52 N.C. 609 | N.C. | 1860
The lessor of the plaintiff claimed title under a judgment and execution against one Long, and a sheriff's sale and deed made thereon, all of which, with the defendant's possession, were admitted.
The defendant claimed title, and gave in evidence a deed to him from the said Long for the premises, for a full and valuable consideration, in which the premises are described as follows, to wait: "My house and lot in the town of Jefferson, in Ashe County, North Carolina." The deed bore date and was executed prior to the teste of the execution under which the lessor of the plaintiff claimed. At the time the said deed was executed, Long, the bargainor, had a fee-simple right to this house and lot in the said town of Jackson, and there was no evidence that he owned any other house and lot therein, nor was it so alleged.
It was contended that the defendant's deed was void for uncertainty in the description of the premises, and that no title passed thereby, which was the only question debated between the counsel of the parties. A verdict was, by consent, rendered for the plaintiff, subject to the (610) opinion of the court on the question of the law raised in the case, with leave for him to set aside and enter a nonsuit in case he should be of opinion against the plaintiff. Subsequently, on consideration of the question reserved, his Honor ordered the plaintiff to be nonsuited.
We agree with his Honor who tried the cause, that the description of the house and lot contained in the deed under which the defendant claimed was sufficiently certain to identify and convey the property. The terms, "my house and lot in the town of Jefferson," if contained in a will, would undoubtedly be sufficient to pass the testator's house and lot, in the absence of any proof to show that he had more than one. Thus it was held in a strongly analagous case that a bequest of "my twenty-five shares of bank stock," when the testator had just that number of shares, was a specific legacy, while a designation of them as simply "twenty-five shares of stock," without the prefix of the word "my," was a general legacy. Kinseyv. Rhem,
A house and lot, or one house and lot, in a particular town, would not do, because too indefinite on the face of the instrument itself. See Plummerv. Owens,
PER CURIAM. Affirmed. *470
Cited: Robeson v. Lewis,
(612)