The plaintiff and the defendants claim the land in controversy under A. C. Berry as a common source of title. The deed from Berry to the plaintiff was dated 27 February, 1903, and registered 31 December, 1906; the deed from Berry to "W". T. Crow was dated 18 February, 1909, and registered 1 February, 1910.
No conveyance of land shall be valid to pass'any property, as against creditors or purchasers for a valuable consideration, from the donor, bargainor or lessor, but from the registration thereof in the county where the land lies, and no notice however full and formal -as to the existence of a prior deed can take the place of registration. C. S., 3309;
Allen v. R. R.,
The execution of all deeds of conveyance may be proved or acknowledged before any one of designated officials. C. S., 3293. They shall be acknowledged by the grantor or his signature shall be proved on oath by one or more witnesses in the manner prescribed by law; and all deeds executed and registered according to law shall be valid. C. S., 3308. The substantial form of the grantor’s acknowledgment is prescribed in section 3323. “Probate of a deed is taken by hearing the evidence touching its execution;
i. e.,
the testimony of witnesses, or the acknowledgment of the party, and from that evidence
adjudging the fact
of its due execution.”
Pearson, J.,
in
Simmons v. Gholson,
The registration of a deed on a. probate which is apparently regular is prima facie evidence of its due execution.
Strickland v. Draughan,
*661
In
Starke v. Etheridge, 71
N. C., 240, one of the agreed facts was that the deed had been proved on the oath of the subscribing witness, and the clerk endorsed upon the deed as a memorial of the proof the word “jurat,” the primary meaning of which, the court said, is “sworn,” the derivative meaning being “proved.”
Moore v. Quickle,
Our opinion is that the probate of the deed in question is defective, the mere acknowledgment by the witness that, he saw the deed signed by Berry falling short of the plain requirement that the execution must be proved by the witness on his oath.
The plaintiff offered to prove by the justice of the peace who took the “acknowledgment” of McNabb, one of the subscribing witnesses, and by McNabb himself, that McNabb testified on oath before the justice that Berry signed the deed in the presence of both witnesses. We find no error in the exclusion of this evidence. Neither
Starke v. Etheridge, supra,
nor
Quinnerly v. Quinnerly, supra,
nor
Bailey v. Hassell, supra,
supports the appellant’s position. The first two of these cases hold that evidence is admissible to show that what purports to be a deed is a forgery, or that it was executed by a married woman or an infant, or that it was not properly executed, and that the registration of an instrument may be impeached in this way or supported by evidence tending to sustain the officer’s finding as stated in his certificate.
Bailey v. Hassell, supra,
-which was a controversy between the immediate parties or their representatives, is not authority for the position that parol evidence may be heard, long after the rights of innocent third parties have intervened, to validate an invalid probate by adding to or contradicting its terms. The opposite conclusion is maintained in
Butler v. Butler,
*662
The plaintiff next insisted that his deed is color of title, citing three cases which we think are not in point. In
Smith v. Proctor,
In
Austin v. Staten,
We are of opinion, however, that his Honor erred in directing a verdict upon the two issues set out in the judgment. There is at least some evidence of the plaintiff’s adverse possession of the land for a period of twenty years. C. S., 430. Johnson v. Fry, supra. For this reason the appellant is entitled to a
New trial.
