where the title is an equitable one, the equity not being stated in the complaint; second, the legal effect of a conveyance for land, not being under seal when introduced as a link in the chain of title; third, the rule concerning hearsay evidence as applicable to* boundary; and, fourth, the rule in reference to general reputation as to boundary.

It seems to be settled by the decisions of our Court that a plaintiff may recover in ejectment upon an equitable title. Taylor v Eatman, 92 N. C., 601; Condry v. Cheshire, 88 N. C., 375; Geer v. Geer, 109 N. C., 679. In cases, however, where it is necessary to establish equitable ownership by extrinsic testimony, then the facts and circumstances should be particularly set dut in the complaint. Under the former system, in cases where it became necessary to resort to the court of equity to recover possession of land, all the facts necessary to establish the equity and to' warrant equitable interference were required to be set out in the bill. And under the present practice, in conformity to the old practice, they must be particularly set forth in the complaint. Bur where the naked legal title is outstanding in another, or where upon the face of the record evidence, introduced on the trial, a Court of competent jurisdiction would, in an ex parte proceeding and as a matter of course/order the correction of a mere formal defect in a deed for instance,it is not necessary to set forth the particular facts constituting the equity in the pleadings. Geer v. Geer, supra. And that view is not inconsistent with Patterson v. Galliher, 122 N. C., 511, and the cases there cited. Of course the same rule would apply in cases where the defendant was defending his possession.

In respect to the second question, the legal effect of deeds not under seal, of course the general rule is. that they *381 convey nothing and. are void. Land can only be conveyed by deed, and a deed is an instrument of writing, signed, sealed and delivered. But there is an exception to- the rule, or at least one instance in which tire lack of a seal may be dispensed with, under a decision of this Court, a decision which meets our hearty approval. Geer v. Geer, supra. There, the deed was without Seal. On the trial the plaintiff introduced evidence in the nature of a record of the Superior Court concerning a sale of land for partition. The Clerk of the Court, who was appointed to sell the land and convey the same to the purchaser, omitted to put a seal at the end of his name, and the Court held that “Where upon the face of the record evidence, like that before us, the Court would in a direct proceeding as a matter of course order the correction of a mere formal defect in the execution of its decree, it is unnecessary (though perhaps better practice) to set forth the facts in the proceeding.”

In the case before us there appeared no seal to the deed which formed a main link in the chain of the plaintiff’s title, and in his complaint there were no equities set out. The plaintiff, however, introduced in evidence the full record of the bankruptcy proceedings on the petition of E. H. Cunningham, filed on the 26th day of May, 1868. That record showed the appointment by the proper authority of E. S. H. Reynolds, of Buncombe County, as assignee of the bankrupt, and the deed in question, in which was conveyed the land in dispute, was executed by Reynolds, the assignee, to George Westfelt, the plaintiff. We are of the opinion that the same rule ought to be applied here that was applied in Geer v. Geer, supra. Certainly the United States District Court,j through which the administration of the bankrupt law of 1861 was conducted, would, upon the inspection of the records introduced in this case as evidence, upon motion, order a commissioner appointed by the Court to execute a *382 deed with a seal — the defect in the original being merely technical and formal.

Under the circumstances of the case, we think there was' no error in the ruling of his Honor that the deed was sufficient to pass title. Probate of the deed was had in Buncombe County, and the land was situated at that time in the county of Macon, and afterwards embraced in the territory of the new county of Swain (formed in 1871, Public Laws 1870-’71, Chap. 94). The officer who took the, probate in Buncombe County did not attach his seal to the certificate, and when the registry of Swain County was introduced by the plaintiff, the defendant objected because the certificate of the probate officer of Buncombe County was not made under that officer’s seal. The probate was dated May 1, 1869, and was registered in Swain County on September 16, 1881. At neither date did the laws require the certificate to, be accompanied by the seal of the probate officer. Acts 1868-’69, Chapter 64; Batt. Rev., Chap. 35, Sec. 5; Holmes v. Marshall, 72 N. C., 37.

The third and fourth questions for consideration can be discussed together:

The beginning corner of the tract of land claimed by the plaintiff was the chief matter in dispute. In Dobson v. Finley, 53 N. C., 495, in the discussion of the admissibility of evidence by general reputation and of hearsay, Chief Justice Pearson, for the Court, said: “It is settled law that both kinds of evidence are competent evidence of private boundary in this State. In the latter, to-wit, hearsay evidence, it is necessary as a preliminary to its admissibility to prove that the person whose statement it is proposed to offer in evidence is dead; not on the ground that the fact of his being dead gives any additional force to the credibility of his statement, but on the ground that if he be alive he should be produced as a witness; whereas, it is manifest that in respect to evi *383 dence by reputation, this preliminary evidence can not arise. Shaffer v. Gaynor, 117 N. C., 15.

In the case before ns, his Honor admitted the testimony of two witnesses (Cable and Francks) as to the beginning comer of the plaintiff’s land, who got their information from persons deceased, the witness not having been at the time of receiving his information at or near the boundary beginning, but twenty-five or thirty miles away; that is, that the corner or the beginning was not pointed out to the witness by the deceased person. Those particular witnesses had never after-wards actually identified the boundary as fitting the description given by the deceased declarant. Other witnesses, however, testified that they found a tree at the alleged beginning comer answering the description given by the deceased to the first witnesses. If the beginning corner had not been afterwards identified, then the testimony of Cable and Francks would have been inadmissible; because it was afterwards found, we think it was competent.

In Scoggin v. Dalrymple, 52 N.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 823, 131 N.C. 379, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westfelt-v-adams-nc-1902.