East and Wife v. . Dolihite

72 N.C. 562
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 72 N.C. 562 (East and Wife v. . Dolihite) 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
East and Wife v. . Dolihite, 72 N.C. 562 (N.C. 1875).

Opinion

Rodman-, J.

From the record, the facts appear substantially these. • In 18G3 William Dolihite died intestate, possessed of personal property worth about $300, and seised in fee of 238 acres of land. He left a widow, Elizabeth, and five children,, viz: Samuel, (the defendant) Tyree, Mary, Harden, and Ursula, (the feme plaintiff.) One Carson became his administrator, and the widow and Ursula Riddle were his sureties.. He received the personal assets and absconded, leaving his-sureties liable. Some short time afterwards an arrangement, which was never put in writing, was entered into between the-widow and children to the following effect:

1. Samuel was to release his interest in his father’s estate,, and to receive the land of Ursula Riddle at her death, by devise from her. She was an old, unmarried lady, the aunt of the children.

2. Tyree was in like manner to release and to receive the-land of Mai’y Riddle, who was a sister of Ursula, and similarly-situated.

3. Harden was to receive from his mother fifty acres of land which she held in her own right, and the four other children were each to pay him $25.

4. Mary was to receive one-half of her father’s 238 acres..

5. Ursula, the plaintiff, was to receive the other half.

6. It was also agreed that the sureties to the administration bond should not be disturbed.

It does not appear that Ursula and Mary Riddle were par *564 ties to this arrangement, further than that it was known to ■them, and they executed wills acccording to it

This arrangement was so far carried into effect that Harden received a deed for his mother’s land, and the $100 agreed on. A deed to Ursula East, the plaintiff, for one half of her father’s •238 acres, was executed by all the other children except Samuel, and she took possession. It does not appear why ‘Samuel failed to join in the deed. Mary received a deed for ¡and took possession of the other half of that land. Samuel and Mary Riddle rented the lands of Ursula and Mary Riddle respectively, and went to live on them as tenants.

Seme time after this arrangement was made, and partly performed, Ursula Riddle changed her mind ; she destroyed the will she had made in favor of Samuel, and made one in favor of the plaintiff Ursula. Samuel in his answer says this change was procured through the fraud of the plaintiff; but there is no evidence to that effect.

Upon this change the plaintiff became tenant of Ursula Riddle, and Samuel took possession of the half of his father’s land, which had before been conveyed to the plaintiff, and all the other children conveyed their estates in that land to him. After this, Ursula Riddle signed a deed for her land to the plaintiffs, which she showed to plaintiff, but never delivered to her.

This state of affairs lasted for several years, when Ursula Riddle again changed her mind, and conveyed her land, by deed, to the defendant Samuel. The plaintiff charges that this ■change of purpose was induced by the fraud of the defendant; but there is no evidence to that effect.

Upon this state of facts, the plaintiff contends that Ursula Riddle became a trustee of her lands for the plaintiff, subject ■to a life estate in said Ursula, and that the defendant Samuel was equitably estopped from accepting a conveyance, and prays ¡that he be declared a trustee for her.

It would not be to the advantage of the plaintiff to contend ¡that the original arrangement was irrevocably binding on the *565 parties, or on them and Ursula Riddle; for that gave the land in controversy to Samuel. But we cannot see any circumstance in what the plaintiff calls the second arrangement, to distinguish it in this respect, favorably for the plaintiff from the first. If, bjf the law of North Carolina, part performance can in any case take an oral contract for the conveyance of lands, out of the statute of frauds, it would seetn that, as between the children, who were the parties to the first arrangement, it should do so in that case. That question is not presented, and it is unnecessary to express any opinion on it.

If we put that arrangement out of view as a binding one, we are of the opinion that the second arrangement did not amount to a contract by Ursula Riddle, which a Court would specifically enforce ; or by force of which a Court would hold her a trustee of her land, subject to her life estate, for the benefit of the plaintiff; and that it did not destroy her power freely to devise or otherwise convey her land ; and that it did not estop the defendant from accepting a conveyance from her.

First, as to Ursula Riddle:

She promised the plaintiff to devise her land to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff on the faith of that promise, rented the land of Ursula, and also conveyed her interest in one half of her father’s land to Samuel. There was no consideration for the promise of Ursula in any advantage to her. The plaintiff paid her rent: but that was only as a compensation for the use of her land.

Neither was there any consideration for the promise in the form of a disadvantage to the plaintiff, by reason of her conveyance to Samuel: for that was intended, and would be held to be on a condition to be void, if Ursula Riddle failed to devise to the plaintiff as she had promised to do.

The first arrangement was evidently conditioned on the event that the two aunts, Ursula and Mary, should devise as they were expected to do, and the second arrangement (if it can properly be called an arrangement,) was conditioned on the will *566 of Ursula, and on the failure of that condition the plaintiff was remitted to her prior right.

It is suggested that the plaintiff acted to her prejudice in yielding the occupation of her land for so many years to Samuel, who may have allowed them to become wasted by neglect or bad husbandry. Although this does not appear as a fact, yet it may have been so, and it may be supposed that to some extent the plaintiff was or might have been damaged, by acting on the promises of Ursula.

Under the circumstances what was the effect of the promise of Ursula to devise to the plaintiffs ?

No doubt a person may make a binding contract to devise his lands in a particular way, and a Court of Equity in a proper oase will enforce in effect a specific performance of the contract. 1 Story Eq. Jur., secs. 781, 785, 786, 793; Semmes v. Worthingham, 38 Md. 298; Moorhouse v. Colvin, 9 E. L. E. E. R., 136; Berkley v. Newland, 2 P. Williams, 108, 608.

In England and in those States in which the doctrine of part performance is admitted, such contracts will be enforced, even when not written, when' the enforcement is necessary to prevent a fraud.

It is said that in this State we. have got rid of that doctrine. Under the statute of frauds, no contract for the conveyance of any interest in land is valid if not in writing, and it is said that in this State we admit of no exception.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.C. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-and-wife-v-dolihite-nc-1875.