{
  "id": 11270941,
  "name": "C. N. NORWOOD et als. v. JOHN TOTTEN et als.",
  "name_abbreviation": "Norwood v. Totten",
  "decision_date": "1914-09-30",
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    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
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    "parties": [
      "C. N. NORWOOD et als. v. JOHN TOTTEN et als."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Clark, O. J.\nFrances A. D. Norwood, who was the second wife of Mebane A. J. Norwood, on 11 October, 1905, executed a \u25a0deed to the premises to her husband, whose heirs at law are the plaintiffs. Her privy examination was not taken. She died \u25a0\u25a0about a month thereafter, having had no issue born. The defendants are her. heirs at law. The jury find, under proper instructions, that said husband and his children by the first wife have been in adverse possession under said deed more than seven years. This deed was offered merely as color of title, and the court properly held that it was sufficient for the purpose.\nJudge Henderson s definition of color of title, in Tate v. Southard, 10 N. C., 121, is, \u201ca writing, upon its face professing to pass title, but which does not do it, either-from want of title in the person making it or the defective mode of conveyance used.\u201d He added: \u201cIt must not be plainly and obviously defective, so much so that no man of ordinary capacity could be misled by it.\u201d\nJudge Gaston's definition of color of title is to be found in Dobson v. Murphy, 18 N. C., 586, as follows: \u201cSome written document of title, professing to pass tbe land, and one not so obviously defective that it could not have misled a man of ordinary capacity.\u201d This has been approved in Ellington v. Ellington, 153 N. C., 154; Avent v. Arrington, 105 N. C., 390; Keener v, Goodson, 89 N. C., 277, and other cases.\nThe definition by Judge Hoke in Smith v. Proctor, 139 N. C., 324, is that \u201cColor of title is a paper-writing (usually a deed) which professes and appears to pass the title, but fails to do so.\u201d This appears to us to be the best and clearest definition of the three.\nApplying that to this deed, the judge was correct in holding the deed to be color of title. In Pearse v. Owens, 3 N. C., 415, it was held that a deed from husband and wife, to which her private examination had not been taken, and which, therefore, was not valid, was color of title. This was cited with approval in McConnell v. McConnell, 64 N. C., 342, and is quoted in Perry v. Perry, 99 N. C., 273. In Ellington v. Ellington, 103 N. C., 58, Smith, C. J., also holds that a deed from husband and wife, to which the privy examination of the wife has not been taken, is color of title sufficient to ripen title under adverse possession.\nIn Smith v. Allen, 112 N. C., 226, it is held, citing Perry v. Perry, supra, and other cases, that \u201ca deed to which the privy examination of the married woman is not taken is color of title.\u201d In Greenleaf v. Bartlett, 146 N. C., 198, Connor, J., in reviewing the authorities, quotes with approval the above cases of Pearse v. Owens and Perry v. Perry, that a \u201cdeed conveying the real estate of a' married woman, without private examination, is color of title.\u201d\nIt may here be noted that the requirement of the private examination of a married woman to any conveyance was long ago abolished in England and in nearly all the States of this Union, including our adjacent States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, and Virginia. Besides North Carolina, there are only four other States in the Union retaining such requirement, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, and Texas. 1 A. and E. Enc., 522, 523. In many States it bas been abolished by statute. In others it has been held that words substantially like those in -our Constitution, Art. X, sec. 6, giving a married woman the right to convey her realty \u201cas if she were unmarried\u201d per se prohibit the requirement of a privy examination in her conveyance, and indeed the requirement in our Constitution of a private examination is made only (Art. X, sec. 6) as to the conveyance by the husband of his homestead. However, this Court, in a majority opinion, has held that it will require a statute to abolish the exaction of a privy examination. Weathers v. Borders, 124 N. C., 610.\n\u201cAcknowledgment is not ordinarily essential to the validity of an instrument. Consequently an instrument properly executed in other respects but defectively acknowledged is good against everybody except subsequent creditors and purchasers without notice. No one else can take advantage of-the defect. . . . The fact that an instrument is defectively acknowledged will not affect its operative force as against the grantor and his heirs.