Court Opinion

ID: 6695762
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:50:05.736007+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:14.009251
License: Public Domain

IIoke, J.,
after stating the case: The writ of assistance, in its ordinary acceptation, is one issuing from a court having general equitable jurisdiction for the enforcement of decrees or orders conferring a, right to the present possession or enjoyment of property. It usually issues on motion after notice duly served, when the right thereto is clear, and, as a rule, only against parties or persons bound by the terms of the decree. *329Wagon Co. v. Byrd, 119 N. C., 464; Exum v. Baker, 115 N. C., 244; Knight v. Houghtalling, 94 N. C., 408; 2 Beach Modern Eq. Practice, sec. 897; Schenck v. Conover, 13 N. J. Eq., and see editorial note to case of Clay v. Hammond, 199 Ill., 370, appearing in 93 Amer. State Reports at p. 154. It seems that the facts of the present case would properly call for or permit a resort to this process, but we are not required to determine this question, for the reason that, on notice duly served and returnable to term, pleadings have been regularly filed and the issues determined by the jury, and the parties having thus elected to treat the proceedings as an original action to recover land, we have concluded it is best to adopt their view and consider and deal with the case in that aspect.
Coming, then, to the principal question, the validity of the present trial before the jury, the plaintiffs put in evidence the original proceedings, including the decree and the deeds under which defendant claimed, particularly that to II. W. Clarke, describing the divisional line as running from the recognized point at D, S. 11 E. 33 poles to a stake; thence S. 65 E. 15 poles to a stake,' etc., to the black gum corner, and offered evidence further of the value of the lands wrongfully occupied by the defendant if the line from D, S. 11 E. were run as called for on the face of the deed. Defendant then offered to prove that, just prior to the execution of the deeds in question, and with the view of making the same, the grantor, D. S. Clarke, desiring to make division of said land among his children, went on the premises with a surveyor and the grantees, J. B. and Harvey Clarke, and ran and marked the boundaries, including this divisional line in controversy, running said line from .“the corner fixed at D, thence along a fence, S. 80 E. 33 poles to a •stake, thence S. 65 E. 15 poles to a stake along the fence, thence N. 72 E. 60 poles to G, thence S. 87 E. 52 poles to the black gum at H,” said D. S. Clarke indicating the line and marking some of the trees and having others marked on the line as surveyed; that “the deed in question was made pursuant to said survey and intending to convey the land embraced in the same.” This, with other evidence of similar purport, was, on objection, excluded by the court, and we are' of opinion that the ruling must be held for reversible error.
*330It bas been long held for law, in tbis 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. This is regarded as an exception to the rule, otherwise universally prevailing, that in the case of written deeds the land must pass according to the written description as it appears in the instrument (Reed v. Schenck, 13 N. C., 415) ; but it is an exception so long recognized with us that it must be accepted as an established principle in our law of boundary. In Cherry v. Slade, 7 N. C., 82, the position referred to is thus stated: “Whenever it can be proved that there was a line actually run by the surveyor, was marked and a corner made, the party claiming under the patent or deed shall hold accordingly, notwithstanding a mistaken description of the land in the patent or deed”; and in Reed v. Schenck, supra, it was again referred to as follows: “Parol evidence to control description of land coiitained in a deed is in ho case admissible, unless where monuments of boundary were erected at the execution of the deed. If the description in the deed varies from these monuments, the former may be controlled by the latter.” Soon after these decisions, and in some of the later cases, expressions will be found giving intimation that the principle should only be allowed to prevail when there are some other written data in the principal deed or elsewhere, by reference to which the physical survey could be attached; but a careful examination of the authorities controlling in the matter will disclose that this suggested limitation on the exception may not be sustained. Thus, in Cherry v. Slade, Chief Justice Taylor, delivering the principal opinion, refers with approval to the case of Person v. Roundtree, 2 N. C., 378, as follows: “In Person v. Roundtree, the latter entered a tract of land, lying in Granville County, upon Shocco Creek, which was run out, ‘beginning at a tree on the bank of Shocco Creek, running south a certain number of poles to a *331corner, thence north a certain number of poles to a corner on the creek, thence up the creek to the beginning.’ By a mistake, either in the surveyor or secretary who filled up the grant, the courses were reversed, placing the land on the opposite side of the creek to that on which it was really surveyed, so that the grant did not cover any of the land surveyed. Roundtree settled on the land surveyed, which was afterwards entered by Person, who obtained a deed from Lord Granville, and brought an ejectment against Roundtree, who proved the lines of .the survey and a possession under his grant. The Court decided that Roundtree was entitled to the land intended to be granted, and which was surveyed, and that he should not be prejudiced by the mistake of the surveyor or secretary.” The question received very full consideration in several cases appearing in 119, 117, and 116 volumes of our reports,, to wit: in Higdon v. Rice and Deaver v. Jones, 119 N. C., pp. 623 and 598; Shaffer v. Gaynor, 117 N. C., 15, and Cox v. McGowan, 116 N. C., 131, in which Associate Justice Avery, for the Court’, in opinions of great force and learning, gives adherence to the principle as announced in Cherry v. Slade and Person v. Roundtree; and in Higdon v. Rice, the learned judge said: “It seems to have been conceded that, subject to some not very clearly defined restrictions, it is a rule of law that deeds and patents shall be so run as to include the land actually shown to have been surveyed with -a view to its execution.” In Beaver v. Jones the Court held: “That when a grant is located by co-temporaneously marked lines, these lines govern and control its boundary and fix the location so as to supersede other descriptions.”
