Court Opinion

ID: 3642542
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 05:59:43.100089+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:40:05.285875
License: Public Domain

This is an action to recover possession of a lot or parcel of land containing one-fourth of an acre, more or less, and described in the complaint by metes and bounds. *Page 395 
At the trial the plaintiffs and the defendant filed with the court a statement of facts agreed. The action was heard upon this statement.
On the facts agreed the court was of opinion that the plaintiffs are the owners and are entitled to the immediate possession of the land described in the complaint, and so adjudged. The defendant appealed to the Supreme Court, assigning error in the judgment.
The plaintiffs are the widow and heirs at law of W. D. Adams, deceased.
On 20 March, 1918, W. D. Adams and his wife executed and delivered to the defendant J. M. Myers a deed by which they conveyed to the defendant a tract of land described in said deed by metes and bounds, containing 46 acres, "less 1/4 acre that Clara Holleman holds her life time rite in." This deed was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Yadkin County.
On 20 August, 1914, W. D. Adams and his wife executed and delivered to Clara Holleman a deed by which they conveyed to her a lot or parcel of land, containing one-fourth of an acre, and described in said deed by metes and bounds. This lot or parcel of land is included within the description of the 46-acre tract contained in the deed from W. D. Adams and wife to the defendant. Clara Holleman is dead. The deed to her was not recorded until after the execution of the deed from W. D. Adams and wife to the defendant.
The court was of opinion that the lot or parcel of land described in the deed from W. D. Adams and wife to Clara Holleman was not conveyed to the defendant by the deed to him executed by W. D. Adams and wife, but that the title to said lot or parcel of land remained in the grantor, W. D. Adams, subject to the life estate of Clara Holleman, and that at her death the said lot or parcel of land descended to the plaintiffs as his heirs at law, subject to the dower right of the plaintiff, his widow.
The judgment in accordance with this opinion is affirmed. See Fisher v.Mining Co., 97 N.C. 95. In the opinion in that case it is said: "Where a grantor makes a valid exception in a deed, the thing excepted remains the property of the grantor or his heirs."
Affirmed. *Page 396