Carraway v. . Lassiter

51 S.E. 968, 139 N.C. 145, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 26, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 968 (Carraway v. . Lassiter) 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
Carraway v. . Lassiter, 51 S.E. 968, 139 N.C. 145, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 103 (N.C. 1905).

Opinion

This case, entitled in the transcript sent to this Court"Carraway v. Lassiter," is a motion in a cause lately pending in the Superior Court of GREENE, in which R. L. Davis, executor of (147) L. V. Whitehead, is plaintiff (petitioner), and Geo. W. Carraway and wife, Inez, and others, are defendants. The plaintiff, R. L. Davis, executor, instituted the original proceeding by filing a petition in said court in the usual form, asking for license to sell a portion of the lands of his testatrix to make assets to pay her debts, etc., pursuant to sections 1436 et seq. of The Code. The record contains over two hundred pages of printed matter, a large portion of which is irrelevant and immaterial. The facts, as we gather them from the petition, answer and findings of the clerk, material to a decision of the questions raised by the exceptions of the petitioners, are: Mrs. L. V. Whitehead, late of the county of Greene, died on 14 December, 1895, seized and possessed of a plantation in said county containing 1100 acres, known as the "Streator Place." She left a last will and testament devising and bequeathing her entire estate, real and personal, to her granddaughter Inez for life, remainder to such children as she might leave surviving, and in default of issue, to the Oxford Orphan Asylum, naming R. L. Davis executor and guardian to her said grandchild, who was then a minor. The said will was duly admitted to probate in common form, and the said Davis duly qualified as executor thereto. He was also appointed and qualified as guardian to the said Inez. Thereafter a caveat to said will was filed by the next of kin, and the issue raised duly docketed in the Superior Court of Greene County on 6 March, 1896. At the time of her death the said L. V. Whitehead was indebted in an amount exceeding $4,000, the payment of which was secured by mortgages on the said land. On or about 12 October, 1896, the said Davis, executor, filed his petition in the Superior Court of said county, containing the averments prescribed by the statute and asking for an order to sell 846 acres, being a portion of said land. The remaining portion contained the dwelling house and improvements. The said Inez had, prior (148) to the filing of said petition and during her minority, intermarried with Geo. W. Carraway, who was also a minor, being about twenty years of age. Upon the filing of said petition, it appearing that the said Davis was both executor and guardian, he asked that some suitable person be appointed guardian ad litem for his ward, etc. On 12 October, 1896, and before any summons had issued, the clerk made an *Page 139 order appointing T. E. Barrow guardian ad litem for said infant defendants. The petition named as defendants the said Inez and her husband, J. L. Wooten and wife, who held mortgages on said land, and the Orphan Asylum. On 15 October, 1896, the clerk issued a summons directed to the sheriff of said county, commanding him to summon the defendants, Inez and her husband, J. L. Wooten and wife, the Orphan Asylum and the said T. E. Barrow, guardian ad litem, to appear and answer the petition on 6 November, 1896. The petition is lost and the facts in regard thereto are found by the clerk upon the affidavits of the former clerk and the attorney who filed the same. The order appointing the guardian ad litem and the summons are in the judgment roll. The sheriff made a return of said summons, stating that he had served the same on the defendants Carraway and wife by reading it to them, and on T. E. Barrow, guardian ad litem, by delivering a copy. The summon on J. L. Wooten and wife was served by the sheriff of Pitt County. There is no record of any service on the Orphan Asylum. On the return of the summons the said guardian ad litem filed his answer, drawn by the clerk and signed by said guardian, admitting the allegations of the petition. This paper is lost. On 6 November, 1896, the clerk made an order, reciting that proper service of the summons had been made on all the parties defendant, and that the guardian ad litem had filed an answer, directing "the sale of the land described in the petition," after duly advertising the same, and that the executor make report to the court, etc. This order is on file. The said executor filed his report, stating that pursuant to said order (inadvertently referring (149) to it as having been made on 13 November) he had sold the lands on 7 December, 1896, at public auction at the courthouse door in Snow Hill, after duly advertising the same, and that T. U. Lassiter was the last and highest bidder at the sum of $4,000, which was a full and fair price therefor; that he was ready to comply with his bid, etc. The executor recommended that the sale be confirmed. On 18 December, 1896, the clerk made an order confirming said sale, in which it was recited that due and legal service of summons was made on all the defendants, and that they had admitted in their answers the allegations of the petition, etc. He directed the executor to collect the purchase money and make title to the purchaser. The purchaser paid the purchase money and the executor executed to him a deed for said lands, dated 30 December, 1896, which was recorded on 30 December, 1897. The order of confirmation was approved by the resident judge of the district on 26 December, 1896. The clerk finds that the attorney for the petitioner did not have any conversation with the guardian in regard to his *Page 140 appointment or the preparation or filing of his answer. Nor did the petitioner attempt to use any undue influence to induce him to accept the guardianship. That said T. U. Lassiter was bona fide purchaser of said land for full value and without any notice of any irregularity, if there was any, in the special proceedings under and by virtue of which the land was sold; that the sale was fair and open, and the land brought its full market value at the time of sale; that Lassiter had no notice of any irregularity in the proceeding or of any cloud upon the title, nor of any other matter or thing, if there was any, which prevented him from getting a good title; that he bid on said land at the urgent request of Geo. W. Carraway, husband of Inez, and that he became the purchaser, believing that he would get a good title under the decree of the (150) court; that the personal estate of the said L. C. Whitehead was insufficient to pay her debts; that it was necessary to sell the land for that purpose; that the petition set out a description of the portion of the land to be sold. The petition contains a number of allegations and records referring to litigation pending in Pitt County at the time of her death by and against Mrs. Whitehead, in regard to her property. It is charged that one of said actions affected the title to a portion of the lands sold by the executor. It also appears that on 12 April, 1897, Lassiter sold and conveyed to R. L. Davis 330 acres of the Streater place for about $5 per acre. There is no evidence tending to show any agreement prior to or at the time of the sale, or during the pendency of the proceeding between Davis and Lassiter, in regard to the purchase of any portion of the land by Davis. They both expressly deny any such agreement. It appears that prior to December, 1897, the said Geo. W. Carraway, having attained his majority, qualified as guardian of his wife. At the December Term, 1897, R. L. Davis, executor, the said Carraway and wife, and Carraway as guardian, were made parties to one of the actions pending in Pitt Superior Court, and that they were also parties to an action pending in Greene Superior Court. At the time the petition was filed by R. L. Davis, executor, Mrs. Carraway had no issue. A child was born to her on 18 November, 1896; the said child died in its infancy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 968, 139 N.C. 145, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carraway-v-lassiter-nc-1905.