44 S.E. 617 | N.C. | 1903
This is a petition to rehear the above entitled case, which was decided at the last term, and is reported in
The plaintiffs, who have petitioned for the rehearing, assigned several errors in the former opinion and judgment of the Court, but we do not deem it necessary to consider but one of them, as the decision of the Court, by which a new trial was awarded, must be sustained upon the ground we now take with reference to that assignment of error.
It appears that the plaintiffs undertook to establish title to the land in controversy by showing that it had been mortgaged by one James Case, ancestor of the defendants, to William Case, and then they attempted to show that William Case in 1855 had conveyed the land by deed to W. L. Henry. This deed was not produced, and it was alleged to have been lost. Plaintiffs then introduced in evidence a paper-writing, signed by William Case, but not under seal, purporting to convey the land to W. L. Henry, which bore date as of 15 May, 1855, but was not proved and registered until 1887. There was annexed to and proved and registered with this deed a memorandum as follows: (796)
"The above is a duplicate of a deed heretofore executed by me to W. L. Henry and his heirs for the said lands, which deed was lost before it was registered. This is a duplicate of the same tenor and date, as near as I can make it. (Signed) William Case."
The defendants objected to the introduction of this paper-writing; the objection was overruled, and they excepted.
The plaintiffs then introduced a deed from Jesse Sumner, sheriff, to George Brooks, under whom they claimed, and also evidence tending to show, as they contended, that they had been in adverse possession of the land for more than seven years under this deed, which was held by *560
this Court to be color of title. Mfg. Co. v. Brooks,
It must be conceded that the description in one deed may be referred to in another for the purpose of identifying and making more certain the lines and boundaries of the land which is intended to be conveyed (Everitt v.Thomas,
If the copy or substitute for the original deed had been executed before the date of the sheriff's deed to Brooks, there might be some ground upon which to base an argument that it could be used for the purpose of showing what land was meant by the following language in the sheriff's deed: "Containing 100 acres, more or less, being the land sold by William Case to W. L. Henry." King v. Little,
It is unnecessary, in the view we have taken of the case, to consider the other assignments of error, except for the purpose of saying that the Court by inadvertence erroneously assumed at the last term that the plaintiffs had admitted in their reply to the answer that the title to the land was at one time in James Case, the ancestor of the defendants.
It appears by a careful examination of the pleadings that it was denied by the plaintiffs that James Case ever had any title to the land. *562
The case is now decided and the new trial awarded upon the single ground stated in this opinion and without any prejudice to the plaintiffs by reason of the other grounds set forth in the former opinion.
There was error in admitting the paper-writing alleged to have been made by William Case to W. L. Henry and registered in 1887, for the reason herein given, and the decision, at the last term, will stand subject to the qualification above stated.
Petition dismissed.
Cited: Vick v. Tripp,
(800)