90 S.E. 117 | N.C. | 1916
This is an action to set aside a deed under which the defendants claim on the ground that it had never been delivered, the lack of sufficient mental capacity from the grantor to execute the same, and undue influence. The jury found all three issues in favor of the defendants. The trial seems to have hinged, however, almost (157) solely upon the question whether there had been a sufficient delivery.
The assignments of error, except 6, 7, 8, and 9, are totally insufficient and must be disregarded. The first assignment is: "1. To the question and answer in the admission of the evidence of the witness J.R. Jones as contained in the exception 1 on page .... of the record." In the same form are the other exceptions other than the four above stated. For example, exception 10 is "To the refusal of the court to give the plaintiffs' prayer for instruction, No. 1, as contained in the plaintiffs' 13th exception (see page .... of the record)." These would be insufficient even if the blanks had been filled up. In McDowell v. Kent,
"This requirement of the Court is not arbitrary, but has been dictated by its experience and from a desire to expedite the public business by our being enabled to grasp more quickly the case before us and thus more intelligently follow the argument of counsel. In this practice we have followed what has been adopted by other courts."
"This Court is decidedly averse to deciding any case upon a technicality or disposing of any appeal otherwise than upon its merits. But having adopted this rule from a sense of its necessity, and having put it in force only after repeated notice, and having uniformly applied it in every case since we began to do so, it is absolutely necessary that we observe it impartially in every case."
"That the rule has not been difficult to observe, and that the profession have loyally observed it, is shown by the fact that on a average our records show that the failure to do so does not exceed two appeals in a thousand. We trust that there will be none hereafter."
This case has been repeatedly cited and applied since. See citations in Anno. Ed. to Thompson v. R.R.,
As the Court has repeatedly stated, these rules have not been arbitrarily made, but experience has shown us that they are necessary for the proper consideration of the public business coming before us, and will be impartially enforced against all litigants. If a case is worth bringing to this Court for review, counsel should think it worth the trouble to present it in the manner required by the statute and the rules of the Court.
As to the four assignments of error, 6, 7, 8, and 9, which are properly made, they are all to the charge of the court on the question of delivery, *207 and we find no error. The charge of the court was that on the question of delivery the jury should find whether the plaintiff "intended to part with the deed and lose legal control of it, and that if the grantor parted with the deed absolutely, then he would have no right to take it back. If he parted with it, holding control over it, then he would. Then you have a question there to consider, because it is a man and his wife, as to what the intention was."
Exceptions 8 and 9 are to an instruction that where a deed has been recorded, whether after or before the death of the grantor, it is presumed to have been delivered, and the burden shifts to the other side to rebut that presumption. This is familiar law, and it is clearly so stated byBrown, J., Fortune v. Hunt,
No error.
Cited: Greene v. Dishman,