Court Opinion

ID: 3669520
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:18:28.128906+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:59:59.312037
License: Public Domain

Civil action for an accounting and to recover salary alleged to be due plaintiff by the defendant, a nonresident corporation, for services rendered as clerk in the defendant's hotel at Balsam, N.C. This action was instituted 21 February, 1921, by attaching certain hotel furniture and thereafter obtaining service by publication. As the case involved a long accounting, it was referred under the statute. Exceptions were duly filed to the report of the referee, some of which were sustained, and as thus modified, the report was adopted and approved by the judge of the Superior Court, and judgment entered in favor of plaintiff for the *Page 45 
sum of $2,990.84, with interest. The property attached was ordered to be sold for the satisfaction of plaintiff's judgment. Defendant appeals, assigning errors.
The defendant seeks to present the question as to whether the personal property herein attached is subject to the prior lien of a deed of trust, executed by the defendant 3 April, 1909, to Mrs. W.H. Wiggs to secure an indebtedness of approximately $53,000.
Without deciding whether the defendant, on the present record, is in position to raise this question, we are satisfied from a careful examination of the evidence that the judgment is fully supported by the facts found, and it is clear that the furniture attached herein is not included in the deed of trust executed to Mrs. Wiggs in 1909.
The description of the property in the deed of trust is simply "All those certain tracts or parcels of land situate, lying, and being in Scott's Creek Township in the county of Jackson," with specific calls by metes and bounds, etc., and no enlargement of this description is to be found either in the habendum or in the warranty clause, which would extend it to the personal property in question under the doctrine announced inTriplett v. Williams, 149 N.C. 394, wherein it was held that unless otherwise controlled by some arbitrary rule of law, a deed is to be construed from its four corners and the intent of the grantor, as thus interpreted, allowed to prevail. Bagwell v. Hines, 187 N.C. 690. True, in each of the bonds secured by said deed of trust, there is a recital to the effect that "this bond is one of a series, . . . all equally secured by a deed of trust or mortgage of all the assets of said company." But this, we apprehend, would not enlarge the terms of the deed of trust without proof of a broader intent on the part of the grantor, or some omission by mistake. S. v. Bank, 193 N.C. 524; Bank v. Kaufmann, 93 N.Y. 273.
Neither the trustee in the deed of trust nor Mrs. Wiggs, or her representative, is a party to this proceeding, and the Balsam Hotel Company, admittedly indebted to both the plaintiff and Mrs. Wiggs, is seeking by this appeal to raise a question apparently of interest alone to the creditors.
It is settled by all the decisions on the subject, with none to the contrary, that the findings of fact, made by a referee and approved by the trial judge, are not subject to review on appeal, if they are supported by any competent evidence. Dorsey v. Mining Co., 177 N.C. 60. Likewise, where the judge, upon hearing and considering exceptions to a referee's report, makes different or additional findings of fact, they *Page 46 
afford no ground for exception on appeal, unless there is no sufficient evidence to support them, or error has been committed in receiving or rejecting testimony upon which they are based, or some other question of law is raised with respect to said findings. S. v. Jackson, 183 N.C. 695, and cases there cited.
We have found no error on the record; hence the judgment will be upheld.
Affirmed.