Allen v. Roanoke Railroad & Lumber Co.

88 S.E. 492 | N.C. | 1916

Lead Opinion

Hoke, J.,

after stating the facts: It has been repeatedly held with US that, under our registration law.s, no notice, however full and formal, as to the existence of a prior deed, will of itself supply the place of registration. Piano Co. v. Spruill, 150 N. C., 168; Tremaine v. Williams, 144 N. C., 116; Quinnerly v. Quinnerly, 114 N. C., 145; Todd v. Outlaw, 79 N. C., 235. This being true, the de.ed to plaintiffs from Mrs. Sills and her children, the original owners, conveying the land and all that was on it of a permanent nature, including the growing timber, having been registered in Franklin County before any conveyance 'of the timber from these owners to defendant or to any one under whom the defendants claim, on the record as it now stands the plaintiffs have the better title, and the position is not affected because the deeds of defendants were first registered in Nash County, where a portion of the land is situate. Our statute, Revisal, 980, establishes priority of right from registration in the “county where the land lieth,” and the registration in Nash had no effect beyond the borders of that county. King v. Portis, 77 N. C., 25.

It is urged for defendant, the lumber company, that the plaintiffs are affected with legal notice of their claim, as we understand the argument, by reason of the registration in Franklin County of the deed from the Nash Timber Company to the lumber company, this deed having been registered in Franklin in 1907, and making some reference to the former deed of Alston and Taylor to said lumber company. There are decisions on the subject which hold that a deed by its recitals, etc., may so recognize and refer to the existence of a prior deed as to create an interest or engraft a trust upon the property conveyed, and so protect such interest or estate by registration of the latter instrument, an instance presented in Hinton v. Leigh, 102 N. C., 28, and one or two other cases in our Reports; but- in the case before us the provision is not at all of that character, but only refers to the Taylor and Alston deed for a better description of the property, and did not purport to have any further effect. Piano Co. v. Spruill, supra. And, if it were otherwise, the reference relied upon is to a deed from Taylor and Alston, and not to any deed or conveyance from Mrs. Sills and her children.

The purpose of our registration acts is to enable creditors and purchasers for value to ascertain the true owner, and the priority of right *342should arise from the prior registering of the deed passing the property from such owner. This, as we have seen, the plaintiffs have, and it must be held, therefore, as stated, that they hold the superior claims.

It is further insisted that his Honor, on some appropriate issue, should have submitted the question involved in the suit by Mrs. Sills and her children to correct the deed made by them to plaintiffs, on the ground of mistake; that by the terms of the agreement the timber was to have been excluded from this instrument. To correct a deed on account of mistake is a recognized subject of equitable jurisdiction, but in order to its exercise for the purpose of reforming the instrument because it does not properly express the agreement of the parties, it is established that the mistake must be mutual or it must be the mistake of one superinduced by the fraud of the other. Sills v. Ford, at present term; Shook v. Love, 170 N. C., 99; Pelletier v. Cooper, 158 N. C., 405; Floars v. Ins. Co., 144 N. C., 232; King v. Hobbs, 139 N. C., 170; Warehouse v. Ozment, 132 N. C., 839.

In Pelletier’s case, supra, it was held: “Equity will correct a mistake in law in the drawing of a written contract when it is made to appear that the contract, as therein expressed, does not carry out the actual agreement which both the parties had made and which it was their mutual intent to express in the writing.” And in Shook v. Love, supra, Associate Justice Brown delivering the opinion, it was said: “The power of a court of equity to reform written instruments so as to speak the real contract of the parties will not be exercised because of the mistake of one of the parties unless brought about by the fraud of the other; but an instrument will be reformed when the mistake is by all parties or when it is the mistake of the draftsman.”

Applying the principle, there is doubt if on proper consideration of the record there is sufficient evidence of mistake on the part of Mrs. Sills and her children to .justify a correction of this instrument, and we find no evidence whatever of any mistake or fraud on the part of the Allens. On the contrary, the facts tend to show that, having been approached by a real estate dealer, representing Mrs. Sills, with a proposition to sell the land, they had the record examined, and, finding the title clear, they bought and took a deed for the land and had the same properly registered, and that the timber on the portion of the land in Franklin County was one of the inducements to the purchase, and the deed and claim correctly expressed the contract which they made and intended to make. True,- there is testimony on part of Mrs. Sills that the purchase price paid for the land, $3,300, was entirely inadequate, and that the timber alone was worth that amount; but there is also evidence tending to show that the land, as conveyed, brought a full price, and, in any event, there is no such discrepancy of value and price a.s to affect the result. Doubtless, Mrs. Sills did not intend to *343convey tbe timber, wbicb sbe bad already sold, and ber son told tbe draftsman of tbe deed, in Greensboro, tbat tbe timber bad been already sold off; but tbe draftsman was tbe agent of Mrs. Sills, and we do not find tbat be was instructed to leave out tbe timber, and accordingly, tbe deed conveying botb land and timber, having been duly executed, was forwarded to tbe Allens at Louisburg, and there is nothing to show tbat they bad any knowledge or notice tbat it was not drawn pursuant to tbe agreement between tbe parties as they understood it, and tbe case presented is only an ordinary one where a second purchaser has obtained tbe title by having bis deed first registered pursuant to law.

