70 S.E. 834 | N.C. | 1911
This action was brought to recover the possession of a tract of land and damages for the unlawful detention (348) of and injury to the same. The plaintiff's right to the relief demanded was conceded to depend upon the correct location of a call in the deeds from M. J. Battle to Mary A. Powell and from Mary A. Powell to M. J. Battle, guardian. The true boundary line between adjoining tracts is the question in controversy. The call is as follows: Beginning at the head of a ditch on the Enfield and Tarboro road, about equidistant from the buildings on the land of J. H. Cutchin and (those on) the Nevill place, running with said ditch in an eastern direction to a branch, thence with said branch to the edge of Griffin Swamp, thence due east to the canal, and thence by various calls to the beginning.
The plaintiffs contend that the line should be run from the first station with the ditch, in an easterly course, to the branch, and thence with the other calls to the edge of the swamp (indicated on the map as lines 1, 2, 20, 19, 18, 17, and 16), and if this is done, it is admitted that they must succeed and the defendants must fail.
The defendants, on the contrary, insist that the line should begin at the ditch (figure 1), which is admitted to be the true beginning corner, and that the call for the ditch means what they say is the "lead ditch," and that, therefore, the other calls should follow the course of that ditch until it empties into a branch, which is considerably north of the branch which the plaintiffs say is the one mentioned in the deeds.
The judge charged with the plaintiffs, and told the jury that in locating the line they must follow the course of the lower ditch, which begins at the figure 1, and leads in an easterly direction and almost due *274
[EDITORS' NOTE: THE MAP IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.], SEE
east, while to follow the other ditch would describe a line running east about 3 1/2 chains, thence N. 18 E. 5 chains, thence N. 87 E. 5.80 chains, thence N. 78 E. 9 chains, thence N.W., thence by several zigzag lines varying in course from due north to northwest and thence due east to the upper edge of the swamp.
We do not agree altogether with his Honor as to the law of the case. The question as to what are the boundaries of land is one of law, but as to where they are is for the jury to determine. Jones (349)v. Bunker,
The court instructed the jury as follows: "What are the boundaries of a tract of land is a question of law; where these boundaries are is a question of fact. Both parties admit that the beginning point is at 1, and the ditch from 1 to 2 constitutes a part of the dividing line in dispute, and if the jury find from the evidence that there was a ditch running from 1 towards 18, it is their duty to go to that point, 18, even though the ditch gave out at 19, and to answer the first issue in favor of the plaintiffs; that the line contended for by the defendants did not run in an eastern direction and did not answer the call in the deed from M. J. Battle to Mary A. Powell."
The learned judge erred in taking the disputed question from the jury, even though there may be a ditch from 2 to 19. That fact, of itself, did not locate the line as matter of law. The question of fact was whether the ditch from 2 to 19 was a part of the ditch at the beginning corner, or did that ditch lead in another direction, that is, from 2 to 3 and thence to 9. The calls for an "eastern direction" was not controlling. The ditch at the beginning corner does run a little north of east for some distance, and the fact that its course is then changed does not necessarily destroy its identity. While its course is a varied one, sometimes east and northeast and even north, its general course bears eastwardly. It will be competent, in locating the ditch, to consider the calls of the deed for an "eastern direction," with the other facts, namely, that the lower ditch ends at 19, that it is a (352) small ditch emptying into the other ditch at 2, that the latter ditch is larger and better defined and continues from 1 to 2 to 3 and thence to 9, but that it has various courses in different directions, its general trend being eastward, although the course of one line is north or a little west of north. The jury, of course, may consider the other relevant facts and circumstances in their effort to identify the ditch, but which ditch is the one called for is for them to determine and not for the court as a naked proposition of law. We think our conclusion is supported by the authorities.
In Spruill v. Davenport,
"A latent ambiguity exists when, there being no defect in the description on the face of the instrument, it becomes necessary to fit the description to the thing — in other words, to identify it; and in introducing parol evidence for this purpose, the uncertainty appears." Deafand Dumb Inst. v. Norwood,
Two cases decided by this Court afford striking illustrations of the rule in the law of boundary, that when two objects are called for, and there is doubt as to which of them answers the true call, it is for the jury to find upon oral and extrinsic evidence, as between the two or more objects, the one intended by the parties. Hurley v. Morgan,
There is a question of evidence in the case. Plaintiff's witness, W. L. Sherrod, was permitted, against defendant's objection, to testify as to a declaration made by M. J. Battle, after he had parted with the land, as to the line, which was to the effect that in conveying the land to his mother, Mary A. Powell, he intended the lower line, which is contended by the plaintiff to be the boundary, that is, from 1 to 19; but in looking at his deed he found it plain that it was not the line. This testimony, if competent as a declaration of a third person, would seem to be in favor of the defendant; but the location of the line is not to be affected by his intention, unless it is expressed in the deed. The calls of the deed as they are, and not as they were intended to be, must govern, for as said by Judge Ashe in Scull v. Pruden,
We were not informed as to what bearing the acreage of the two tracts has upon the question in controversy. Perhaps none, as it was not mentioned. "Ordinarily, the number of acres mentioned in a deed constitutes no part of the description, especially when there are *280
specifications and localities given by which the land may be located; but in doubtful cases it may have weight, as a circumstance in aid of the description, and in some cases, in the absence of other definite descriptions, may have a controlling effect." Whitaker v. Cover,
His Honor in his charge assumed, as a fact, that the ditch from 1 to 2 and from 2 to 19 were parts of the same ditch and are continuous and identical throughout, whereas that was a question for the jury, as there was a latent ambiguity. A new trial must be awarded for this error.
New trial.
Cited: Fulwood v. Fulwood,