Farmer v. . Daniel

82 N.C. 152
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 82 N.C. 152 (Farmer v. . Daniel) 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
Farmer v. . Daniel, 82 N.C. 152 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Dillard, J.

This was an action to recover real property and after issue joined on the pleadings, the parties made a case agreed setting out all the facts and submitted the con- *155 elusions of law thereon to the judgment of the court. His Honor being of opinion that the plaintiffs on the facts agreed were not entitled to recover, adjudged that they take nothing by their suit, and that the defendant recover his costs, and from this judgment of the court below the appeal is taken.

The facts, to be gathered from the case agreed,, material to the decision of the question presented for our consideration and determination, are these : On the death of William Farmer, the land sought to be recovered in this action descended to his surviving brothers and sisters, and the issue of such as were dead. And some of the heirs-at-law, among whom was the feme plaintiff, then an infant, filed their petition in the court of equity against the other heirs, praying a decree of sale and a partition of the proceeds among them according to their respective rights. Guardians ad litem were duly appointed by the court for the feme plaintiff and all oth'ers under twenty-one years of age, and after orderly constitution of the cause in court by the service of process on the home defendants and publication made as to nonresidents, a decree of sale on a credit of six and twelve months was made in the cause.

At fall term, 1838, the master having reported a sale to Arthur D. Farmer, and the price fair, an order of confirmation of the sale and for collection was made, and afterwards, to-wit, in the year 1839, the master having reported the purchase money collected, an order of distribution and for title to the purchaser was regularly entered in the cause, and from and after that time the cause was dropped from the docket.

At spring term, 1873, of the superior court, pursuant to notice, the cause was brought forward and entered on the docket, and on motion, the judge finding the facts to be as above stated and the further fact that no deed had ever been executed by the clerk and master to the purchaser, *156 ordered the clerk of bis court to execute a deed to Arthur D. Farmer or his assigns, with a declaration in the decree that the decree should have the effect to transfer the title to said Arthur D. Farmer, or in case he had assigned his interest, to his assignee, in the same plight and condition as though the conveyance ordered were made.

In the case agreed, it is stated that the present defendant connects himself by a chain of mesne conveyances with the purchaser at the clerk and master’s sale, and in case His Honor should decide in favor of the plaintiffs, judgment is to be entered for one one hundred-and-eighth part of the land described in the complaint, otherwise for the defendant with costs of suit.

We concur in the opinion and judgment of the court below, that the plaintiffs upon the facts presented are not entitled to recover. Upon the argument before us it is contended by plaintiffs that on the death of Wm. Farmer, the legal title to one one-hundred-and-eighth part of the land sold by the decree of the court of equity descended on the feme plaintiff, and no deed having been executed by the clerk and master to Arthur D. Farmer, the, purchaser, the legal estate is still in her, and has not been divested by the decree for title in the superior court in the year 1873, passed in the petition-cause, for the reason that the case stood abated, and there being no act of assembly authorizing it to be brought forward at that time, the decree for title was coram non judice and therefore inoperative to pass the title. The defendant contends that the deed executed under the decree of the superior court in 1873 or the decree of itself availed in law to pass the estate to him, or if not, then that he claiming under Arthur D. Farmer, the original purchaser, has a complete equity to have the title, and that in any aspect of the case he is entitled to defeat the plaintiffs’ present action and be left in the possession!

Upon this contention of the parties it is not necessary to *157 the decision of this case, that we should consider or express an opinion on the question made, as to the due constitution of-the original suit on the docket of the superior court in 1873, and the efficacy of the decree therein made for title, being of opinion that the perfect equity of Arthur D. Farmer to have the legal title, which is agreed to have come to the defendant by a regular chain of mesne conveyance, is sufficient to defeat the plaintiffs’ action.

The plaintiffs are not entitled to recover the possession of of the whole, nor indeed the undivided share of the feme plaintiff, if the proceedings for sale and partition in the court of equity had the legal effect to pass the legal estate to the purchaser or his assignee, or only the effect to pass a clear equitable right to have a deed. The confirmation of the report of sale to Arthur D. Farmer was an acceptance of him as a purchaser, and in legal effect the bargain was thereby struck, and gave to the heirs-at-law of William Farmer, and to the purchaser or his assignee, the reciprocal right to have a specific performance of the contract against each other. Ex parte Yates, 6 Jones Eq., 306; Edney, v. Edney, 80 N. C., 81; Pritchard v. Askew, Ibid, 86; Rorer on Judl. Sales.

In this case it appears as a fact in the case agreed that the purchaser specifically performed the contract on his part by paying into the office of the clerk and master the purchase money, and thereupon the right arose to have performance on the part of the heirs acting through the agency of the court. And the court of equity, on report of full payment by the master, in recognition of this right, ordered that the title of the heirs be conveyed by the master to the purchaser. In this state of things even if the decree of the superior court in 1873 for the execution of title was ineffectual to pass the legal title of the feme plaintiff as insisted on by them, still the defendant assignee of the original purchaser *158 succeeded to his complete equity to have title and may yet have the conveyance made to him. See the cases cited.

Seeing that the defendant by assignment from the original purchaser has such a perfect equitable right to have a deed passing the title, if he has not already one, it remains to inquire whether such an equity can be set up so as to defeat the action of the plaintiffs. Formerly if no title had passed to the purchaser by an actual deed or by the operation of the decree per se under the act of assembly in such case made and provided, the plaintiffs would have been entitled in a court of law to recover, and the defendant would have been forced to go into a court of equity by an independent suit or by mol ion in the original cause and have the recovery enjoined. But now under our new system of courts such circuity is avoided and the defendant is entitled to set up his equitable title in defence of the plaintiffs’ legal title which they claim to have, and in the superior court the defendant is entitled to the same relief as formerly he was compelled to seek in the courts of equity.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.C. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-daniel-nc-1880.