Exceptions to rulings of tbe court on questions of evidence are without merit.

One J. A. Turner, a witness for defendants, to whom Mrs. Sills first wrote about selling ber land, and who negotiated tbe sale to plaintiffs, wa.s asked on cross-examination if, in tbe transaction, be represented tbe Allens in any way, as factor or agent, and answered be did not.

It is a recognized position, not infrequently presented, tbat tbe fact of agency cannot be proved by tbe declarations of an alleged agent; but we fail to see why this fact cannot be shown by tbe sworn testimony of tbe witness. Unless objectionable on some other principle, such testimony would seem to be directly relevant, and tbe cases so bold. Sutton v. Lyons, 156 N. C., 3; Machino Co. v. Seago, 128 N. C., 160.

The right of a woman as notary public to take tbe verification of a pleading of tbe probate of a deed is not involved in this appeal. No exception or assignment of error presents tbe question, nor is it discussed in tbe briefs, and for tbe reason, no doubt, tbat tbe verification and probate were taken in Yirginia, and tbe Constitution of tbat State provides tbat “Men and women 18 years of age shall be eligible to tbe office of notary public.” Art. II, see. 32. If this did not appear affirmatively, tbe presumption is tbat tbe officer of another State is acting under legal authority. Nicholson v. Lumber Co., 160 N. C., 33.

We find no error in tbe record, and tbe judgment in plaintiff’s favor is affirmed.

No error.






Concurrence Opinion

Clark:, C. J.,

concurring: Tbe answer in this case was sworn to before “Alleene” C. Jones, notary public, 13 November, 1913. If tbe majority opinion in S. v. Knight, 169 N. C., 333, wbicb set aside chapter 12, Laws 1915 (wbicb provided tbat women could exerci.se tbe duties and powers of a notary public), is to be adhered to, it must be upon tbe ground that women are inherently incompetent, under tbe Constitution, to discharge tbat duty, and hence they must have been so at tbe date tbat this answer was filed. Consequently, tbe answer of tbe defendant not being legally verified, tbe allegations of tbe verified *344complaint would be taken as true, and tbe discussion in tbe opinion of tbe rights of tbe parties is unnecessary.

Furthermore, tbe deed to tbe defendant Roanoke Railroad and Lumber Company, 25 June, 1907, was acknowledged before Miss Rosa T. Bilisoly, notary public. This point was made on the trial below and in this Court, and tbe fact that she was a woman was not denied. Tbe acknowledgment of this deed, certified under her “band and official seal” as notary public, is beaded “North Carolina — Nash County.” It is true that tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court in passing upon her certificate says: “Tbe foregoing certificate of Rosa T. Bilisoly, notary public of Norfolk, Ya., is adjudged to be correct. But tbe certificate made by her recites, as above, tbe acknowledgment as having been taken before her in Nash County.

If there is, as I believe, no inherent defect, either in fact or in law, which disables women from signing a certificate as notary public, then I acquiesce in tbe opinion of tbe Court, if a woman cannot be a notary; but tbe discussion in tbe opinion is unnecessary and obiter.

In Nicholson v. Lumber Co., 160 N. C., 33, we held that where tbe probate of a deed is taken before a woman notary public in another State it will be assumed that she rightfully held tbe position in that State, and Virginia is one of- some forty-odd States and territories in which a woman can exercise tbe duties of that position. Indeed, in Virginia it is held that “any man or woman 18 years of age” can be a notary public. But in this case tbe acknowledgment of tbe deed for land in this State, as already stated, purports to have been taken by Miss Bilisoly' in Na.sb County in this State.

There is no recital by tbe clerk that Alleene 0. Jones, before whom tbe verification of tbe answer was made, was a notary public in another State, and tbe verification purports to have been taken in Nash County.






