72 S.E. 487 | N.C. | 1911
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by Mr.Chief Justice Clark. Llewellyn Sinclair by his will, probated 2 July, 1889, devised to his daughter, Mary Jarman, 100 acres of land "commencing in the old line at a corner of a 25 acres, my corner and Lewis Rickett's land, where it joins my old land, and runs near north, so as to make 100 acres west of said line." The 100 acres were surveyed off for her soon after the probate of the will, said survey being made by the county surveyor at the instance of Mary Jarman, without the plaintiff, the *371 executor of the will, A. D. Sinclair, being present. The said executor, who was devisee of the land adjoining, found out soon thereafter that said survey had been made, and he and the said Mary Jarman each treated said survey as containing only 100 acres, as devised in the will, and from said date said Mary Jarman, and those claiming under her, and the said A. D. Sinclair, were each in possession of their respective land on each side of said line, under said survey, under known and visible lines and boundaries, each cultivating up to said line.
On 2 March, 1893, Mary Jarman and husband mortgaged the (460) land to one Covington, describing the same by metes and bounds as had been fully set out in the survey made by the county surveyor. The land was sold under the mortgage and the purchaser received the deed containing said description bearing date 11 October, 1894. The purchaser went into possession under said deed, under known and visible lines and boundaries, and remained in possession of the same till 18 November, 1905, when he for value conveyed the same to the defendant E. P. Teal, describing the said meters and bounds, who has remained in possession under known and visible lines and boundaries up to this date. Another survey was made in the latter part of the year 1907, when it was discovered that the tract contained 108 acres, and this action was commenced 27 October, 1909, being less than three years prior to the beginning of this action, to cut off and recover 8 acres.
The defendant pleads the twenty-year statute, the ten-year statute, the seven-year statute, and the three-year statute. It would seem that he was protected by each one of them; but the plaintiff claims that under Revisal, 395 (6), he could maintain his action on the ground of mistake, it having been brought within three years after the actual discovery of the mistake in the acreage. If this had been true as between the plaintiff and Mary Jarman, it would not have deprived the defendant of the protection of the other statutes of limitations that are pleaded.
But even between the original parties the three-year statute runs from the time the fraud or mistake was discovered, "or should have been discovered in the exercise of ordinary care." Peacock v. Barnes,
Upon the agreed statement of facts as above, the court properly held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Affirmed.
Cited: Eubank v. Lyman,