Citation Numbers: 131 S.E. 729, 191 N.C. 359
Judges: Brogden
Filed Date: 3/10/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On 7 October, 1909, W. C. Dixon conveyed to Charitable Brotherhood No. 4, a lot of land 40 by 45 feet, the deed not having been recorded until 9 November, 1922. On 3 February, 1921, the said Dixon conveyed the entire five-acre lot, including defendant's lot, to the plaintiff, Lee, who recorded his deed on 7 February, 1921. This suit was instituted by the plaintiff against the defendant for the purpose of setting aside defendant's deed to the end that plaintiff's title "be quieted." The defendant in its answer alleged that at the time the said Dixon *Page 360 conveyed the entire property to the plaintiff it was understood and agreed that defendant's lot should be excepted from the operation of said deed and that by mutual mistake of the parties and inadvertence of the draftsman defendant's lot was not excepted from plaintiff's deed, and the defendant prayed that the deed be reformed to carry out and effectuate the intention of the parties and to correct the mistake so made.
The following issues were submitted to the jury: (1) Did the parties by inadvertence and mutual mistake fail to except in the deed from W. C. Dixon and wife to R. H. Lee, the land described in the deed from W. C. Dixon and wife to Charitable Brotherhood Lodge No. 4, Grantsboro, North Carolina? (2) Is the plaintiff, R. H. Lee, the owner and entitled to the possession of the land described in the deed from W. C. Dixon and wife to Charitable Brotherhood Lodge No. 4, at Grantsboro, North Carolina?
The jury for its verdict answered the first issue, "Yes," and the second issue, "No." Judgment was entered upon the verdict and the plaintiff appealed. The decisive question, presented, is whether or not the grantee in a deed for a portion of property, prior in date, though subsequently registered, is entitled to invoke the equity of reformation, occasioned by mutual mistake, against the grantee in a deed for the entire property, subsequent in date but prior in registration, it being conceded that both deeds were made by the same grantor, who is not a party to the action.
The identical question was presented and answered in the affirmative in the case of Sills v. Ford,
The Sills case, supra, has been cited with approval many times, and the principle announced disposes of the main question involved in this appeal.
The plaintiff, however, excepts to the ruling of the trial judge in admitting testimony of the grantor of his intention to exempt from the conveyance the lot of defendant. This evidence was competent. In Maxwell v.Bank,
Plaintiff further assigns as error the testimony of the grantor as to a "verbal option" given to real estate agents to sell the land. The exact testimony of the witness was: "I put it in the hands of Rawls Tingle, the real estate men, to sell for me. It was a verbal option." It is clear that the contract referred to was no more than a mere authority to a broker to sell real estate and such authority is not required to be in writing.Abbott v. Hunt,
The plaintiff excepts to the testimony of the stenographer who drew the deed and who was instructed to exempt the defendant's lot therefrom. She testified as follows: "I drew the deed. I have forgotten what instructions were given me with reference to the Brotherhood lot." Thereupon, this question was asked: "What was said about where the Brotherhood land was to go, whether in the lot or not?" The witness answered "to exempt the Brotherhood lot." The plaintiff contends that the witness having first said that she had forgotten what instructions were given, and having afterwards said that she was instructed to exempt the Brotherhood lot, that her testimony should be stricken out. This only raises the question as to the credibility of the witness, and her credibility and the weight to be given her testimony was for the jury.
The record discloses no reversible error and the judgment must be
Affirmed. *Page 362
Sills v. . Ford , 171 N.C. 733 ( 1916 )
Lamb v. Baxter. , 130 N.C. 67 ( 1902 )
Abbott v. Hunt. , 129 N.C. 403 ( 1901 )