Farris v. . Hendricks

146 S.E. 77, 196 N.C. 439, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 146 S.E. 77 (Farris v. . Hendricks) 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
Farris v. . Hendricks, 146 S.E. 77, 196 N.C. 439, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 7 (N.C. 1929).

Opinion

ClaeesoN, J.

Tbe plaintiff bad a bouse and lot in Belmont, Gaston County. Tbe defendant, Spencer Lumber Co., obtained a judgment for $208.11 and duly docketed same in tbe Superior Court of Gaston County. This was a lien on plaintiff’s land. C. S., 614. Thereafter plaintiff and bis wife executed a mortgage on tbe bouse and lot. It was sold to pay tbe mortgage debt and there was an excess over and above tbe mortgage of $509.49, which was paid to tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court of said county.

Tbe Constitution of North Carolina, Article X, section 2, is as follows: “Every homestead, and tbe dwellings and buildings used therewith, not exceeding in value one thousand dollars, to be selected by tbe owner thereof, or in lieu thereof, at tbe option of tbe owner, any lot in a city, town or village, with tbe dwelling and buildings used *442 thereon, owned and occupied by any resident of this State, and not exceeding the value of one thousand dollars, shall be exempt from sale under execution or other final process obtained on any debt. But no property shall be exempt from sale for taxes, or for payment of obligations contracted for the purchase of said premises.”

Article X, section 8: “Nothing contained in the foregoing .sections of this article shall operate to prevent the owner of' a homestead from disposing of the same by deed; but no deed made by the owner of a homestead shall be valid without the voluntary signature and assent of his wife, signified on her private examination according to law.”

Is plaintiff, under the mortuary tables, C. S., 1790, entitled to the present worth or cash value in $509.49, said fund representing his homestead in a house and lot, excess after paying the mortgage on the house and lot? -We think not. Plaintiff cites Wilson v. Patton, 87 N. C., 318; Leak v. Gay, 107 N. C., 468-483; Montague v. Bank, 118 N. C., 283; Duplin County v. Harrell, 195 N. C., 445; Cheek v. Walden, 195 N. C., 752.

In the Montague case, supra, it is said: “Should the land sell for more than the mortgage debt, the surplus money is still realty, in which the debtor can assert his homestead, as against any execution. Hinson v. Adrian, 92 N. C., 121.”

By a careful perusal of the cases cited by plaintiff, it will be noted that they relate to the constitutional right of the debtor to the homestead in the equity of redemption, or the proceeds in the surplus after sale under mortgage or deed of trust, being real estate, when duly demanded by the homesteader and not waived. These cases must be read in the light of the facts of the particular case. In the Wilson and Leah cases, supra, there are dicta sustaining plaintiff’s contentions. The Wilson case was cited in the Duplin County case, supra, on the aspect of the homesteader claiming his homestead in certain funds and the proceeds from the sale of the homestead. See Gulley v. Thurston, 112 N. C., at p. 112-13.

In 32 A. L. R., Anno., p. 1334, it is said: “In Gulley v. Thurston (1893), 112 N. C., 192, 12 S. E., 13, the Court, in holding that a judgment lien is superior to a subsequently registered mortgage on land held by the debtor, which is over and above the statutory homestead limit, said: ‘The question which is presented by this appeal is, which has a superior lien on land of the debtor outside of his allotted homestead — his judgment creditor whose judgment has been duly docketed, or his mortgagee whose mortgage was executed and registered after the docketing of the judgment? A bare statement that under the law (Code, sec. 435, C. S., 614), the docketing of a judgment creates a *443 lien on all tbe land of tbe debtor in tbe county where docketed, from tbe date of tbe docketing, and tbat a mortgage is a lien only from tbe registration, would seem to be a sufficient answer to tbis question. It cannot be tbat tbe act of a debtor and a third party can impair or destroy tbe rights of tbe judgment creditor as to tbe excess over tbe homestead/ In Vanstory v. Thornton (1893), 112 N. C., 196, 34 Am. St. Rep., 483, 17 S. E. 566, tbe Court overruled tbe earlier case of Leak v. Gay (1890), 107 N. C., 468, 12 S. E., 312, and held tbat a judgment creditor has a lien on any surplus over and above tbe homestead exemption, and no act of tbe'debtor can impair tbe creditor’s right under tbis lien. Tbe Court said: Tn some states a docketed judgment creates no lien on tbe homestead land, but in tbis State such a judgment creates a lien on all tbe land of tbe debtor, both tbat outside of tbe homestead boundaries and tbat within those boundáries, tbe only difference being tbat tbe lien on tbat which is within tbe homestead boundaries is not enforceable by execution or other final process until there has come about, in some way, a termination of tbe debtor’s constitutional exemption rights in tbis land, which rights, vested in him by tbe organic law, may be prolonged after bis death, for tbe benefit of bis widow in some instances, and in some for tbe benefit of infant children. As we have said, be cannot now enforce bis lien on tbe homestead land, but bis debtor cannot displace tbat lien by any act of bis. It is fixed on tbe land by. law, and tbis Court can only recognize and at tbe proper time enforce it.’ ”

In tbe Vanstory case, supra, at p. 210, it is said: “If there is to be any present division of tbis fund between tbe parties, it must be a matter of arbitration or agreement among themselves, for tbe courts have no rule by which to determine what exemption rights are worth in cash, their present value, tbe length of their duration depending on too many contingencies.” These principles enumerated in tbe Vanstory case, are now applicable.

Tbe General Assembly of 1905, chap. Ill, passed tbe following: C. S., 729: “Tbe allotted homestead is exempt from levy so long as owned and occupied by tbe homesteader or by any one for him, but when conveyed by him in tbe mode authorized by tbe Constitution, Article X, section eight, tbe exemption ceases as to liens attaching prior to tbe conveyance. Tbe homesteader who has conveyed bis allotted homestead may have another allotted, and as often as is necessary. Tbis section shall not have any retroactive effect.”

Tbis Court in Sash Co. v. Parker, 153 N. C., p. 130, held tbat tbis section is in accordance with tbe views of tbe Court and expresses tbe proper construction of Article X, section 2. It has been repeatedly held *444 since, that the homestead exemption ceases upon its conveyance by the homesteader, in accordance with Const., Art. X, sec. 8, supra. Caudle v. Morris, 160 N. C., 168; Crouch v. Crouch, 160 N. C., 447; Watters v. Hedgpeth, 172 N. C., 310; Duplin County v. Harrell, supra; Cheek v. Walden, supra.

Defendant, Spencer Lumber Co., contends: “That the homestead right is a creature of the Constitution (Art. X, sec. 2, supra),

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.E. 77, 196 N.C. 439, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-v-hendricks-nc-1929.