Dalrymple v. . Cole

86 S.E. 988, 170 N.C. 102, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 86 S.E. 988 (Dalrymple v. . Cole) 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
Dalrymple v. . Cole, 86 S.E. 988, 170 N.C. 102, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 348 (N.C. 1915).

Opinions

PLAINTIFF'S APPEAL This case was before this Court on demurrer to the complaint, Dalrymplev. Cole, 156 N.C. 353. The defendant on 15 October, 1910, contracted in writing for a valuable consideration to make to plaintiff a good and sufficient deed of conveyance within ninety days for the land set out in the complaint, with covenants of warranty, upon the payment to defendant of $1,400 purchase money. The plaintiff within ninety days demanded the deed and alleged that he tendered the said sum. The jury found upon issues submitted that at the time of the tender of the purchase money and the demand for the deed there were mortgages outstanding upon the property executed by defendant and wife and also a docketed judgment for $100, all of which are liens upon the property.

The plaintiff thereupon tendered a decree that the defendant should execute to the plaintiff a good and sufficient deed in fee simple for the land described in the complaint, with the usual covenants of warranty and relieved of all encumbrances, upon the plaintiff paying into court the contract price of $1,400 and interest thereon from 14 January, 1911, said amount to be applied first to the payment of said mortgages and the judgment and interest which had been found to be a lien against said land, and by the sum of $125.65 which the plaintiff had paid on said purchase money, and further by the "present value of the inchoate right of dower of the wife of the defendant," as damages for (104) failure of title to that extent, unless said defendant shall in the meantime procure his wife to join in the execution of said deed with her privy examination duly taken; with further provision that the defendant make reasonable effort to procure his wife to execute said deed, and if she refuse to do so that then "the value of the inchoate right of dower" should be assessed by a jury at the next term.

The plaintiff assigns as error that the court struck out the words "inchoate right of dower" in both places and inserted in lieu thereof the words "except the homestead right."

The question presented is whether the constitutional requirement of the privy examination of the wife to the conveyance of the homestead is requisite except when the homestead has been allotted. This Court has repeatedly held that it is not. The homestead not having been allotted, and there not being any judgment under which it should be allotted, for the defendant answers that it was agreed that the judgment (which was for $100) should be paid out of the purchase money, there was no homestead which required the joinder of the wife. Her *Page 151 joinder was required to release her inchoate right of dower only, which might or might not be of greater value than the interest in the homestead, if it had been allotted.

In Mayho v. Cotton, 69 N.C. 292, it was held that the failure of the wife to join in the conveyance of the tract of land in question was immaterial so far as the homestead is concerned, because, said the Court, "Section 8, Art. X of the Constitution applies only to a conveyance of the homestead after it has been laid off." To same purport, Hager v. Nixon,69 N.C. 108. These decisions are almost an contemporary construction of the Constitution.

In Bruce v. Strickland, 81 N.C. 267; Smith, C. J., held that the husband might convey his land, except where there is a dower right, without the joinder of his wife, unless the homestead had been allotted.

In Hughes v. Hodges, 102 N.C. 242, the authority of Mayho v.Cotton, supra, was recognized and followed, though the Court was inclined to somewhat modify it (in deference to the decision in Adrian v.Shaw, 82 N.C. 474), where the owner of land being embarrassed, his land was subject to be sold to satisfy a lien (p. 248). But Adrian v.Shaw, has since been overruled, Revisal, 686, and the authorities construing that section. In Hughes v. Hodges, 102 N.C. 246,Avery, J., for the Court, says: "A landowner who is not in debt may convey his land that has never been allotted to him as a homestead, without the joinder of his wife in the deed, subject only to her right of dower, if she survive him, but free from any restriction growing out of the provisions of section 8, Art. X of the Constitution," and on p. 247 he quotes with approval from Mayho v. Cotton. "Neither is it material that the wife of the defendant assent to receiving a (105) homestead in the swamp place. Section 8, Art. X of the Constitution, applies only to a conveyance of the homestead after it is laid off."

In Scott v. Lane, 109 N.C. 154, it was held that when no homestead has been allotted and there are no judgment liens under which a homestead might be set apart preliminary to a sale, the owner can convey his land and pass the entire interest therein, including the homestead right (except the inchoate right of dower, should she survive him), without the wife joining in the conveyance.

In Fleming v. Graham, 110 N.C. 374, the Court stated: "In Mayho v.Cotton it is said `section 8, Art. X of the Constitution applies only to the conveyance of the homestead after it is laid off.' This is cited and approved in Hughes v. Hodges, 102 N.C. 236, 247, with some reservations, in which it is said that though no homestead has been allotted, such conveyance cannot be made by the husband without the assent of the wife, if there are judgments against him which constitute a lien upon the land and upon which executions might issue *Page 152 and make it necessary to have his homestead allotted." If this modification is valid since the adoption of Revisal, 686, yet it would have no application in this case, since there was no judgment outstanding save that of $100, which the defendant avers that it was agreed should be paid out of the purchase money.

Though Fleming v. Graham, supra, was questioned in some subsequent cases, it has been recognized as the law since the enactment of chapter 111, Laws 1905, now Revisal, 686, which has been uniformly followed by the Court since its adoption as the correct construction of the Constitution, sec. 8, Art. X.

In Cawfield v. Owens, 130 N.C. 644, the Court said: "The only safe rule as to the meaning of section 8, Art. X of the Constitution must be deduced chiefly from the two cases last cited, Mayho v. Cotton,69 N.C. 289, and Hager v. Nixon, ib., 108. When there is no creditor there is no reason for restricting the owner in the sale of lands not allotted as a homestead, by any construction placed upon that section, because the whole plan of homestead exemption was framed for the purpose of affording protection against debt. But it does not follow from the mere fact that a man owes debts that section 8, Art.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.E. 988, 170 N.C. 102, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalrymple-v-cole-nc-1915.