Citation Numbers: 80 S.E. 424, 164 N.C. 56, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 9
Judges: Clark, Hoxe
Filed Date: 12/13/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
CLARK, C. J., dissenting. HOKE, J., did not sit.
After stating the case: We are of opinion that the defendants in this case are completely foreclosed by the judge's findings *Page 49
of fact. Parties can have their causes tried by jury, by reference, or by the court. They may waive the right of trial by jury by consenting that the judge may try the case without a jury, in which event he finds the facts and declares the law arising thereon. Revisal, sec. 540. His findings of fact are conclusive, unless proper exception is made in apt time that there is no evidence to support his findings or any one or more of them. The present Chief Justice, in Matthews v. Fry,
"1. That after the due execution of the said deed by the defendants Franklin, and the probate of the same by the said justice of the peace, the said deed was delivered to the said defendant W. C. Clark, for said Raymond Buchanan, who was then in the State of Kentucky.
"2. That at the time of the execution of the first deed, the grantors therein and the said W. C. Clark intended that the land in controversy should belong to Raymond Buchanan in fee simple."
Conceding for the sake of discussion, that the defendant W. C. Clark has distinctly excepted, upon the ground that there is no evidence to sustain this finding, which may be questionable, we yet think that the evidence is sufficient for the purpose. The deed was prepared on 16 March, 1910; actually delivered to defendant W. C. Clark on the same day, for *Page 50 Raymond Buchanan, his son, after having been duly probated, and was registered 8 May, 1912. C. F. Franklin testified that he delivered the deed to W. C. Clark, who said that he "wanted the land deeded to Raymond." Mrs. Franklin testified that "W. C. Clark had them (62) to make the deed to Raymond, so his other children could not knock him out of it," and further, that W. C. Clark took the deed, said nothing about delivery, but that he wanted Raymond to have it. The second deed was executed by the Franklins to W. C. Clark after the death of Raymond Buchanan, and on 21 November, 1911, and there was no consideration for it. The Franklins told Clark they did not want to make the second deed, as it was illegal, they having already made one to Raymond Buchanan, and Clark gave them the paper-writing, agreeing thereby to indemnify them against damages for making the second deed. All this, of itself, was evidence sufficient to support the findings, without any reference to other testimony in the case. There could not well be a "second" deed unless there had been a "first" one. The Franklins simply signed the paper, acknowledged it as their act and deed before the justice, and delivered it to W. C. Clark, who accepted it with the distinct understanding between them that he held it for his natural son, Raymond Buchanan. This was all done at the time. He so held it for a year and eight months or more, and then the second deed was made.
After the first deed had vested the fee-simple estate absolutely in Raymond Buchanan, nothing that the parties did afterwards, without his consent, could divest it. It makes no difference what the undisclosed or unexpressed intention of W. C. Clark was; having received the deed for his son, he is bound by his act, and the title then passed from the grantors, the Franklins, to Raymond Buchanan. The deed had passed out of the possession of the Franklins and they had lost control of it and all power of recall, and they so regarded the transactions. This is the supreme test of a delivery. In Phillips v. Houston,
The plaintiff, who is his heir, expressly assents to the conveyance, and, therefore, holds an irrevocable title to the land conveyed by the deed. No one, it is true, can be forced to take a title against his will, but the right of dissent prevents this from being done. It is the delivery to the third person for the grantee that passes the title, upon his presumed assent; the deed, though, is put beyond the control of the grantor, and his power of recall is forever gone, because, as to him, it has been delivered. This is the principle established in the earliest period of this Court, and it has been followed ever since. It was illustrated practically in Phillips v. Houston,
It is unquestionable, too, that probate and registration of a deed furnish presumptive proof of its delivery, and were, therefore, additional evidence to sustain the finding of the fact. Fortune v. Hunt, supra. They were more than this, being prima facie evidence of the delivery, and sufficient in themselves and even as against opposing proof, to support the finding as to the fact of delivery, it being for the judge, acting like a jury would, to weigh the evidence and decide upon its preponderance. If there was any evidence, as we have shown, the finding cannot be disturbed.
The supplemental finding as to the intention of W. C. Clark, that his son should have the land, as his part of the estate, so that he could share with the other children, tends to strengthen the views already stated. The death of his son so soon was an event he may not have contemplated, but it was accidental, and did not alter the fact of the delivery, or tend to disprove it, but rather the contrary.
