Den Ex Dem. Hoyle v. Stowe

19 N.C. 320
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 N.C. 320 (Den Ex Dem. Hoyle v. Stowe) 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
Den Ex Dem. Hoyle v. Stowe, 19 N.C. 320 (N.C. 1837).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice,

after stating the case as above, proceeded as follows: — The plaintiff’s objection to the evidence, and the first part of the instruction prayed by him, rest on the same position. It is, that the disability of infancy can be insisted on only by the infant himself,' *323 or his privies in blood; and that a privy in estate cannot allege the infant’s deed to be void. It may be true, that the infant or his heir alone can disaffirm his deed. It is his privilege; and until he shall treat the deed as void, or act upon a right to the estate as if a deed did not exist, third persons may not assume the privilege. But after the party has disaffirmed his deed by an act legally sufficient for that purpose, then his allienee, and indeed all persons, mav treat the deed as null; for it is then all one, as if it never had existed. If this were not so, land once conveyed by an infant and resumed by him, would be forever after unalienable. His Honor, therefore, laid down the law properly, that the party to this deed might disaffirm it; and when that was done, that others might take advan'tage of the disaffirmance. .

The disabi. tjofinf311 insisted on ™f^ty *e his privies ' estatecan-advantage °^4- t®ut infant has ^o^his be disaf-fn™person, whether thedeed of voicCor1 18 “"Jyyojd- Is not a bargainand itsalebyan *324 infant in-efficacious until confirmed ; and must the proof of 'cohfirma"tion come from him claiming under it ? Qw;.

*323 The remaining questions are, whether the deed to Hoyle •was in this case disaffirmed and avoided ; or whether it was ratified or confirmed.

Before proceeding to discuss these points, it is to be first observed, that in the Superior Court, an important proposition was yielded to the plaintiff; which is, that the deed in question was only avoidable and not void. That is the doctrine of the case Zouch v. Parsons, 3 Bur. Rep. 1794, and has been subsequently recognized upon the authority of that case. But the point does not seem to be at rest. It involves much learning, and there will be found on it, an irreconcilable conflict of opinion among judges and jurists of great eminence. While some deeds of infants areWreed on all hands to be void, and it is said that others are voidable, it is seen that those who hold the latter opinion, differ as to the principle which prevents them from being null ab origine: it being held by some, to be the solemnity of the instrument; by others, the delivery of the thing conveyed by the infant personally ; and by others, the apparent benefit or disadvantage of the infant. It is not proposed to go into this discussion; for the decision of the question is not necessary to the decision of this case. It is not, indeed, readily apprehended what is meant, when it is said that a deed of bargain and sale by an infant, is only voidable. It may be that *324 is hot void in the sense, that the other contracting party or strangers can so treat it; or in the sense, that it admits of confirmation by some method or other at the full age of the bargainor. But it is a different question-, whether as against the bargainor himself, or those in privity with him, it is not to be regarded as inefficacious until it be confirmed : whether the evidence of confirmation must not come from the bargainee, to cure the original defect of his title-: or whether the evidence of the avoidance is to come from the other side to get clear of the deed as a conveyance? An entry will avoid a feoffment made by an infant. It is necessary, because the feoffment Passes die land itself, whereby the feoffee get's a defeasible ‘estate, and that must be divested before another 'can have such a right as is necessary to ’maintain an fiction for the possession. But a deed operating under .the statute of uses> does not pass the land,.but only the use-; and the statute transfers the possession to such use as the contract of the parties raised. Now, an infant has not capacity, in the view of a Court of equity, to contract for the sale of ¡ * k * his land ; and his contract raises no use which ban be then enforced. How, then, upon his bargain and sale,can he gtan(j scjze(j f0 a use¡¡ which the statute can 'execute? Lord Coice lays it down, that a deed of an infant, operating under the statute of uses, will not pass the land, and may !je avoided by the infant when he will; for it is of no effect to raise a use. 2 Inst. 673. Then no act of the for as between bargainor'is necessary to revest his estate him and the bargainee, it never vested in the latter, nor 'was out °f die former. If the bargainee were to bring tres,pass against his bargainor, the latter might give his infancy in evidence on ■ not guilty or liberum temmeritüm ■; for it couhj be done in no other way. It is not perceived either, . . J . . . - , why the infant may not at once bring ejectment tor the land, without a previous disaffirmance ire pais; for the thing to be avoided is not as estate, but simply the deed. If an infant be sued oft his bond, he disaffirms it by plea simply. If he sells personal chattels, he disaffirms the whole contract, whether by delivery or by deed, by suing for the chattels; which is the constant course. 'It is *325 •otherwise in the case of land, when the conveyance operates by way of transmutation of the possession. But a deed of bargain and sale is out of the reason of that. Upon principle, therefore, it would seem that ejectment 'on an infant’s bargain and sale cannot be maintained ‘against the bargainin', or one in possession under him, unless a confirmation after full age be shown; as without it, the lessor’s title is in itself defective. • The reasoning . ’ 7 „ . . , , , in Zouch v. Parsons, tends to the contrary-; though the particular point decided, may stand with it. That was, that the infant heir of a mortgagee in fee might, after payment of the mortgage money, convey the premises by lease and release. When the case has been subsequently discussed, it has been generally allowed to be right on this ground, if no other; that by a modern statute the infant was compellable in the Court of Chancery to convey the land; and therefore, that one Court could not hold the act 'to be void, when voluntarily done, which, if not thus done, 'another Court would coerce. It is to be observed, however, that although the Chancellor would in such a casé decree a conveyance, it is to be considered what species of conveyance would be proper, and that he ought not to select one that upon its face would be ineffectual at law, unless prescribed in the statute. But it is certain that Lord Mansfield., and his associates, did not place the decision on that principle ; but, on the contrary, treated it as a general question on the capacity of infants to convey. To the -general proposition, that an infant’s deeds of bargain and sale, or lease and release, are not void as against himself, the foregoing doubts have been suggested. The most serious dissatisfaction with it has been indicated, not unfrequently, and judicially; and Mr. Preston in his able Treatise on Conveyances, p.

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19 N.C. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-ex-dem-hoyle-v-stowe-nc-1837.