In Shaffer v. Gaynor 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.”
*332And again, in Cox v. McGowan: “All rules adopted for tbe construction of deeds embody wliat tbe law, founded on reason and experience, declares to be tbe best means of arriving at tbe intention of tbe parties at tbe time of tbe delivery of tbe deed; bence, course and distance, or even wbat is considered, in law, a more certain or controlling call, must yield to evidence, if believed, that tbe parties at tbe time of tbe execution of tbe deed actually ran and located a different line from tb'at called for, sueb evidence being admitted to sbow tbe description of tbe line to be a mistake.” And numerous and well considered cases, before and since these decisions, are in approval of tbe principle., notably Lance v. Rumbough, 150 N. C., pp. 19-24; Fincannon v. Sudderth, 140 N. C., 246; Elliott v. Jefferson, 133 N. C., 207; Barker, v. R. R., 125 N. C., 596; Bonaparte v. Carter, 106 N. C., 534; Baxter v. Wilson, 95 N. C., 137. In Lance v. Rumbough, Associate Justice Walker, speaking to tbe question, said: “The survey made under such circumstances is considered -a practical location of tbe land by tbe parties.”
It is insisted for plaintiffs, that although tbe principle is fully recognized in this jurisdiction, it should not be allowed to prevail in tbe present instance, and this by reason of tbe language of tbe decree in tbe former proceedings, “That defendant is tbe owner of tbe land described in tbe deeds,” and that defendant is thereby estopped from claiming the lands in controversy. But this position cannot, in our view, be sustained: First, for tbe reason that tbe parties only joined issue as to tbe delivery of tbe deeds, and tbe question of their boundary or correct location was in no way involved, and certainly was not considered or determined. It is tbe accepted rule, in such cases, “When a court, having jurisdiction of tbe cause and tbe parties, renders judgment therein, it estops tbe parties and their privies as to all issuable matters contained in tbe pleadings, and 'though not issuable in a technical sense, it concludes, among other things, as to all matters within tbe scope of tbe pleadings which are material and relevant and were in fact investigated and determined at tbe bearing.” A correct application of this principle, announced in Capehart v. Tyler, 125 N. C., 64, and approved in many other decisions of this Court (Weston v. *333Lumber Co., ante, 165; Coltrane v. Laughlin, 157 N. C., 282, and Gillam v. Edmonson,. 154 N. C., 127), is against the plaintiff's position. As heretofore stated, the boundary of these deeds and their correct location were not necessarily involved in the partition proceedings, nor were they in any wise put in issue or investigated, and no estoppel arises, therefore, as to their proper location. Secondly, and apart from this, the law of boundary, which we have discussed and held applicable to the facts presentéd in the record, whether it be referred for its basic principle to the doctrine of mistake, as suggested by Associate Justice Avery in Higdon v. Rice, or to that of estoppel, as intimated by Mr. Justice Douglas in Barker v. R. R., as between the parties or against privies, who claim as volunteers, is a principle governing the correct location of deeds which prevails in actions at law. In such case it has not been held that any change in the phraseology of the deeds is required, and, therefore, in a case where the only issue involved was as to the delivery of the deeds, and there was no question of boundary either raised, considered, or determined, a decree awarding to a party litigant the lands contained in the deeds should, by correct interpretation, be construed to mean “as contained” in the deeds correctly located according to law,
For the error in excluding the evidence- there must be a new trial of the cause, and it is so ordered.
New trial.