96 S.E. 736 | N.C. | 1918
This is an action to have what is known as Dyer Street, in Elizabeth City, declared a public street, and to prevent the defendant from obstructing the same.
The land covered by Dyer Street is a part of 17 acres of land formerly belonging to J. W. Hinton, and by successive conveyances the title to the whole 17 acres was vested in Bush Lippincott in 1881.
In July, 1881, Bush Lippincott had the land surveyed and platted and subdivided into lots which were numbered, and streets which were named, including Dyer Street.
The plat of this survey was registered in Pasquotank County, in Book 4, pages 38 and 39, and is as follows:
On 11 September, 1882, W. H. Smith executed a deed to R. H. Berry, purporting to convey some of said lots, "subject to any vested or prescribed rights of the corporation of Elizabeth City and others to Dyer Street."
On 15 September, 1882, the surviving partners of Bush Lippincott executed a deed to the said R. H. Berry, conveying several of the lots on the plat by the following description:
"Situate in the County of Pasquotank, State of North Carolina, in the town of Elizabeth City, known as `Parsonage' property, bounded on the north or northeast by the remaining part of lot No. 30, 38 feet wide, extendingfrom Dyer to Poplar Street; on the easterly side, by the Academy lot and Hinton lots; on the south, by Parsonage Street, or Cotter Street; on the westerly side, by Poplar Street. The description *28
[EDITORS' NOTE: THE MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.],] SEE
herein made is according to a plat recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pasquotank County, in Book 4, pages 38 and 39."
The defendant claims under this deed, and the boundaries named therein cover Dyer Street, the deed to the defendant himself being executed by N.W. Stevens on 9 December, 1907, and containing the following clause:
"This deed is made subject to any right the town may have to lay out Dyer Street as per the Conrow, Bush Lippincott plat, as recorded in Book 4, pages 38 and 39." *29
After the execution of the deed to Berry, the survivors of Bush Lippincott executed several deeds to different parties, conveying lots by numbers to different parties, and calling for the streets thereon, although none of these deeds called for Dyer Street.
The plaintiff relied on other deeds and contracts to show a dedication of Dyer Street to the use of the public prior to making and recording of the plat; but, in the view taken by the court of the question involved, it is not necessary to state the facts in regard thereto.
At the conclusion of the evidence his Honor instructed the jury to answer the issues in favor of the plaintiff if they believed the evidence, and the defendant excepted.
There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment pronounced thereon the defendant appealed. The defendant concedes that the survey and plat made by Bush Lippincott, subdividing the land into lots and laying off streets thereon, including Dyer Street, was an offer to dedicate the street to the use of the public, and that if this offer had been accepted by the city, or if lots had been conveyed calling for the streets, before the revocation of the offer by Bush Lippincott, the offer would then have been irrevocable; but he contends that there was no acceptance of offer and no deed calling for streets executed prior to the execution of the deed to Berry on 15 September, 1882, and that as this conveyed the street it was a revocation of the offer.
This position of the defendant is fully sustained by the authorities, if the deed to Berry is a revocation, but if not a revocation, the subsequent deeds by Bush Lippincott calling for streets and referring to the plat are an irrevocable dedication, although Dyer Street was not referred to.Conrad v. Land Co.,
The Court says, in Conrad v. Land Co.: "If the owner of land lays it off into squares, lots, and streets, with a view to form a town or city, or as a suburb to a town or city, certainly if he causes the same to be registered in the county where the land is situated, and sells any part of the lots or squares, and in the deed refers in the description thereof to the plat, such reference will constitute an irrevocable dedication to the public of the streets marked upon the plat. Meier v. Portland,
Both of these cases are affirmed and approved in the other cases cited.
It becomes, therefore, of the first importance to determine the proper construction of the Berry deed, and to see whether it can be held to amount to a revocation.
The deed of 15 September was executed four days after the execution of the deed from Smith, purporting to convey lots marked on the plat, which clearly recognized the right of the city in Dyer Street, because it says that the conveyance is subject "to any vested or prescribed rights of the corporation of Elizabeth City and others as to Dyer Street."
The deed of 15 September contains no express terms of revocation, and on the contrary one of the boundaries in the deed is described as "extending from Dyer to Poplar Street."
It goes further than this, because, immediately following the enumeration of the boundaries, it is said in the deed: "The description herein made is according to a plat recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pasquotank County, in Book 4, pages 38 and 39."
The legal effect of this last clause in the description is, according to the authorities, to incorporate the plat in the deed as a part of the description of the land conveyed. Everett v. Thomas,
The Court says, in Everett v. Thomas: "We do not doubt that, by a proper reference of one deed to another, the description of the latter may be considered as incorporated into the former, and both be read as one instrument for the purpose of identifying the thing intended to be conveyed." And in Hemphill v. Annis: "It has been well settled by a series *31 of adjudications that where a reference is made in one deed to another for a more definite description, the effect is to incorporate the description of the instrument referred to into that containing the reference, provided the language used points so clearly to the explanatory deed or instrument as to make it possible to identify it." And the other cases are to the same effect.
We have, then, in the deed to Berry two descriptions — one sufficient to convey the fee in the street, and the other conveying the land and imposing upon it the easement; and following the rule of construction announced in Gudger v. White,
We are therefore of opinion that, upon the facts that were not in dispute, his Honor held correctly that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for.
No error.