98-3. Establishing boundaries and interest, where conveyance and copy lost.
When any conveyance of real estate, or of any right or interest therein, is lost, the registry thereof being also destroyed, any person claiming under the same may cause the boundaries thereof to be established in the manner provided in the Chapter entitled Boundaries, or he may proceed in the following manner to establish both the boundaries and the nature of his estate:
He shall file his petition before the clerk of the superior court, setting forth the whole substance of the conveyance as truly and specifically as he can, the location and boundaries of his land, whose land it adjoins, the estate claimed therein, and a prayer to have his own boundaries established and the nature of his estate declared.
All persons claiming any estate in the premises, and those whose lands adjoin, shall be notified of the proceedings. Unless they or some of them, by answer on oath, deny the truth of all or some of the matters alleged, the clerk shall order a surveyor to run and designate the boundaries of the petitioner's land, and return his survey, with a plot thereof, to the court. This, when confirmed, shall, with the declaration of the court as to the nature of the estate of the petitioner, be registered and have, as to the persons notified, the effect of a deed for the same, executed by the person possessed of the same next before the petitioner. But in all cases, however, wherein the process of surveying is disputed, and the surveyor is forbidden to proceed by any person interested, the same proceedings shall be had as under the Chapter entitled Boundaries.
If any of the persons notified deny by answer the truth of the conveyance, the clerk shall transfer the issues of fact to the superior court, to be tried as other issues of fact are required by law to be tried; and on the verdict and the pleadings the judge shall adjudge the rights of the parties, and declare the contents of the deed, if any deed is found by the jury, and allow the registration of such judgment and declaration, which shall have the force and effect of a deed. (1865-6, c. 41, s. 3; Code, s. 56; Rev., s. 328; C.S., s. 367; 1973, c. 108, s. 44.)
Structure North Carolina General Statutes
North Carolina General Statutes
Chapter 98 - Burnt and Lost Records
§ 98-1 - Copy of destroyed record as evidence; may be recorded.
§ 98-2 - Originals may be again recorded.
§ 98-3 - Establishing boundaries and interest, where conveyance and copy lost.
§ 98-4 - Copy of lost will may be probated.
§ 98-5 - Copy of lost will as evidence; letters to issue.
§ 98-6 - Establishing contents of will, where original and copy destroyed.
§ 98-7 - Perpetuating destroyed judgments and proceedings.
§ 98-8 - Color of title under destroyed instrument.
§ 98-9 - Action on destroyed bond.
§ 98-10 - Destroyed witness tickets; duplicates may be filed.
§ 98-11 - Replacing lost official conveyances.
§ 98-12 - Court records as proof of destroyed instruments set out therein.
§ 98-13 - Copies contained in court records may be recorded.
§ 98-14 - Rules for petitions and motions.
§ 98-15 - Records allowed under this Chapter to have effect of original records.
§ 98-17 - Conveyances reciting court records prima facie evidence thereof.
§ 98-18 - Court records and conveyances to which Chapter extends.