Orange County, NC - McKerall v. Cheek, 1823 ~~~~~~~~~~ Den on Demise of McKerall v. Cheek, Tenant in Possession, and Kirkland, Landlord - From Orange A sheriff's deed for 300 acres of land was offered in evidence. It was proved that the sheriff intended to convey but 125 acres; that he was ignorant of the courses of the land, and that he would not have signed the deed if the courses had not been inserted in such way as to deceive him with respect to the quantity. The court below held the deed to be conclusive; this Court grants a new trial because the judge should have left it to the jury to say whether the deed was fairly or fraudulently obtained, for a court of law has cognizance of the question as well as a court of equity. Ejectment. The lessor of the plaintiff, to support his title, produced a grant from the State for the land in dispute (A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L,) to Robert Cheek, the elder, bearing date 13 March, 1780; a judgment in Orange County court, obtained August Term, 1817, against Robert Cheek, the elder, and execution thereon; a judgment in Orange Superior Court, at September Term, 1817, against Robert Cheek, the elder, and execution on it, and the sheriff's deed to himself, dated 27 February, 1818, describing the land by the boundaries of the original patent and purporting to convey 125 acres of land. (Diagram appears here) The defendant admitted himself to be in possession of all the lands except those included in the lines C, D, E, M; of that part the plaintiff was in possession. The defendant produced a judgment in Orange court against James Cheek, and an execution under which the lands A, B, C, M, I, K, L had been levied on and sold by the sheriff to William Kirkland, by deed dated in August, 1820. He showed also another judgment against Robert Cheek, the elder, at March Term, 1818, of Orange Superior Court, an execution thereon and a sale by the sheriff to William Kirkland of the lands A, B, C, M, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, as the lands of Robert Cheek the elder, on 7 August, 1820. The defendant then called witnesses to prove that, more than 30 years before, James Cheek had purchased from Robert Cheek, the elder, the tract A, B, C, M, I, K, L, paid him for it, entered into possession, had it surveyed, the line C, M, I, marked between them, and that James had ever since lived on it and occupied it exclusivly as his own. The court rejected the evidence of any agreement between Robert and James whereby James became the purchaser, unless the land was actually conveyed by deed, upon the ground that such evidence would not show the legal title to be out of the plaintiff, which alone could be regarded in this action. The defendant then alleged that the three pieces of land in the plat were separate and distinct from each other, and that McKerall had only purchased C, D, E, M; and to prove this point he called several witnesses, from whose testimony it appeared that the portions of land described in the diagram as James' and Robert's land were sold to them respectively many years ago by their father, old Robert Cheek; that no deeds were executed, but that they had exercised over them acts of ownership ever since they purchased; that their boundaries were clearly marked out, and that it was the general understanding through the neighborhood that Robert Cheek, the elder, owned only C, D, E, M. The officer who sold the land described it as the place where old Robert Cheek lived, and all his interest therein, supposed to contain 125 acres, more or less; he did not think it included the lands on which James and Robert lived, nor did he so represent it, and the sheriff, when requested to sign a deed describing the land by metes and bounds as containing 300 acres, refused to do so, from a belief that only 125 acres were sold. The court charged the jury that it appeared all the three pieces of land had originally been one tract, whereof the title was in Robert Cheek, the elder, and he had never actually conveyed it to his sons or either of them, and that all the interest of Robert, the elder, had been sold and conveyed by the sheriff to McKerall, and that, although at the sale it was described as containing 125 acres, more or less, yet his legal interest extended to the whole tract of 300 acres, and the sheriff had conveyed it by metes and bounds, which included the 300 acres, whereby the whole tract passed, though called in the deed 125 acres, more or less. And that under these circumstances the sheriff's deed was the highest evidence of what land was sold, notwithstanding the testimony of the witnesses, and that it was conclusive evidence of the plaintiff's right and entitled him to recover. Verdict for the plaintiff, new trial refused, judgment and appeal. Hall, J. It seems that the sheriff conveyed the land in question not only without knowing it, but contrary to a determination he had made not do do it, because he considered that he had only levied upon and sold 125 acres, the land on which Robert Cheek, the elder, lived. Nor could he have been prevailed upon to convey it if the courses including it had not been inserted in a way calculated to deceive him, by estimating the whole amount conveyed at 125 acres, more or less; for he was altogether unacquainted with the courses. Design or fraud practiced upon innocence and ignorance in this way ought not to have the effect to deprive men of their rights and put it out of the power of courts of common law to restore them. I do not concur in the opinion that the deed executed by the sheriff is conclusive and binds the title. I do not hesitate to say that the rule for a new trial should be made absolute. Henderson, J. Whether the deed of the sheriff fairly obtained shall be conclusive on the parties and all claiming under them we do not deem it necessary to decide, for we think a preliminary question fairly grows out of the evidence, which should have been distinctly propounded by the judge to the jury, namely, whether the deed was fairly or fraudently obtained; for a court of law has cognizance of the question, as well as a court of equity. This question fairly arises upon the evidence; the judge erred in telling the jury that the deed was conclusive without evidence of what the sheriff sold, without calling their attention to the circumstances under which it was executed and informing them that it did not pass the lands in controversy, if fraudulently obtained. Taylor, C. J., concurred. Per Curiam New Trial Cited: Dobson v. Erwin, 18 N.C., 573; McArthur v. Johnson, 61 N.C., 320, 321. Source: NC Reports, Vol. 9, 343 - 1822-1823 Orig. 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