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Houser v. Belton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1849
32 N.C. 358 (N.C. 1849)

Summary

In Houser v. Bolton, supra, a corner was described as being on the east side of a creek, when the circumstances show it should have been on the west side, and it was held competent to show the mistake by competent proof, though it be parol testimony, citing the leading case of Person v. Rountree, supra, where south was read for north, because of a manifest inadvertence of the draftsman, by which the mistake occurred.

Summary of this case from Ipock v. Gaskins

Opinion

December Term, 1849.

Where a deed described a corner as being on the east side of a creek, it is admissible for the party, by competent testimony, to show that the corner was in fact on the west side of the creek.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Law of SURRY, at Fall Term, 1849, Caldwell, J., presiding.

This was ejectment. The lessor claimed under a deed from one Gittens, dated in 1822, under which possession had been held for more than twenty-one years. The deed described the land as lying on both sides of Loven's Creek — beginning at a white oak on the east side of Loven's Creek, thence south 55 chains to a post oak; thence east 100 chains to a white oak, thence north 55 chains to a white oak, thence to the beginning, containing 550 acres.

The plaintiff insisted that the beginning corner was at a white-oak stump on the west side of the creek, and that it was described as being on the east side by mistake.

If the corner was at the stump, the plaintiff was entitled to recover; otherwise, his title did not cover the land sued for.

The second, third and fourth corners were established. The point of intersection, by running from the fourth corner west and from the second corner north (reversing the course of the first line), was at the white-oak stump, and the distance of these two lines gave out within a few feet of the stump. (359) A witness testified that, many years ago, his father, who is now dead, pointed out to him a white-oak tree, which was marked for a corner, and told him it was the corner of the lessor's land. The witness stated that several years ago the tree was cut down by one Wright, when clearing land. The corner contended for by the lessor was the stump of that tree. The witness further stated that Wright had also cut down a line tree between the white-oak stump and the creek, and that both the white-oak corner and the line tree were on the west side of the creek.

The defendant insisted that the calls of the deed could not be controlled by such testimony, and the beginning corner must be on the east side of the creek.

The court charged that if the evidence satisfied the jury that the white oak, of which the stump was the remains, was marked as the corner of the lessor's land, it would control the word "east," and fix the lessor's corner on the west side of the creek, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

There was a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment thereon the defendant appealed.

Iredell for plaintiff.

No counsel for defendant.


The opinion of his Honor is fully sustained by many decisions. The question is simply whether a party is at liberty to show, by the kind of proof offered in this case, that there was a mistake in using the word "east," instead of the word "west." It is not a question between a marked tree and a natural boundary, but between a marked tree and a mere word.

When a creek is called for as a boundary, it will control course and distance, and even marked lines and corners, because it is permanent and fixed, and a thing about which there can be no mistake. It is a natural boundary. Marked (360) lines and corners control course and distance, because a mistake is less apt to be committed in reference to the former than the latter. Indeed, the latter is considered as the most uncertain kind of description, for it is very easy to make a mistake in setting down the course and distance, when transcribing from the field book or copying from the grant or some prior deed, or a mistake may occur in making the survey, by losing a stick, as to distance, or making a wrong entry as to course. For these reasons, when there is a discrepancy between course and distance and the other descriptions, the former is made to give way.

All the reasons for making course give way to a natural boundary, or to the lines of another tract, or to marked lines and corners, apply with full force to the present question. The deed describes the beginning corner as being on the east side of the creek; the proof shows the corner tree to be on the west side. The marked tree must control, because there is less liability to mistake about it than in the use of one word for another, and the discrepancy shows there must be a mistake in the one or the other.

In the leading case, Person v. Roundtree, 2 N.C. 378, S. c., 1 N.C. 69, the course of the first line was "north" from a creek, so as to put the whole tract on the north side. The marked line ran "south" from the creek, so as to put the whole tract on the south side. It was held that the course of the first line had been written north instead of south by mistake, and the marked lines controlled. There is the same reason for holding, in this case, that "east" had been written instead of "west" and the marked course must control.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.

Cited: Marshall v. Fisher, 46 N.C. 119; Mizell v. Simmons, 79 N.C. 190; Credle v. Hays, 88 N.C. 324; Higdon v. Rice, 119 N.C. 626, 9; Bowen v. Gaylord, 122 N.C. 820; McKenzie v. Houston, 130 N.C. 573.

(361)


Summaries of

Houser v. Belton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1849
32 N.C. 358 (N.C. 1849)

In Houser v. Bolton, supra, a corner was described as being on the east side of a creek, when the circumstances show it should have been on the west side, and it was held competent to show the mistake by competent proof, though it be parol testimony, citing the leading case of Person v. Rountree, supra, where south was read for north, because of a manifest inadvertence of the draftsman, by which the mistake occurred.

Summary of this case from Ipock v. Gaskins

In Houser v. Belton, 32 N.C. 358, the jury were allowed to find that a corner which in the deed read "east" of a certain creek should have been written "west."

Summary of this case from Powers v. Baker

In Houser v. Belton, 32 N.C. 358, Judge Pearson gives the reason for the rule as follows: "Marked lines and corners control course and distance, because a mistake is less apt to be committed in reference to the former than the latter.

Summary of this case from Bowen v. Gaylord
Case details for

Houser v. Belton

Case Details

Full title:DEN ON DEMISE OF T. C. HOUSER ET AL. v. EWELL BELTON

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1849

Citations

32 N.C. 358 (N.C. 1849)

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