Reed v. Reed
Decision Date | 28 November 1910 |
Docket Number | 14761 |
Citation | 53 So. 691,98 Miss. 350 |
Court | Mississippi Supreme Court |
Parties | JOHN A. REED v. ROBERT REED |
October, 1910
APPEAL from the Chancery court of Washington county, HON. M. E DENTON, Chancellor.
Bill in chancery by John A. Reed against Robert Reed, to cancel a tax deed as a cloud upon his title. From a decree in favor of complainant, defendant appeals.
The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court.
Decree affirmed.
Shields & Boddie, for appellant.
It is an undoubted rule of law that a deed of real estate, to be effective as a conveyance, must designate a grantee otherwise, no title passes. The designation of a grantee is just as necessary to the validity as the grantor and the description of the property. 9 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 132 states the rule as follows:
Numerous authorities have been cited by counsel in support of their construction of the deed under consideration. These cases are in point only so far as they declare general rules of construction. In none of them was the deed being considered identical in language with that before us. It is a general rule, applicable to all written instruments, that courts, in construing them, will, when possible, adopt a construction which will give effect, rather than one which defeats them. The Michigan court in Newton v. McKay, supra--a case quite similar to the case at bar, --uses this language: In the above case the grantor was named as party of the first part, and one Genereaux as party of the second part. The grantee's name did not appear in the granting clause. It was held that, in as much as no other name appeared in the instrument, Genereaux was sufficiently identified as the grantee. The language which we have quoted from the opinion was expressly approved in Vineyard v. O'Connor (Tex. Sup.), 36 S.W. 424, and it states a generally accepted rule of construction. Tested by the foregoing, does the deed in question designate a grantee? We are clear that it does. It recites that the consideration was paid by John P. Walker. That fact alone raises a very strong, but perhaps not a conclusive presumption that he was intended as grantee. But we do not rest our conclusion on this presumption. But three persons are named in the deed. The first two--F. T. Walker and Maggie Walker--are grantors. The other person named is John P. Walker. The deed, after reciting that the consideration is paid by John P. Walker, declares that the grant is unto said; that is, to some person or persons thereto named. The only person to whom it can possibly refer, is John P. Walker, for the grantors could not convey to themselves, and no other persons are named. Through a clerical omission, Walker's was not repeated in the blank in the granting clause, but he had already been named, and, had the blank been filled, no other name than his could have been inserted. The language as it stands forbids it. Our conclusion is, that the deed designates John P. Walker by name as grantee with entire certainty, and is therefore a valid instrument.
Now we submit that there is absolutely no difference between the foregoing cases and the case at bar, except that this case is a tax deed. But why should that fact alone render the deed to Jno. A. Reed void? Is not the only person, to whom it can possibly refer as grantee, Jno. A. Reed? Is not Jno. A. Reed designated as grantee in the deed, with as great certainty as was John P. Walker in one case, and Genereaux in the other? Can any one doubt who was the purchaser--the grantee--in the deed? ...
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