The act of 1885, ch. 147 (Revisal, sec. 980), has no application, as defendant is admittedly not a purchaser for value, and the judge so finds, and the circumstances of the case would exclude him from its benefits.Austin v. Staten,
Of course, the decision of this case must rest upon a correct understanding and statement of the facts as found by the court. The salient facts are these:
1. That after the due execution of the deed by the Franklins to Raymond Buchanan, and the probate of the same by the justice of the peace, it was delivered unconditionally to the defendant W. C. Clark, for Raymond Buchanan, who was then in the State of Kentucky. This is the judge's sixth finding of fact. *Page 54
(67) 2. The deed of the Franklins to Raymond Buchanan was executed and delivered by them to W. C. Clark for him 16 March, 1910, and the subsequent deed of the Franklins to W. C. Clark, which they told Clark they did not have the right to make, was executed on 21 November, 1911, or one year and eight months after the delivery of the other deed, and not even anything said between them about it during this long interval of time.
3. W. C. Clark, on that day (21 November, 1911), when he insisted on the execution of the deed to him by the Franklins and gave them the writing admitting the execution of the prior deed, had full actual notice of the latter deed. This is admitted. This, of course, is not notice under the Connor Act, but he was not a purchaser for value, as the judge expressly finds, having paid nothing for the deed. This was also admitted on the argument. To hold that he is protected by that statute would violate its very principle, and would enable him to perpetrate a fraud upon his son, for whom he voluntarily held the other deed.
4. It is perfectly clear that the Franklins parted with the possession of the deed with intent to pass the title to Raymond Buchanan and put the same beyond their control or recall. They so say, and the judge so finds. They could not have recovered the deed or the land by action. The title, therefore, passed out of them, and there is no one in whom it could have vested except Raymond Buchanan, as there was no intention in the minds of the parties to vest it in any one else. W. C. Clark so understood it, as he said: "I gave the deed to my wife to hold; I was acting for this boy, though he did not know it, and I was not his agent." But this is evidence, and we must abide by the facts as found by the judge, which plainly fix him with the intention to accept the deed, not for himself, nor for any one else, but his son alone. No subsequent change of mind can affect the result.
5. The additional finding of the court, under the certiorari, goes no further than to show an undisclosed or unexpressed intention of W. C. Clrak [Clark] to do something which he did not do at the proper time, and is based altogether upon evidence as to what he afterwards, and long afterwards, said about it, and after his son had died. He could not (68) thus recall a delivery already completely made, and if we should so hold, no man's deed would be safe from attack, and every title in this State would be in constant jeopardy, depending, not upon what a grantor may have done, but upon his uncommunicated intentions or the thoughts hidden in the inner recesses of his mind, even if he had them. It will place every grantee at the mercy of his grantor.
No error is disclosed in the record.
No error.
HOKE, J., not sitting. *Page 55
Matthews v. Fry. , 143 N.C. 384 ( 1906 )
Fortune v. . Hunt , 149 N.C. 358 ( 1908 )
Helms v. . Austin , 116 N.C. 751 ( 1895 )
Avent v. . Arrington , 105 N.C. 377 ( 1890 )
Cannon v. . Blair , 229 N.C. 606 ( 1948 )
Johnson v. . Johnson , 229 N.C. 541 ( 1948 )
In Re Craddock , 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 1220 ( 2009 )
Fish v. . Hanson , 223 N.C. 143 ( 1943 )
Thomas v. . Carteret County , 182 N.C. 374 ( 1921 )
Allen v. . Allen , 209 N.C. 744 ( 1936 )
Odom v. . Palmer , 209 N.C. 93 ( 1935 )
Ballard v. Ballard , 230 N.C. 629 ( 1949 )
Hill v. . Lindsay , 210 N.C. 694 ( 1936 )
Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. ... , 207 N.C. 63 ( 1934 )
Faircloth v. . Johnson , 189 N.C. 429 ( 1925 )
City of Goldsboro v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. , 246 N.C. 101 ( 1957 )
Town of Burnsville v. Boone , 231 N.C. 577 ( 1950 )
Corbett v. Corbett , 249 N.C. 585 ( 1959 )
Watson v. United States , 34 F. Supp. 777 ( 1940 )
Nationwide Homes of Raleigh, N. C., Inc. v. First-Citizens ... , 267 N.C. 528 ( 1966 )
Harrison v. City of New Bern , 193 N.C. 555 ( 1927 )
Ex Parte Barefoot , 201 N.C. 393 ( 1931 )
Baushar v. . Willis , 210 N.C. 52 ( 1936 )