Elliott v. . Pool

59 N.C. 42
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 N.C. 42 (Elliott v. . Pool) 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
Elliott v. . Pool, 59 N.C. 42 (N.C. 1860).

Opinion

Battle, J.

When this cause was heard, and an account ordered at December Term, 1856, the question presented in the petition to rehear, was either not argued by the counsel, or if argued, was overlooked by the Court. It certainly was not decided, as appears from the opinion on file, and reported in 3d Jones’ Eq. 17. It is, therefore, a proper subject for consideration upon the petition to rehear the former decree. The question thus presented, is an important and interesting one,, and we aré gratified that, in the investigation of the principles upon which it is to be decided, we have been materially aided by the able arguments which have been submitted to us by the counsel on both sides. In proceeding to state the process of reasoning by which we have been led to the conclusion to which we have come, it will aid us to advert to the facts upon which the question is raised. They are briefly as follows: One Jesse L. Pool, being greatly in debt, and, as it afterwards appeared, insolvent, oh 30th day of January, 1841, executed a deed in trust to the defendant, Joseph H. Pool, conveying to him a large real and personal estate, consisting of land, slaves and other personal property, being in fact all he owned, in trust that he should, when he might deem proper, advertise and sell the same, either for cash or upon a credit, and apply the proceeds to the payment, in the first place, of certain debts recited in the deed, due and owing to the said trustee, or for which he was surety, and in the second place, to the payment of a debt due to one John Pool, and then, should there be a residue of property, after discharging these liabilities, it was to be conveyed by the trustee to the grantor, Jesse L. Pool. In the year following, J esse L„ Pool died, and *44 shortly thereafter, to wit,-on the 1st and'3d days of December, 1842, the defendant, Joseph H. Pool, after-due advertisement, sold all the property conveyed to him in the deed of trust, and, by his agent, became the purchaser of a valuable tract of land, and several of the slaves. The whole amount -of sales was sufficient to pay and discharge all the debts mentioned in the first class, and a part of the’debt due to John Pool, leaving a part of that debt unpaid. This appears from ■exhibits filed with the answer of Joseph H. Pool, which eon-tain statements of the accounts of the sale, and the amounts -of the several debts secured by the deed of trust. The defendant, Joseph II. Pool, being afterwards advised that he ■could not, legally, become a purchaser at his own sale, and that the heirs-at-law and personal representative of Jesse L. Pool could, at their discretion, have his purchases declared void, and call for a reconveyance, or a resale of the property, procured a friend to take out letters of -administration on the estate of the said Jesse L. Pool, and then filed a bill in the -court of equity against the 'heirs and administrator of the deceased, calling upon them to elect either to repay him the ■amount of his bids, -and take a reconveyance of the property, or to permit him to have his purchases confirmed by a decree of the court. -On this bill such proceedings were had, that a ■decree was made, -confirming the purchases made by the trustee, and-perpetually enjoining the heirs and administrator of the grantor in trust, respectively, from setting up a title to the property. The present bill was filed by the plaintiffs, as creditors of Jesse L. Pool, not secured by the deed in trust, charging .fraud on the defendant, Joseph H. Pool, and seeking to ■hold him accountable for the full value of the land and slaves, which he purchased at his own trust sale, and which value was alleged to be much greater than that at which the property was purchased. After an answer was filed to the original bill in 1848, the defendant, Joseph II. Pool, instituted suits at law against the administrator of Jesse L. Pool for certain debts which he alleged to be due him, and which were not in-eluded in the deed in trust. In these suits, the defendant *45 pleaded a want of assets,, which was admitted by the plaintiff, and judgments- guando were- taken, for the amounts claimed. After this, the defendant obtained leave to- file a supplemental answer, in, which he claimed that if he should be held to-be accountable to the plaintiffs for the increased value of the-land and slaves, purchased by him, as has been before mentioned, he should be allowed, as credits, the amount of the debts due him from Jesse L. Pool, and for which he had obtained the judgments above referred to. The right of the plaintiffs to the account was established by the decree made at the hearing of the cause, and the question, whether the defendant, Joseph Ii. Pool, is entitled to the credits which lie claims, either upon the ground of retainer, or as an equitable set-off, is the one now presented to us upon the petition to rehear.

The doctrine of equitable set-off, was established as one of the principles of the court of chancery prior to the enactment of any statute authorising sets-off in a court of law.— Judge Stoey, in delivering an opinion in the case of Greene v. Darling, 5 Mason’s Rep. 201, in the circuit court of the United States, held in Bliode Island, made an elaborate review of all the English cases on the subject, from which he drew the conclusion “ that courts of equity will set off distinct debts where there has been a mutual credit; upon the principles of natural justice, to avoid circuity of suits, following the doctrine of compensation of the civil law to a limited extent. That law went further than ours, deeming the debts, buo jwre, set off or extinguished pro tanto ; -whereas, our law gives the party an election to set-off, if he chooses to exercise it; but if he does not, the debt is left in full force, to be recovered in an ordinary suit.” The learned Judge then proceeds to say “since the statute of the set-off of mutual debts and credits, courts of equity have generally followed the course adopted in the construction of the statutes by courts of law, and have applied the doctrine to equitable debts; they have rarely, if ever, broken in upon the decisions at law, unless some other equity intervened which justified them in granting relief- *46 beyond the rules of law, sueh as has been already alluded to. The American courts have generally adopted the same prin-cipies as far as the statutes of set-off of the respective States have enabled them to act.” In North Carolina we have had -a statute of set-off ever since the year 1756, (see Rev. Code of 1820, ch. 57, sec. 7; Rev. Stat. ch. 31, sec. 80,) which is embodied in the Revised Code, ch. 31, sec. 77, as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Harrigan v. Gilchrist
99 N.W. 909 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.C. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-pool-nc-1860.