Yopp v. . Aman

193 S.E. 822, 212 N.C. 479, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 24, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 S.E. 822 (Yopp v. . Aman) 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
Yopp v. . Aman, 193 S.E. 822, 212 N.C. 479, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 344 (N.C. 1937).

Opinion

BabNHIll, J.

The controversy in this cause grows out of a lappage in the descriptions contained in two old deeds — one dated 10 August, 1874, which is the source of title of the Dixon tract owned by the defendant, and the other dated 1 February, 1872 — -which is the source of title of the French tract conveyed by the defendant to the plaintiff.

The one question presented to us for determination in plaintiff’s brief is as follows: “Is there any evidence of mutual mistake herein?” All of plaintiff’s exceptions are directed to this question. If there was no mutual mistake then the defendant’s deed is binding upon him and he admits in his pleadings, that the description contained in his deed to the plaintiff embraces the land in controversy — that is, the land between the true dividing line as contended by the plaintiff and the true dividing line as contended by the defendant.

If an incorrect description was incorporated in the deed from the defendant to the plaintiff by mutual mistake of the parties the defendant is entitled to so show and to have the deed reformed so as to conform to the true intent of the parties. Speaking to the subject in Cox v. McGowan, 116 N. C., 131, Avery, J., says: “All rules adopted for the construction of deeds tend towards one objective point. They embody *482 wbat the law, founded on reason and experience, declares to be the best means of arriving at the intention of the parties. 3 Washburn, 428 and 429. The intention, of course, relates to the time when the deed is delivered, hence course and distance, or even what is considered in law a more certain or controlling call, must yield to evidence, if believed, that the parties at the time of the execution of a deed actually ran and located a different line from that called for, such evidence being admissible to show the description of the line to he a mistake. Buckner v. Anderson, 111 N. C., 572; Cherry v. Slade, 7 N. C., 82; Baxter v. Wilson, 95 N. C., 137; Stanly v. Green, 12 Cal., 148; 3 Washburn, 435.

“In support of the position stated, we find that Tiedeman, in his exhaustive work on Real Property, sec. 828, lays down the rule as follows: 'Contemporánea expositio esi optima et foriissima in lege. In construing deeds, courts endeavor to place themselves in the position of the parties at the time of the conveyance in order to ascertain what is intended to be conveyed. For in describing the property parties are presumed to refer to its condition at that time, and the meaning of their terms of expression can only be properly understood by a knowledge of their position and that of the property conveyed.’ The familiar rule that the course of a stream called for as a boundary is' to be determined by showing the location at the time of the conveyance is referred to as one illustration of the practical operation of the rule.” Realty Co. v. Boren, 211 N. C., 446.

In Clarke v. Aldridge, 162 N. C., 326, it is said: “It has been long held for law, in this State, that when parties, with the view of making a deed, go upon the land and make a physical survey of the same, giving it a boundary which is actually run and marked, and the deed is thereupon made, intending to convey the land which they have surveyed, such land will pass, certainly as between the parties or voluntary claimants who hold in privity, though a different and erroneous description may appear on the face of the deed.” Reed v. Schenck, 13 N. C., 415; Cherry v. Slade, supra.

In Shaffer v. Gaynor, 117 N. C., 15, it was held: “A deed is a contract and the leading object of the courts in its enforcement, where the controversy involves a question of boundary, is to ascertain the precise lines and corners as to which the minds of grantor and grantee concurred. Hence, though parol proof is not, as a rule, admissible to contradict a plain, written description, it is always competent to show by a witness that the parties by a contemporaneous, but not by a subsequent survey, agreed upon a location of lines and corners different from that ascertained by running course and distance.” Clarke v. Aldridge, supra; Realty Co. v. Boren, supra; Dudley v. Jeffress, 178 N. C., 111.

*483 Where the grantor and grantee actually go upon the land and agree upon well-marked corners and a definite, marked line as the boundary of a tract to be conveyed the same rule applies.

Was there then sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury to support the allegation of the defendant that contemporaneously with, and as a part of the contract of bargain and sale, the plaintiff and the defendant went upon the premises and agreed upon the boundary line of the tract being conveyed to the plaintiff, so as to override the description contained in the deed actually executed and to show that it was the true intent of the parties that the deed should be so drawn as to set out and describe the line agreed upon as the boundary line between the French tract and the Dixon tract? If so, the judgment below must be affirmed. The evidence offered by the defendant and accepted by the jury in arriving at its verdict tends to show that .the defendant and his predecessors in title owned the Dixon tract many years prior to the time the defendant acquired the French tract; that at point 5 there is a stake with pointers, at point 1 there is a stake and the corner of a wire fence, at 4 there is a corner of a fence and the fence continues along the line from 4 to 6 (which is the line contended for by the defendant). In the wooded portion of the land through which the line 4 to 6 goes there were marked trees; that the defendant and his predecessors in title have been in the actual possession of the Dixon tract up to the line from 4 to 5 for fifty years or more, and there has been a fence on the line for that period; that this line from 4 to 5 was actually surveyed about forty-five years ago; that the plaintiff and defendant went upon the premises and the defendant pointed out to the plaintiff two pine stumps in the Dixon line and showed him the fence that constituted the line now contended for by the defendant, and that they then and there made a bargain for the purchase and sale of the said premises with the said line as the boundary line between the Dixon and the French tract; that about 25 steps of the fence in the woods had been changed by the defendant from off the line for convenience; that after the purchase by the plaintiff he established this fence on the line as pointed out by the defendant; that the plaintiff went in possession of the tract conveyed to him down to the line so pointed out, but made no effort to take possession of, and made no claim to, either the wooded or the cleared portion of the land in controversy until 1924 (by his testimony, 1933 by defendant’s testimony) at which time the plaintiff undertook to borrow money from a Federal agency and discovered from a survey made in furtherance of the loan that the courses of his deed extended over into the tract of land owned by the defendant and to the line now contended for by the plaintiff; that thereafter, without protest on the part of the plaintiff, the defendant still continued in actual possession of the lands *484

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.E. 822, 212 N.C. 479, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yopp-v-aman-nc-1937.