\u201d 1 Oyc., 526, 527, and many cases cited.\nIt is true that this is a conveyance from the wife to the husband, and that Eev., 2107, requires, as t'o contracts by the wife with the husband, that the officer, besides the certificate of privy examination, must certify that such contract \u201cis not unreasonable or injurious to her.\u201d\nIf, however, it had been required that such certificate as to the reasonableness of the transaction should be embraced in the certificate to conveyances, its absence would have no more effect than the absence of the certificate of a privy examination, that is, while it would invalidate the conveyance, it would npt prevent it from being color of title.\nTreating this defect in the acknowledgment as fatal to the validity of this deed, it was sufficient as color of title which was ripened by seven years adverse possession, under our authorities as above quoted. The same is the general doctrine elsewhere according to cases cited in 1 Oyc., 1087, which are summarized: \u201cA deed which purports to convey title will give color of title, though it be not acknowledged or though it be defectively acknowledged.\u201d\nThe evidence here of adverse possession from the death of the wife, the grantor, is amply sufficient. The building of a house on the land was not the beginning of the adverse possession, but only additional evidence. When the wife died, having had no children, the husband did not have tenancy by the curtesy, and the title went to her heirs at law, and possession by her husband became adverse to them, unless the contrary was shown, for the evidence was that he and his son after him, either in person or by their tenant, occupied and cultivated the land under known and visible metes and bounds for seven years.\nThe description of the land in the deed, after naming the township and county, \u201cadjoining the land of John Stone on the north and west, and Hargrove heirs on the east, and Samuel Culbertson on the south, and bounded as follows, viz., containing 30 acres more or less,\u201d is not void for uncertainty, but the tract could be identified by parol evidence, if there had been any controversy in that regard. Hudson v. Morton, 162 N. C., 6; Perry v. Scott, 109 N. C., 377; Farmer v. Batts, 83 N. C., 387, where a list of descriptions is set out, some being held too indefinite and others not too indefinite to admit of parol testimony.\nNo error.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Clark, O. J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "B. H. Huyes for plaintiffs.",
      "A. G. Ray and Maness & Carver for defendants."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "C. N. NORWOOD et als. v. JOHN TOTTEN et als.\n(Filed 30 September, 1914.)\n1. Deeds and Conveyances \u2014 Married Women \u2014 Conveyance to Husband\u2014 Privy Examination \u2014 Certificate of Probate Officers\u2014 \u201cColor\u201d \u2014 Limitations of Actions.\nA conveyance of land by tlie wife to her husband without her privy examination and the-certificate of the probate officer that the contract \u201cis not unreasonable or injurious to her\u201d (Revisal, sec. 2107) is \u201ccolor of title\u201d which will ripen into a perfect title by seven years adverse possession of the husband, and his children by a former marriage after her death, there being no issue born alive by the second marriage and therefore no tenancy by curtesy of the husband in the lands.\n2. \u201cColor of Title\u201d \u2014 Approved Definition.\nDefinition of \u201ccolor of title\u201d in Smith v. Proctor, 139 N. C., 324, specially approved.\n3. Deeds and Conveyances \u2014 Description\u2014Parol Evidence \u2014 Identification.\nA description of lands in a deed, after naming tlie township and county, continued as follows: \u201cAdjoining the lands of J. S. on the north and west, and the H. heirs on the east, and S. O. on the south, and bounded as follows: Containing 30 acres, more or less,\u201d is sufficient to admit of parol evidence of identification.\nThe constitutional necessity for the wife\u2019s privy examination in a deed to her lands questioned and discussed by Cl\u00e1kk, C. J.\nAppeal by defendants from Peebles, J., at May Term, 1914, of Chatham.\nThis action was begun before the clerk for the partition of land, and upon a plea of sole seizin it was transferred to the civil-issue docket, and tried before a jury. Verdict and judgment for plaintiffs. Appeal by defendants.\nB. H. Huyes for plaintiffs.\nA. G. Ray and Maness & Carver for defendants."
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  "file_name": "0648-01",
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