Clark v. Carolina Homes, Inc.

189 N.C. 703
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 20, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 189 N.C. 703 (Clark v. Carolina Homes, Inc.) 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
Clark v. Carolina Homes, Inc., 189 N.C. 703 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

Varser, J.

The will of O. B. Cox, deceased, did not confer on the Greensboro Loan & Trust Company, the executor, the power of sale of the lands devised; this will, however, did enjoin upon the executor a duty to carry out its provisions, and it directed the “apportionment” of this estate, both real and personal, to be made by. the president, secretary and treasurer of the Greensboro Loan & Trust Company, providing that one other, a disinterested party, might be called in by these officers of the executor, if they desired any assistance. In the suit in Randolph Superior Court, instituted by the executor against the devisees of O. B. Cox for a construction of this will and for advice as to the proper administration of said estate, a decree was rendered in 1913, wherein it was adjudged that the executor should distribute said property in accordance with this decree. This decree determined the intention of O. B. Cox to be that his wife, Sarah E. Cox, and his children, other than John Clyde Cox and Lewis Tax Cox, should first be made equal with A. E. Cox in the distribution of his estate out of the real and personal property other than his home place and certain personal .effects on the premises, and that the balance of his real and personal property should be equally divided among his wife and children, and that if John Clyde Cox and Lewis Tax Cox failed to comply with certain conditions named in the will, then the personal property and real estate given to Sarah E. Cox for life should be divided equally among all the children of O. B. Cox, deceased, or their heirs, at her death. The testator desired that these officers of his executor, whoever they might be at the time of his death, should make this “apportionment” by actual partition, if practicable. It is also clear that he did not intend to require them to make an actual partition if such could not be had without injury to the several devisees, or any of them. He desired equality in this division on the basis named in his will. The testator named for this important duty those parties who had been elected officers of the Greensboro 'Loan & Trust Company. The “apportionment” was a duty of the executor to be performed, if actual partition [707]*707was practicable, by its named officers. Tbis provision in tbe will was only tbe machinery for tbe “apportionment” by actual partition, instead of leaving tbis to be provided for by tbe board- of directors. These officers, so designated, found that an actual partition could not be bad without injury to tbe several parties interested; they were clothed with tbe duty and tbe power to determine tbis, and when they so- determined, their decision was accepted by tbe executor. Tbis appears in tbe petition filed in tbe partition proceeding and is admitted in all tbe answers filed, and then found as a fact by tbe court. These officers bad performed their duty as fully as if they bad found it to be practical to make actual “apportionment” or partition. In tbis situation, tbe question was not presented to tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court of Randolph County for him to determine whether they ought to make tbe apportionment or not.

Tbe executor desiring to- perform its duty, as set out in tbe will, and as determined in tbe decree rendered by tbe Superior Court of Randolph County construing tbe said will and advising tbe executor, applied to tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court of Randolph County in 1917, upon petition in due form, asking for partition by sale in order to complete tbe settlement of tbe estate committed to it by tbe will of O. R. Cox. In due course an. order of sale was entered, executed, and title made to plaintiff for tbe locus in quo upon payment of bis bid, which was a fair value for tbe property.

Tbis partition proceeding is attacked in tbe instant case by tbe defendant, as noted above.

Tbis attack on tbe judgment in tbe partition proceeding is indirect and collateral. Only.void judgments are subject to such an attack. Moore v. Packer, 174 N. C., 665; Reynolds v. Cotton Mills, 177 N. C., 412.

Tbe invalidity must appear affirmatively, either on tbe face of tbe record or in one of tbe accepted ways, in order to permit a successful collateral attack. McKellar v. McKay, 156 N. C., 283; Harrison v. Hargrove, 109 N. C., 346; Smathers v. Sprouse, 144 N. C., 637; Brickhouse v. Sutton, 99 N. C., 103; Doyle v. Brown, 72 N. C., 393; Lynn v. Lowe, 88 N. C., 478; Burgess v. Kirby, 94 N. C., 575, 579.

There is, in tbis State, one apparent exception to tbe rule set forth in these cases as applied to probate courts. If tbe person alleged to be dead is not, in fact, dead, tbis prevents tbe probate court from granting letters of administration or administering bis estate. Springer v. Shavender, 116 N. C., 12; Springer v. Shavender, 118 N. C., 33; Fann v. R. R., 155 N. C., p. 140; Bernhardt v. Brown, 119 N. C., p. 507; Trimmer v. Gorman, 129 N. C., p. 163; Dowd v. Watson, 105 N. C., 476; Batchelor v. Overton, 158 N. C., p. 398.

[708]*708Bailey on Jurisdiction, vol. 1, p. 182, classes North. Carolina as one of the States holding that decrees of probate courts are entitled to the same presumptive validity as decrees of courts of general jurisdiction, but notes Springer v. Shavender, supra, as establishing the exception.

A void judgment is not a judgment and may always be treated as a nullity. It lacks some essential element; it has no force whatever; it may he quashed ex mero motu. Stallings v. Gully, 48 N. C., 344; McKee v. Angel, 90 N. C., 60; Carter v. Rountree, 109 N. C., 29; Mann v. Mann, 176 N. C., 353; Moore v. Packer, 174 N. C., 665; Burgess v. Kirby, supra; McKeller v. McKay, supra; Harrison v. Hargrove, supra; Smathers v. Sprouse, supra; Balk v. Harris, 122 N. C., 64; Hervey v. Edmonds, 68 N. C., 243; May v. Getty, 140 N. C., 310; Dalton v. Webster, 82 N. C., 279.

A lack of jurisdiction or power in the court entering the judgment always avoids the judgment. This is equally true when the court has not been given the jurisdiction of the subject-matter, or has failed to obtain jurisdiction on account of a lack of service of proper process. Johnson v. Whilden, 171 N. C., 153; Starnes v. Thompson, 173 N. C., 466; Massie v. Hainey, 165 N. C., 178; Graves v. Reidsville, 182 N. C., 331; Pinnell v. Burroughs, 168 N. C., 315; Doyle v. Brown, 72 N. C., 393; McCauley v. McCauley, 122 N. C., 288.

In Card v. Finch, 142 N. C., 144, Mr. Justice Connor says: “It is axiomatic, at least in American jurisprudence, that a judgment rendered by a court against a citizen affecting his vested rights in an action or proceeding to which he is not a party is absolutely void and may be treated as a nullity whenever it is brought to the attention of the court. We think that no- case can be found in the courts of this country, State or Federal, in which this principle is questioned. Certainly in this jurisdiction it is fundamental.” Citing Doyle v. Brown, supra; Condry v. Cheshire, 88 N. C., 375; Lynn v. Lowe, 88 N. C., 478; Harrison v. Harrison, 106 N. C., 282.

In Card v. Finch, supra, the authorities are collected and distinguished with clearness and with a full and proper regard of the right of all citizens to “due process of law.” Mr. Justice Connor

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Bluebook (online)
189 N.C. 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-carolina-homes-inc-nc-1925.