26 S.E. 152 | N.C. | 1896
It is elementary learning that no contract can be enforced unless the subject-matter upon which it is intended by the parties to *315 operate can first be definitely ascertained from its terms, either through an explicit description therein or a reference which points to extrinsic means of identification.
This principle applies to verbal agreements as well as to those required by the statute (Code, sections 1552 to 1555) to be in writing. Hence, where a statute is passed by the Legislature making it essential to the validity of contracts conveying any interest in land that they should be in writing, the courts can no more dispense with such identification of the subject-matter of the deed by description which, either through its own definiteness or by reference to something aliunde, can be fitted with reasonable certainty to it, than they can hold the party to be charged therewith bound where neither he nor his lawfully authorized agent for him signs such agreement.
In the application of the maxim id certum est quod certum reddipotest it has always been held in construing contracts for the sale of chattels that the agreement must provide the means of making certain what is intended to be sold. Lumber Co. v. Wilcox,
It has been well settled by a series 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 in 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. But a conveyance of six tracts of land lying on a specified stream and therefore granted to A. B. (if in fact patents to a dozen tracts situated on it had been issued to A. B.) no more identifies the subject-matter of the conveyance than does the conveyance of six buggies *316 out of a much larger number without giving the means of distinguishing those intended to be sold from the others.
The defendant claims under grant and deed, both of which it is admitted enclose the land in dispute. The plaintiff offered in evidence a deed of conveyance from James Woods to Margaret Mason, (517) containing the following description: "A certain quantity of land, containing three hundred and fifty acres, being in six different deeds, the courses and distances referred to the original grants, which are six, lying on Thompson's Fork of Muddy Creek and Bush Branch in the county of Burke aforesaid." This description was embodied in subsequent conveyances. In order to identify the land intended to be conveyed the plaintiff introduced in evidence a grant to James Wood, issued in the year 1814, for fifty acres. Without offering any other grant the plaintiff proposed to prove by parol that the tract described in said grant was one of six tracts claimed by James Woods, when he executed the deed to Margaret Mason in 1831. The plaintiff also offered to show by parol that this was one of six tracts conveyed by the deed of 1831. The Court sustained the objection of defendant to both propositions. Whether it would have been competent for the plaintiff to have offered six grants and proven that they were located on the streams mentioned in the deed to Margaret Mason, without more specific designation of the deeds or grants referred to in the conveyance from Woods to Mason, we are not called upon to decide, though it is difficult to conceive how such identification could have been shown. But that is not the question presented by the appeal. The Court below held that the reference for more accurate description to six deeds or grants did not warrant the identification of the boundaries of such grants by parol evidence of a verbal claim set up by Woods at the date of the conveyance or by showing by parol, entirely, that the subject-matter of the conveyance was intended to be six tracts, one of which was that described in the grant offered. It would not be competent to select six out of one hundred buggies in a confused mass and attempt to prove that it was the purpose of the parties to an agreement to designate particular (518) buggies, if there were nothing in its terms that would furnish the means of distinguishing the six intended to be sold. So, where there is language relied upon as pointing to extrinsic evidence that will identify the subject-matter, it does not follow that parol proof of the purpose of the parties becomes competent if in no way connected with or explanatory of the terms of the description. It does not appear from the descriptive words used in the deed to Mrs. Mason whether the deeds or grants referred to were executed to James Woods or another, or, if *317
to James Woods, whether there were six or fifty patents issued to him which embraced tracts of land on the streams mentioned in the deeds offered in evidence. If it be competent to permit a single grant for fifty acres to be identified by showing by parol an intention on the part of the grantor to convey it, it would follow that in any case the subject-matter of a conveyance or contract could be identified by parol proof of the purpose of the parties. The plaintiff's contention is not sustained by the line of cases wherein the question has arisen whether an exception in a patent of all land theretofore granted was sufficiently definite to admit parol proof to identify the land excepted (Mining Co.v. Frey,
NO ERROR. *318
Cited: Harris v. Woodard,
(520)