Barnes v. . Barnes

10 S.E. 304, 104 N.C. 613
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 S.E. 304 (Barnes v. . Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. . Barnes, 10 S.E. 304, 104 N.C. 613 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Merrimon, C. J.

— after stating the case: No question was raised by the pleadings, or on the trial in the Court below, so far as appears, as to the validity of the deed of trust in question. It was suggested, but not pressed, on the. argument in this Court, that it was invalid, upon the ground that it was made in contemplation of a separation of husband and wife, parties to it, and with that view. If this is so — and there exists substantial ground for the contention— the deed should be put in question, in that aspect of it, by a proper pleading. We cannot, upon the face of it, see and determine that it is or is not invalid for the cause suggested. For the present purpose and as it appears, we must treat and interpret it as a valid deed for the chief purpose specified in it, if such purpose is sufficiently expressed.

Generally and ordinarily, when a married woman brings an action, her husband must join with her in it, except “ when the action concerns her separate property,” or “ when the action is between herself and her husband.” The Code, *617 §178. But, if he will not join her, as he ought to do, she may make him a party defendant, if need be. McGlennery v. Miller, 90 N. C., 215.

In this case, it appears with sufficient certainty that the husband will not join his wife, the plaintiff Indeed, he is hostile to her alleged rights and the remedy by which she seeks to assert the same; and, moreover, it may turn out that she is entitled to some measure of redress as against him in connection with his co-defendant, so that the action coul 1 not be dismissed upon the ground that the husband did not join in it with his wife.

We are clearly of opinion that the action, as it appears to us from the record proper and the case stated on appeal, should not have been dismissed. The plaintiff alleges the deed — the chief-purpose of it to provide a support for herself — that the defendant trustee and his co-defendant have wholly neglected and refused to supply her reasonable wants and a support out of the rents and profits of the land; that the trustee has wholly neglected, at all times, to execute the trust; that she is seventy years old, poor, sick and infirm, and has had, for years, to rely upon the bounty of her kinsfolk for such support as she has had; that she has demanded of the trustee that he execute the trust; that he has always refused and neglected to do so, to her gréat injury; that the rents and profits of the land are equal to three hundred dollars per annum, &c.

The defendants admit some of the material allegations and deny others, and, particularly, the defendant trustee denies that he is such in any active or responsible sense, &c., &e., and alleges that his co-defendant has had possession of the land and received the rents and profits thereof, &c., &c.

The pleadings, taken in connection with the deed, make a case in -which the plaintiff is surely entitled to some relief, and she is entitled to assert her rights in this action. *618 Although a judgment at law for half the rents and profits of each year since the deed was executed is formally demanded in the complaint, general relief is also demanded, and the facts alleged, if, indeed, they are such, entitle the plaintiff to equitable relief.

The action is both legal and equitable in its nature and purpose, and the Court can proceed therein to compel the defendants to a due execution of the trust, and direct an account of the rents and profits of the land, and make all other necessary inquiries and directions to that end.

The allegations of the complaint are not so definite in all respects as they might and should be; still the Court can see the scope of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and it may, if need be, require the allegations to be made more precise and direct.

If the complaint alleges a- cause, or causes, of action at law, the plaintiff will be entitled only to one judgment at law, but when it alleges sufficiently a cause of action equitable in its nature, it will give such relief as the plaintiff may be entitled to have' — -indeed, the Court will, in a proper case, administer the principles, both of law and equity, in the same action. It seems that the defendants have misunderstood the nature, purpose and importance of the deed now to be interpreted, else they have wilfully been derelict in the discharge of what it made a plain duty on the part of the trustee. It is recited in the preamble of the deed that its purpose is to adjust differences, and to provide an adequate and sufficient support for” the plaintiff. “This was the leading, chief purpose of it. To that end, the land was conveyed to the defendant trustee, to have and to hold the same “to the following uses, and none other: That the said Sowers (the trustee) shall hold the said land, and to allow the said Samuel W. Barnes, and Margaret A. Barnes (the plaintiff) to have the rents and profit's thereof for their own use and behoof; and further, that out of the said rents *619 and profits to support the said Margaret Barnes in such manner as she has heretofore lived,” &c.

The defendant trustee signed this deed, and thus accepted the trust, and became chargeable with it, according to its true intent and meaning. This signing, on his part, was not a mere meaningless ceremony; it was important, and imported that he accepted the title to the land charged with the trust — he was to have and to hold it for the specified uses — to-wit, particularly to alloio his co-defendant and the plaintiff to have the rents and profits thereof for their own use and benefit, but with the further express provision, as to the wife, “ that out of the said rents and profits to support the said Margaret Barnes (the plaintiff) in such manner as she has heretofore lived,” &c. — that is, out of such rents and profits she was to have such support, if they were adequate for that purpose, though it might take the whole. This must be so, else this further provision is meaningless. That this interpretation is correct, is the more manifest because it harmonizes with the recital in the preamble of the deed, which declares that the purpose of the latter is “to provide an adequate and sufficient support for” the plaintiff. The clear purpose was to provide for her such support as she had, before the execution of the deed, been accustomed to have, and that she should have, devoted to that purpose, so much of the rents and profits of the land as might be necessary. The surplus was intended for the husband. The deed does not provide that the plaintiff shall have one-half, one-third, or any definite part, of the rents and profits, or accumulations therefrom, but current “adequate and sufficient support.”

What this is will depend on what she has, what she reasonably needs, her health, necessary incidental expenses, living in the like sphere and condition as she did before the provision was made for her. The plaintiff alleges that the defend *620

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Related

Perkins v. Brinkley.
45 S.E. 541 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1903)
State v. Jones
132 N.C. 1043 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.E. 304, 104 N.C. 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-barnes-nc-1889.