4 S.E. 772 | N.C. | 1887
(Watson v. Dodd,
The grounds of the petition appear in the opinion. This action was heard at the February Term, 1886, of this Court, and the judgment below was affirmed. It is now before us upon a petition to rehear, "because," as the petition sets forth, "the decision there made proceeds exclusively upon the doctrine of estoppel, and its want of application to the case. The plaintiffs did not contend that the record called for an application of the doctrine of estoppel; but they did contend for an application of the presumption, or rule of evidence, that where a grantor makes a valid exception in a deed of conveyance, the thing excepted remains the property of the grantor and his heirs, nothing else appearing."
After a careful review of the opinion heretofore rendered (reported in
The very matter which the petition seeks to bring before the Court was considered and passed upon by it upon the former hearing. Undoubtedly when a "grantor makes a valid exception in a deed of conveyance, the thing excepted remains the property of the grantor, or his heirs"; but if the grantor has no valid title to the thing excepted, neither he nor his heirs can recover, and in this case the plaintiffs failed to show title to the thing excepted. It does not appear that either the plaintiffs or their ancestor, Charles Fisher, ever had title to the reserved minerals, which may have belonged to another, and as was said"the estoppel is necessarily confined to the subject-matter of the conveyance, to which conflicting claims are asserted" — in this case, to the land, and not the minerals.
The judgment of the Court as heretofore rendered is affirmed and the petition to rehear is dismissed.
Dismissed.
Cited: Patton v. Educational Co.,