Farrar v. . Staton

7 S.E. 753, 101 N.C. 78
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 S.E. 753 (Farrar v. . Staton) 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
Farrar v. . Staton, 7 S.E. 753, 101 N.C. 78 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

*79 Smith, C. J.

At Spring Terra, 1887, of this Court, the subject-matter in controversy in this action, and between the same parties, in a reversed relation, involving the contested right to the surplus proceeds of the cotton crop conveyed in the first mortgage after satisfying the secured debt, was considered and decided. The decision then made was reconsidered upon an application to re-hear, and, at the term next succeeding, affirmed. Weathersbee v. Farrar, 97 N. C., 106; 98 N. C., 255.

The ruling by which the excess was given to the second mortgage was based upon the finding of the referee, to which no exception was shown in the record to have been taken, that the crop was conveyed in both mortgages, and the proceeds of the sale by the prior mortgagee being more than sufficient to pay the secured indebtedness, it was held- that the excess belonged to the second mortgage, and would not be diminished by advances made to aid in the cultivation and preparing of the crop for market, in the absence of any lien perfected under the provisions of the statute. The Code, § 1782.

The ruling in the Court below; while there made irrespective of the presence of the crop in the second mortgage and upon equitable grounds, was affirmed upon both hearings in this Court, so that there have been three concurring adjudications upon the conflicting claims to the fund. The facts are fully reported, and the reasons given in support of the conclusion reached set out in the cases, so that it is unnecessary to repeat them here.

The present suit is brought for a revisal of the judgment thus deliberately rendered upon the record then before us, and which now, as we understand from the argument, is admitted to be consistent with the ruling upon the ground that the crop, notwithstanding the referee’s finding, was not included in the enumeration of the property assigned in the posterior mortgage, and that it was so understood and acted' *80 on in the Court below, both by counsel and the Judge; and upon the trial of this action in the Court below, the Judge, by consent, finds as follows:

■‘This cause coming on to be heard, a jury trial being expressly waived, upon the pleadings, the affidavit of Judge Shepherd and the papers in the original cause, and the same being heard, his Honor finds, in addition to the facts admitted on the pleadings, the following facts:

1. That the referee made his report in the original suit to the Fall Term, 1884, of Edgecombe Superior Court. At said term, on affidavits filed, the defendants in that suit moved to set aside said report and remove the referee, which motion was continued to Spring Term, 1885, at which time it was heard and denied.

2. At Spring Term, 1885, motion was made by the defendant in said suit for leave to amend his answer, and by consent, said motion was continued until Spring Term, 1886.

3. That at Spring Term, 1886, on the trial before Judge Shepherd, from whose judgment the original suit was carried by appeal to the Supreme Court, the motion for leave to amend was again asked; that it was conceded that Mrs. Weathersbee’s mortgage did not cover the crop, and that the Judge tried the case on that theory; that in giving judgment the Judge struck from the account, as allowed by referee, the cotton and cotton seed sold at the sale, because he desired to find the proceeds of the sale of the personal property included in mortgage, as distinguished from the crop; that the case was decided by him, upon no misapprehension as to whether the crop was covered by Mrs. Weathersbee’s mortgage, but entirely upon the idea that it was not, that no amendment was actually made.

4. That cotton and cotton seed which were' sold (for $446) at the sale and charged against plaintiff in the account of the referee, were part of the crop in controversy, contained in O. C. Farrar’s mortgage, and that in the testimony *81 there was no evidence of any other crop or that the crop was in Mrs. Weathersbee’s mortgage.

5. That before the case was called in the Supreme Court, by consent of counsel, the motion for leave to amend, therein set forth was marked “ allowed.”

6. That the mistake was made by plaintiff of supposing that the record as sent Up and amended in Supreme Court, showed that the ease was tried by Judge Shepherd, on the concession that Mrs. Weathersbee’s mortgage did not cover the crop.

7. That on the 29th June, 1886, Mrs. Weathersbee assigned for value her interest to L. L. Staton, who has been made a party to this suit.

It appearing that L. L. Staton, has purchased and had assigned to him the interest of Sallie F. Weathersbee, in this action, on motion it is ordered that he be made a defendant in this case; and now upon consideration of the foregoing findings of fact and all the matters above set out, it is adjudged that the defendant go without day and recover of the plaintiff his cost to be taxed by the Clerk and that the plaintiffs take nothing by their action.”

The action now prosecuted seeks to have the judgment reversed, not for that it is erroneous, pronounced upon the facts ascertained and reported, and as contaiued in the record, but because in the Court below it was tried upon the general understanding that the crop was not, and in fact it was not, conveyed in the second mortgage, and that the ruling was upon this basis, in which there was error, while, by inadvertence, the case on appeal upon which the decision was made in this Court states that the crop was embraced in the second subject to the first mortgage deed.

The first suggestion that occurs to us is the novelty of this mode of procedure to rectify an error after successive final adjudications, and the absence of any precedents referred to *82 or found by us to sanction the procedure, either in our own or other Courts.

At law and under our former system the final judgment, except by writ of error sued, concluded the cause and after the term was irreversible. In equity the cause could be re-heard before the enrolment of the final decree upon the decree itself, or upon any intermediate orders, when an application was made in apt time, and could after enrollment be reconsidered upon a bill of review. In this State the ruling in a Court of Law or in a Court of Equity was reviewable by appeal substituted in place of the other remedy. But the distinction between final decrees based upon the enrolment has been obliterated and the form of procedure.for a reviewal is the same.

As the appellate court and its jurisdiction were formerly the creature of the statute, it was held in the American Bible Society v. Hollister, 1 Jo. Eq., 10, that the Supreme Court could not entertain an original bill to review one of its own final decrees, and. that such a procedure was admissable only in the Court of Equity of the county. But such jurisdiction, authorizing the the re-hearing of its own decrees upon a proceeding begun within five years after they have been entered, has been conferred upon the Supreme Court by an act of the Legislature, and was exercised up to the recent constitutional changes. Rev. Stat., ch. 32, § 17.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E. 753, 101 N.C. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrar-v-staton-nc-1888.