Lead Opinion

CLARK, C. J., concurring. Civil action. From an inspection of the record, it appears that, heretofore, in 1913, J. M. and W. H. Allen instituted an action against the lumber company to restrain cutting of timber on plaintiff's land in Franklin County and to recover damage for cutting already done; that Nannie R. Sills and her children and heirs at law, grantors in the deed conveying the land to the Allens, had instituted an action against them in the county of Nash to correct the deed, alleging that the growing timber on the land was included in the deed by mistake of (340) the parties. Both actions were removed to Wake County, and, having been consolidated by order of court, the questions were submitted to the jury on issues as follows:

1. Are J. M. and W. H. Allen the owners in fee and entitled to the possession of the lands described in the complaint and the timber growing thereon, situated in Franklin County, N.C.?

2. Are J. M. and W. H. Allen the owners in fee and entitled to the possession of that part of said lands situated in Nash County, N.C.?

3. Did the Roanoke Railroad and Lumber Company wrongfully and unlawfully cut and remove any timber from the lands situated in Franklin County, N.C. as alleged?

4. If so, what damages, if any, are J. M. and W. H. Allen entitled to recover?

On the trial, the facts in evidence tended to show that Nannie R. Sills, and her two children and heirs at law, codefendants, were the owners of a body of land, amounting to near 260 acres, lying in the counties of Franklin and Nash, about 209 acres of same being in the former county, and that in May, 1912, for $3,325, they conveyed said land to plaintiffs, and the deed therefor was registered in Franklin Country on 26 June, 1912, and in Nash County on 7 August, 1912. It was admitted that the timber growing on the part of the land in Nash County had been *398 already cut and removed by defendant company, and that they had title to that portion of timber; that prior to the execution of the aforesaid deed, to wit, 20 September, 1905, the Sillses, owners, had conveyed the timber growing on these lands to A. G. Taylor and B. G. Alston, and the deed was recorded in Nash County 28 October, 1905, but was not registered in Franklin County till after the commencement of the action in 1913; that on 27 October, 1905, Alston and Taylor conveyed the timber to the Nash County Timber Company, and the deed was registered in Nash County 28 October, 1905, but not in Franklin County till after this action commenced. The Nash County Timber Company conveyed the timber to defendant the Roanoke Railroad and Lumber Company by deed dated 25 June, 1907, and same was registered in Nash County September, 1907, and in Franklin County 23 September, 1907. This deed does not describe the lands, but conveys "all the trees, timber, etc., which are described and conveyed in the following deeds, to which reference is made for a more definite and accurate description: first, the following deeds registered in Nash County," etc., and among the deeds recited is that from G. W. Taylor and wife et al, book 150, p. 307.

There were facts in evidence as to the alleged trespass and amount of damage done, and also testimony offered by defendants for the purpose of establishing the alleged mistake.

(341) At the close of the testimony the court charged the jury that if they believed the evidence they would answer the issues as to title in favor of plaintiffs, and submitted the question of damages for their decision.

Verdict for plaintiff, and defendant company excepted and appealed. After stating the facts: It has been repeatedly held with us that, under our registration laws, no notice, however full and formal, as to the existence of a prior deed, will of itself supply the place of registration.Piano Co. v. Spruill, 150 N.C. 168; Tremaine v. Williams, 144 N.C. 116;Quinnerly v. Quinnerly, 114 N.C. 145; Todd v. Outlaw, 79 N.C. 235. This being true, the deed to plaintiffs from Mrs. Sills and her children, the original owners, conveying the land and all that was on it of a permanent nature, including the growing timber, having been registered in Franklin County before any conveyance of the timber from these owners to defendant or to any one under whom the defendants claim, on the record as it now stands the *399 plaintiffs have the better title, and the position is not affected because the deeds of defendants were first registered in Nash County, where a portion of the land is situate. Our statute, Revisal, 980, establishes priority of right from registration in the "county where the land lieth," and the registration in Nash had no effect beyond the borders of that county. King v. Portis, 77 N.C. 25.

It is urged for defendant, the lumber company, that the plaintiffs are affected with legal notice of their claim, as we understand the argument, by reason of the registration in Franklin County of the deed from the Nash Timber Company to the lumber company, this deed having been registered in Franklin in 1907, and making some reference to the former deed of Alston and Taylor to said lumber company. There are decisions on the subject which hold that a deed by its recitals, etc., may so recognize and refer to the existence of a prior deed as to create an interest or engraft a trust upon the property conveyed, and so protect such interest or estate by registration of the latter instrument, an instance presented in Hinton v.Leigh, 102 N.C. 28, and one or two other case in our Reports; but in the case before us the provision is not at all of that character, but only refers to the Taylor and Alston deed for a better description of the property, and did not purport to have any further effect. Piano Co. v.Spruill, supra. And, if it were otherwise, the reference relied upon is to a deed from Taylor and Alston, and not to any deed or conveyance from Mrs. Sills and her children.

