Bevan v. . Ellis

28 S.E. 471, 121 N.C. 224
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 471 (Bevan v. . Ellis) 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
Bevan v. . Ellis, 28 S.E. 471, 121 N.C. 224 (N.C. 1897).

Opinions

CLARK, J., dissents arguendo. The action, commenced on 7 January, 1896, was to subject to the payment of plaintiff's judgment, rendered and docketed in 1872, land which had been allotted to the judgment debtor as a homestead, but which had *Page 191 been conveyed by the judgment debtor thereafter, and by mesne conveyances had been acquired by defendants.

The court, upon the request of the defendants, instructed the jury, that, inasmuch as the allotment of the homestead was not (228) registered in the office of the Register of Deeds of Franklin County until 21 January, 1897, and that inasmuch as it was admitted that several defendants had entered upon the lands described in the complaint, under the deeds executed to them, which were color of title, and had been in possession of said tracts of land under known and visible boundaries for seven years before the beginning of this action, that they should answer the issue "Yes."

The jury responded accordingly, and the plaintiff excepted.

There was a motion for a new trial by the plaintiff. Motion overruled, and plaintiff excepted and appealed. At the Fall Term, 1872, of Franklin Superior (229) Court, Samuel Bevan, William A. Williams, and Edgar Miller, trading under the firm name of Samuel Bevan Co., obtained a judgment against R. A. Speed for money and costs, and under an execution issued on the judgment, returnable to the Spring Term, 1873, of that court, the sheriff had, through appraisers, the homestead of the defendant allotted to him. The allotment embraced the whole of the debtor's real estate and was returned by the sheriff to the clerk of the court soon after it was made, and it was filed by the clerk at that time in the judgment roll in the case, where it has been ever since. The clerk of the court, however, did not send a certified copy of the homestead return to the register of deeds, nor was the same registered until after the commencement of this action.

The defendant homesteader is dead, his widow owns a homestead in her own right, and the youngest child is more than 21 years old, and Edgar Miller, as surviving partner of the original plaintiffs, brought this action on 7 January, 1896, to subject the homestead to the payment of the judgment of 1872 as a first lien. The defendants claim title to the land, which was the homestead, under mesne conveyances, and set up their several answers back to deeds from Speed and wife, of dates 1876, 1877, 1878, and aver that they bought without notice of the allotment of the homestead, the allotment not having been registered in the office of the register of deeds.

Two questions are presented in the record for our decision. The first is whether it is necessary to have the appraisers' return of the allotment *Page 192 of the homestead registered in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the homestead is situated, and also to have it filed in the judgment roll of the action in which the judgment was had, in order to make the judgment lien valid and binding on the homestead until (230) the homestead estate shall expire; and the second is whether the lien of a judgment procured in 1872, the homestead having been duly allotted, continues only during the ten years next after the rendition of the judgment, or whether it lasts during the continuance of the homestead estate.

We will now take up, in order, the discussion of the first question.

The Code, sec. 504, which is section 4, chapter 137, Laws 1868-'69, requires that "The appraisers shall then make and sign, in the presence of the officer, a return of their proceedings, setting forth the property exemption, which shall be returned by the officer to the clerk of the county in which the homestead is situated, and filed with the judgment roll in the action, and a minute of the same entered on the judgment docket, and a certified copy thereof, under the hand of the clerk, shall be registered in the office of the register of deeds for the county. . . ." The defendants' counsel cited the case of Smith v. Hunt, 68 N.C. 482, as an authority for the indispensable necessity of the registration in the office of the register of deeds of the homestead allotment and return. That case did not present that point. There the homestead and personal property exemptions appeared to have been allotted and appraised by petition before a justice of the peace, and the only point presented arose upon the complete failure of the return to show a descriptive list of the personal property which was set apart as the personal property exemption of the debtor. The return of the appraisement and allotment had been duly registered, but because of a lack of description of the personal property in the allotment, the proceeding was in that case held void by this Court.

Registration in the office of the register of deeds is clearly indispensable in cases where the allotment of the homestead exemption (231) is made on the petition of the homesteader, as was the case in Smith v. Hunt, supra, for the reason that there is no other method which could reasonably give notice of the allotment.

In Gulley v. Cole, 96 N.C. 447, the judge who delivered the opinion for the Court said: "The report of the allotment or appraisal, whether made by the sheriff and the appraisers simply, or by confirmation of the Superior Court in term — time, is required to be registered, the object being to give notice," etc. We do not understand that language to mean that where the report of the allotment of the appraisers has been filed with the judgment roll, a failure to register the same in the register's office would make the allotment void. That point, however, was not *Page 193 raised in Gulley v. Cole, supra, and the declaration of the judge was purely a dictum, if it can be construed into meaning that registration was absolutely necessary to the validity of the allotment and to the attacking of the lien under the judgment, where the return of the appraisers had been filed with the judgment roll in the action.

The only question before the Court in the last mentioned case was whether a homestead could be reallotted in different proceedings without proof of fraud or other irregularities.

The object of the law in requiring the return of the appraisers to be filed with the judgment roll in the action and registered in the office of the register of deeds is, of course, to give sufficient notice to all persons who may have transactions with a debtor concerning the land embraced in the homestead that there is or was an encumbrance by judgment lien upon it, which would continue until the expiration of the homestead estate unless sooner discharged by payment. The object of the notice is not to inform the creditors of the homesteader that the homestead, after it is allotted, cannot be sold under execution for his debts, because the creditors are presumed to know that that was so even before (232) the homestead is allotted. We are of the opinion that the requirements of the law are sufficiently complied with wherever it appears that the return of the appraisers of the allotment is filed in the judgment roll in the action. The law (section 504 of the Code) requires the return of the appraisers to be filed with the judgment roll in the action, and compliance with that requirement is constructive notice to all who may have dealings with the homesteader concerning the homestead estate, and all such persons must, at their peril, examine the judgment roll and all that it contains.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 471, 121 N.C. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bevan-v-ellis-nc-1897.