Dennis v. . Redmond

188 S.E. 807, 210 N.C. 780
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 16, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 188 S.E. 807 (Dennis v. . Redmond) 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
Dennis v. . Redmond, 188 S.E. 807, 210 N.C. 780 (N.C. 1936).

Opinion

This is a proceeding brought by plaintiff against defendants to restrain them from selling certain real property under power contained in a deed of trust. A temporary restraining order was duly issued and the cause came on to be heard on motion of plaintiff to continue the restraining order to the hearing.

The judgment of the court below is as follows: "This cause coming on to be heard, and being heard on 14 September, 1936, by his Honor, *Page 782 J. A. Rousseau, Judge presiding over the courts of the Thirteenth Judicial District, in Chambers at Wadesboro, N.C. the motion of the plaintiff for a restraining order to be continued to the hearing having been continued, by consent of all the parties, to this date and place: And it appearing to the court and the court finding facts as follows:

"(1) That on 18 January, 1930, Mrs. Maie Dennis executed and delivered to J. R. Henderson a deed conveying the lands set out and described in the complaint filed herein and used as an affidavit, which deed was recorded on 20 March, 1930, in Book 207, page 123, Richmond County registry; that J. R. Henderson and wife, on 15 February, 1930, executed and delivered to the Commercial National Bank of High Point, N.C. their deed of trust to secure the payment of a note in the amount of $3,150, said note being made payable to bearer at the office of the Charleston National Bank, Charleston, West Virginia; that said deed of trust was recorded on 6 March, 1930.

"(2) That on 6 March, 1930, J. R. Henderson and wife reconveyed the land described in the complaint to the plaintiff herein by deed recorded in Book 207, page 237, Richmond County registry.

"(3) That thereafter J. R. Henderson died, to wit: On 26 May, 1930, and E. N. Rhodes was duly appointed collector of the estate of the said J. R. Henderson, and thereafter filed his final report showing assets in hand of only $59.11, no executor or administrator having ever qualified, the report of said E. N. Rhodes, collector, being duly filed in Record of Settlements No. 4, page 348, office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Richmond County, File No. 898-A, a copy thereof being hereto attached.

"(4) That from 2 April, 1930, through 21 June, 1933, the plaintiff made payments aggregating $660.00.

"(5) That on 21 November, 1933, the Commercial National Bank of High Point, N.C. trustee, and John Biggs, receiver, advertised the land described in the complaint, and described also in the aforesaid deed of trust for sale on 23 December, 1933, and that on 14 December, 1933, Hon. A. M. Stack, one of the judges of the Superior Court, issued a temporary restraining order restraining the sale; that as a basis for said restraining order the plaintiff herein filed an affidavit and complaint wherein she alleged the execution and delivery of the deed of trust hereinabove referred to, to secure the payment of the note payable to bearer, and further alleged, `The notes being made payable to bearer, but in fact were made payable to the Commercial National Bank of Charleston, West Virginia, whose place of business was at Charleston, West Virginia; that thereafter, on or about 6 March, 1930, the said J. R. Henderson and wife, Jennette Henderson, conveyed by deed to Maie Dennis the property described in the deed of trust; the said Maie Dennis assuming the *Page 783 indebtedness thereon'; that the said Maie Dennis made payments as provided in the deed of trust in excess of $600.00 on the original indebtedness of $3,150.

"(6) That, in addition to the payments made by the plaintiff above referred to, the sum of $1,235.84 was collected by the defendant as proceeds of fire loss on 27 December, 1934, as found by Judge Clayton Moore in an order dated 28 May, 1935, a copy being hereto attached as `Exhibit A.'

"(7) That the plaintiff has paid no taxes on the property described in the complaint and in the deed of trust to the town of Hamlet or the county of Richmond for the years 1931 to 1935, inclusive.

"(8) That in May, 1936, the defendant Anthony Redmond, successor trustee, duly advertised the lands described in the deed of trust for sale under the power contained therein on 1 June, 1936, and that after said sale was held, that the plaintiff Mrs. Maie Dennis, on the 10th day thereafter, raised the bid to $1,575 on said property as by statute provided, and that thereafter the lands were readvertised and reoffered for sale on 3 July, 1936, and temporary restraining order was secured as hereinabove referred to on 13 July, 1936.

"(9) That the plaintiff in the complaint filed herein alleges the due execution and delivery of the deed of trust from J. R. Henderson and wife to secure the payment of the note described therein and secured thereby, and further alleges certain payments, including the collection of $1,235.84 from an insurance company on account of damage to the mortgaged property by fire.

"(10) That while the plaintiff admits certain payments on said note, and that there is a balance due and unpaid thereon, she has not made any tender or offer to pay any amount whatsoever.

"(11) That the plaintiff has not offered to do equity and is not entitled to receive equity or any equitable relief on the showing made at this hearing.

"It is now, on motion of Thomas H. Leath, in propria persona, and of Varser, McIntyre Henry, attorneys for defendants, considered, ordered, and adjudged that the motion of the plaintiff to continue the restraining order until the hearing be and the same is hereby denied, and that the temporary restraining order heretofore issued in this cause be and the same is hereby in all respects dissolved.

J. A. ROUSSEAU, Judge Presiding."

To the foregoing judgment the plaintiff excepted, assigned error, and appealed to the Supreme Court. The only exception and assignment of error made by plaintiff is "to the foregoing judgment." A case where the facts are similar in all respects to the present one is that of Ingram v. Mortgage Co., 208 N.C. 329. At page 330, it is said: "The first exception is to the judgment itself. This judgment is regular upon its face, and the facts found by the trial judge are sufficient to support the decree. Consequently, the first exception must fail. Warren v. Bottling Co., 207 N.C. 313; Moreland v. Wamboldt,ante, 35. The second exception is `to the finding and signing of the order of the findings of facts.' It is to be observed that the plaintiff requested no findings of facts and there is no specific exception to any particular finding of fact. Obviously, some of the findings of fact are necessary and beyond question. The Court is not endowed with the gift of prophecy, and, therefore, is unable to determine which particular finding of fact is objectionable to the plaintiff. Hence, the second exception must likewise fail."

In the record the facts are practically undenied, and those found by the court below are supported by the evidence. On the above authority the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

As the merits of the cause are urgently argued by the plaintiff, we will consider same. The plaintiff contends: (1) "Did his Honor have a right to pass upon and determine the disputed facts without the intervention of a jury?" On the whole record, we do not think that there were sufficient facts disputed to continue the restraining order to the hearing for a jury to determine.

Hoke, J., in Grantham v. Nunn, 188 N.C. 239 (242), speaking to the subject, says: "In Sutton v. Sutton, supra (183 N.C. 128

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188 S.E. 807, 210 N.C. 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-v-redmond-nc-1936.