Yadkin Lumber Co. v. Bernhardt

78 S.E. 485, 162 N.C. 460, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 78 S.E. 485 (Yadkin Lumber Co. v. Bernhardt) 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
Yadkin Lumber Co. v. Bernhardt, 78 S.E. 485, 162 N.C. 460, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 373 (N.C. 1913).

Opinions

Ejectment. Plaintiff introduced two grants covering the land in controversy, bearing date 29 December, 1875, and as to such land, connected itself by mesne conveyances with the grantees, and offered evidence further tending to show trespasses on the same by defendant.

"Plaintiff further adduced evidence tending to show that at the time the 100-acre grant, No. 566, was taken out by William Cottrell, James Cottrell had a 25-acre grant immediately east of the northern line of said grant; also a 50-acre grant immediately east of Grant No. 3390; also that William Cottrell had land south of No. 3390, and that the same William Cottrell had a 50-acre grant lying to the south of Grant No. 566. Evidence was also adduced tending to prove that an extension *Page 380 of the north line of Grant No. 566 from figure 2 by way of 5 east as called for in that grant would strike the James Cottrell 25-acre grant and not the William Cottrell 50-acre grant."

Defendant offered in evidence Entry No. 1333, as follows: "William Cottrell, Sr., enters and locates 100 acres of land on the Long Ridge Branch, waters of Buffalo Creek, beginning at or near his corner of his 150-acre tract, including all the land between the 150-and 50-acre tracts. November 6, 1854." And the warrant of survey on said entry formally stated and certified as follows: "You are hereby directed and required, so soon as may be, to lay off and survey for William Cottrell 100 acres of land on the Long Ridge Branch, waters of Buffalo Creek, beginning at or near his corner of his 150- and 50-acre tracts, entered 6 November, 1854." And the certificate of survey on said warrant, with plat attached to State's Grant No. 566, containing the description, "Begins at a white pine and two chestnut trees by the Falls of Pounding Mill Branch, and runs north 10 poles to a white pine, corner of a 150-acre tract, the same course with the line of said tract 86 poles to two white oaks on the east side of a hill, then east 167 poles to a stake in the line of a 50-acre tract, thence south with that line 96 poles to a stake in a line running east from the beginning, then with that line west to the beginning."

And Grant No. 566, containing the following calls: "One hundred acres laying and being in the county of Caldwell, on the waters of Buffalo. Begins at a white pine and two chestnut trees by the Falls of Pounding Mill Branch, and runs north 10 poles to a white pine, corner of 150-acre tract, the same course with the line said tract 86 poles to two white oaks on the east side of a hill (then east 167 poles to a stake in the line of a 50-acre tract), thence south with line 96 poles to a stake in a line running east from the beginning, then with that line west to the beginning. Entered 6 November, 1854."

Plaintiff then introduced a grant to William Cottrell for 50 acres, No. 3390, lying entirely from 566.

In order to a better understanding of the questions in controversy and the admissions of the parties, the plat is inserted on opposite page.

Admissions were then made as follows: "That the beginning corner of the grant, No. 566, is marked on the court map at the point 1 with the hand pointing towards it, and that such is the beginning corner of said grant. It is further admitted that the second corner in said grant is at the point marked W. P. on map, 10 poles north of 1, and that such point is a corner of a 150-acre tract. It is further admitted that the third corner of Grant No. 566 is at the point marked 2 W. O., with the hand pointing towards the figure 2, as shown on the court map, and *Page 381 [EDITORS' NOTE: THE PLAT IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.], SEE 162 N.C. 381.] *Page 382 that such point is 86 poles north of the white pine and 96 poles north of the beginning corner — the white pine and two chestnuts by the Falls of `Pounding Mill Branch' — and that the two white oaks at the figure 2 are on the east side of a hill."

And further: "That the William Cottrell, senior, who obtained a grant for lands represented on the map as Grant No. 566, was the same person as the William Cottrell who obtained a grant of lands shown on the map as Grant No. 3390, for 50 acres. Plaintiff further admits that Grant No. 3390 is correctly located as shown on the map. Plaintiff further admits that the defendant holds proper mesne conveyances from William Cottrell that constitute a good paper title, nothing else appearing, to such lands as are properly covered by Grant No. 566."

It will thus appear that locus in quo as represented on the above plat is included within the letter X and figures 3, 4, 6, and if Grant 566 under which defendant claims is "to be correctly located in exact accord with course and distance," it would be represented on the map by the figures 1, 2, 5, 6, and would not include this land, but if it may be and is properly extended to the William Cottrell 50-acre grant, No. 3390, making the northern line 308, instead of 167 poles, it would then include the land in controversy and be represented on the plat by the figures 1, 2, 3, 4. On the facts in evidence, the court held and so charged the jury, that in locating the defendant's Grant No. 566, the course and distance would control, and the defendant's title, more especially in reference to running the call east 167 poles under the same, would stop where the distance gave out and go where the course carried it, regardless of the additional call, "to the line of a 50-acre tract," the court holding that such addition to the call is too indefinite to affect the location, etc. There was verdict for plaintiff establishing the lines at 1, 2, 5, and 6. Judgment on the verdict, and defendant appealed. In Tatem v. Paine, 11 N.C. 64, it was held: "What are the termini or boundary of grant or deed is matter of law; where these termini are is matter of fact. The court must determine the first, and to the jury it belongs to ascertain the second. Where there is a call for natural objects, and course and distance are also given, the former are the termini, and the latter merely points or guides to it; and, therefore, when the natural object called for is unique, or has properties peculiar to itself, course and distance *Page 383 are disregarded; but where there are several natural objects equally answering the description, course and distance may be examined to ascertain which is the true object; for in such case they do not control a natural boundary, but only serve to explain a latent (465) ambiguity."

The principles embodied in this statement have been frequently approved in our decisions, as in Lumber Co. v. Hutton, 159 N.C. 445; Sherrod v.Battle. 154 N.C. 346; Mitchell v. Welborn, 149 N.C. 347; Whitaker v. Cover,140 N.C. 280; Fincannon v. Sudderth, 140 N.C. 246; Bonaparte v. Carter,106 N.C. 534; Murray v. Spence, 88 N.C. 357; Corn v. McCrary, 48 N.C. 496;Campbell v. Branch, 49 N.C. 313.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.E. 485, 162 N.C. 460, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yadkin-lumber-co-v-bernhardt-nc-1913.