63 S.E. 82 | N.C. | 1908
The plaintiff claimed under a deed alleged to have been executed and delivered to William Hunt, Sr., and introduced evidence to (359) establish her contention. The defendant introduced no evidence.
Under the direction of the court the jury found for plaintiff. From the judgment rendered the defendants appealed, assigning three errors. It is stated in the brief of the learned counsel for defendants, that if his Honor was correct in holding that, upon the entire evidence in any view of it, there was no delivery of the deed of 21 September, 1870, from William Hunt, Sr., and wife to Elizabeth Hunt, then the judgment of the Superior Court should be affirmed. We think his Honor did err in directing a verdict upon that issue.
The deed in question was signed by William Hunt, Sr., on 21 September, 1870, who died three or four days thereafter. It was probated 1 January, 1891, and registered in August, 1906. The witnesses to the deed are J. T. Mode and his father, W. G. Mode, who is dead.
The facts as testified to by the witness to the deed, J. T. Mode, are, that the deed was signed by William Hunt, Sr., three or four days before his death, that it was not delivered, although some of the children were present. William Hunt, Sr., signed the deed, and the witness further testifies, "and after he had done so he told my father to take it up and keep it, and if he never called for it, to deliver it to the proper person; my father carried it home, and filed it away at his own house; it was not turned over to any of the grantees in the lifetime of William Hunt, Sr.; I saw it in my father's possession; do not know how defendants came in possession of it. Mrs. Elizabeth Hunt was there when the deed was signed; W. W. Hunt, Sr., signed several deeds at the same time, and he said to my father, W. G. Mode, to take the deeds, and if he did not call for them for him to deliver them to the proper parties"; *263 J. M. Mode also testified that the deed was in the possession of (360) his father, W. G. Mode, after, William Hunt, Sr.'s, death.
We concede that when the maker of a deed delivers it to some third party for the grantee, parting with the possession of it, without any condition or any direction to hold it for him, and without in some way reserving the right to repossess it, the delivery is complete and the title passes at once, although the grantee may be ignorant of the facts, and no subsequent act of the grantor or any one else can defeat the effect of such delivery.Phillips v. Houston,
The above cases and the others cited by the learned counsel for defendants sustain that proposition.
But in the case under consideration there is no acknowledgement of execution by the grantor. The execution is proven by the witness to the deed after the grantor's death, and that witness testifies now to facts which completely rebut any presumption of delivery. If the facts testified to by the witness be true, the grantor retained control of his deed and had the right to repossess himself of it at any time. There was never a delivery to the grantee, nor to any one for her during the grantor's life.Baldwin v. Maultsby,
We differ with the learned counsel for defendants that the intention of William Hunt, Sr., is in any way involved. The delivery of a deed, a transmutation of the possession, is an essential ceremony to the complete execution of it, and if William Hunt, Sr., had delivered the paper-writing to W. G. Mode with an unqualified instruction that it should be delivered to the grantee after the death of the grantor it would have been a good deed from the time of delivery to the witness.
But the grantor did not deliver the paper with such unqualified direction. He retained control of it and the parol authority, given to W. G. Mode, was in law revoked by the death of Hunt. (361)
It is contended that although there was no actual delivery or parting with the control of the paper, yet it was operative as a deed if the grantor intended it should be good as such.
This position is inconsistent with the very definition of a deed, which is a writing sealed and delivered. The intention of the grantor will not take the place of actual delivery, which is essential in law to the validity of a deed. As said in Baldwin v. Maultsby, supra, "such an intention cannot overthrow the law."
It is set forth in the text-books and adjudicated cases generally, that where the grantor executes a deed and places it in the hands of a third person with instructions to have it delivered and recorded in case of the grantor's death, but to retain it subject to the grantor's control until his death, and the bailee held the deed until after the grantor's death and *264
then delivered it, there is no valid delivery. Baldwin v. Maultsby, supra;
2 Jones Real Property, sec. 1312; 1 Devlin on Deeds, sec. 279; Brown v.Brown,
We think, however, that his Honor erred in directing the jury to answer the first issue, No. After instructing them upon the law bearing upon the issue, the court might well have instructed the jury (362) that if they found the facts to be as testified to by the witness Mode, there was no delivery of the deed, and that they should answer first issue, No. The defendants had the right to have the jury pass on the credibility of such witness who was introduced by plaintiff.
The value and weight to be given to this testimony is peculiarly within the jury's province. His Honor should have told the jury that the law presumes that this deed, proved, registered and offered in evidence by the defendants, claiming under it, was executed and delivered at the time it bears date, unless the contrary be shown, and that the burden to show it rests upon this plaintiff. Meadows v. Cozart,
If the facts testified to by the witnesses, as set out in the record, be true, then the presumption that the deed was delivered is rebutted, but his Honor had no right to pass on the credibility of their testimony.
For such error there must be a
New trial.
Cited: Gaylord v. Gaylord,
(363)