The purpose of our registration acts is to enable creditors and purchasers for value to ascertain the true owner, and the priority of right should arise from the prior registering of the deed passing (342) the property from such owner. This, as we have seen, the plaintiffs have, and it must be held, therefore, as stated, that they hold the superior claims.

It is further insisted that his Honor, on some appropriate issue, should have submitted the question involved in the suit by Mrs. Sills and her children to correct the deed made by them to plaintiffs, on the ground of mistake; that by the terms of the agreement the timber was to have been excluded from this instrument. To correct a deed on account of mistake is a recognized subject of equitable jurisdiction, but in order to its exercise for the purpose of reforming the instrument because it does not properly express the agreement of the parties, it is established that the mistake must be mutual or it must be the mistake of one superinduced by the fraud of the other. Sills v. Ford, at present term; Shook v. Love, 170 N.C. 99;Pelletier v. Cooper, 158 N.C. 405; Floars v. Ins. Co., 144 N.C. 232;King v. Hobbs, 139 N.C. 170; Warehouse v. Ozment, 132 N.C. 839. *400

In Pelletier's case, supra, it was held: "Equity will correct a mistake in law in the drawing of a written contract when it is made to appear that the contract, as therein expressed, does not carry out the actual agreement which both the parties had made and which it was their mutual intent to express in the writing." And in Shook v. Love, supra, Associate JusticeBrown delivering the opinion, it was said: "The power of a court of equity to reform written instruments so as to speak the real contract of the parties will not be exercised because of the mistake of one of the parties unless brought about by the fraud of the other; but an instrument will be reformed when the mistake is by all parties or when it is the mistake of the draftsman."

Applying the principle, there is doubt if on proper consideration of the record there is sufficient evidence of mistake on the part of Mrs. Sills and her children to justify a correction of this instrument, and we find no evidence whatever of any mistake or fraud on the part of the Allens. On the contrary, the facts tend to show that, having been approached by a real estate dealer, representing Mrs. Sills, with a proposition to sell the land, they had the record examined, and, finding the title clear, they bought and took a deed for the land, and had the same properly registered, and that the timber on the portion of the land in Franklin County was one of the inducements to the purchase, and the deed and claim correctly expressed the contract which they made and intended to make. True, there is testimony on part of Mrs. Sills that the purchase price paid for the land, $3,300, was entirely inadequate, and that the timber alone was worth that amount; but there is also evidence tending to show that the land, as conveyed, brought a full price, and, in any event, there is no such discrepancy of value and price as to affect the result. Doubtless, Mrs. Sills did not intend (343) to convey the timber, which she had already sold, and her son told the draftsman of the deed, in Greensboro, that the timber had been already sold off; but the darftsman [draftsman] was the agent of Mrs. Sills, and we do not find that he was instructed to leave out the timber, and accordingly, the deed conveying both land and timber, having been duly executed, was forwarded to the Allens at Louisburg, and there is nothing to show that they had any knowledge or notice that it was not drawn pursuant to the agreement between the parties as they understood it, and the case presented is only an ordinary one where a second purchaser has obtained the title by having his deed first registered pursuant to law.

Exceptions to rulings of the court on questions of evidence are without merit.

One J. A. Turner, a witness for defendants, to whom Mrs. Sills first wrote about selling her land, and who negotiated the sale to plaintiffs. *401 was asked on cross-examination if, in the transaction, he represented the Allens in any way, as factor or agent, and answered he did not.

It is a recognized position, not infrequently presented, that the fact of agency cannot be proved by the declarations of an alleged agent; but we fail to see why this fact cannot be shown by the sworn testimony of the witness. Unless objectionable on some other principle, such testimony would seem to be directly relevant, and the cases so hold. Sutton v. Lyons,156 N.C. 3; Machine Co. v. Seago, 128 N.C. 160.

The right of a woman as notary public to take the verification of a pleading of the probate of a deed is not involved in this appeal. No exception or assignment of error presents the question, nor is it discussed in the briefs, and for the reason, no doubt, that the verification and probate were taken in Virginia, and the Constitution of that State provides that "Men and women 18 years of age shall be eligible to the office of notary public." Art. II, sec. 32. If this did not appear affirmatively, the presumption is that the officer of another State is acting under legal authority. Nicholson v. Lumber Co., 160 N.C. 33.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment in plaintiff's favor is affirmed.

No error.