Boone v. Pritchett, 163

Decision Date10 April 1963
Docket NumberNo. 163,163
Citation130 S.E.2d 288,259 N.C. 226
PartiesHazel BOONE, Judy Carter, Maggie Parker, Flossie Parker, Eulah Phillips, Eddie Walton, Pearlie Watson, Heirs at Law of the Estate of Dempsey Walton, Appellants, v. J. A. PRITCHETT, Commissioner, B. U. Griffin and Charles Griffin, Sons and Heirs at Law of C. B. Griffin and L. H. Griffin, L. S. Mizelle, Guardian Ad Litem, Appellees.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

Conrad O. Pearson, W. G. Pearson, II, and F. B. McKissick, Durham, for plaintiff appellants.

Pritchett & Cooke, Windsor, for defendant appellees.

SHARP, Justice.

Plaintiffs claim the thirty acres, described in paragraph ten of the complaint as the 'Julia Walton Home Place,' located in Woodville Township, Bertie County, North Carolina, as heirs of Dempsey Walton. The source of their alleged claim is the deed dated November 6, 1878, by which Hezekiah Griffin purported to convey fifty-six acres of land, more or less, to Dempsey Walton. The description in that instrument, as set out in paragraph three of the complaint, is quoted verbatim in the facts above. It discloses positively that the deed is void for vagueness and uncertainty of description. It contains no courses and distances and no reference to any source by which evidence aliunde could identify the land. Holloman v. Davis, 238 N.C. 386, 78 S.E.2d 143; Carrow v. Davis, 248 N.C. 740, 105 S.E.2d 60. There is no allegation that the Dempsey Walton land is in Bertie County but, assuming that it is, Bertie County is bounded on one side by the Roanoke River; on the other, by the Chowan River. It has many miles of river road and myriads of gum and red oak trees. If Green Branch is a known stream, the gum on the bank from which to begin an uncertain trek up the branch to another gum, is not.

If it be conceded that Dempsey Walton owned a tract of land containing approximately fifty-six acres somewhere in Bertie County, the complaint does not justify the inference that the thirty acres which J. A. Pritchett, commissioner, conveyed to L. H. Griffin are a part of it. The demurrer was properly sustained for failure to state a cause of action. Thompson v. Umberger, 221 N.C. 178, 19 S.E.2d 484.

Since L. S. Mizelle died in 1956, he is not only an improper party but an impossible party. The complaint contains no allegation that J. A. Pritchett, commissioner, was ever in possession of the land or received any rents and profits from it. The court correctly ruled that he was an improper par...

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