Fowle v. . McLean

84 S.E. 852, 168 N.C. 537, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 852 (Fowle v. . McLean) 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
Fowle v. . McLean, 84 S.E. 852, 168 N.C. 537, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 102 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

Hoke, J.

There are numerous decisions in this State to the effect that standing timber is to be considered as realty and that a deed conveying such timber to the grantee and giving power to cut and remove same within a specified period creates a fee-simple estate in realty, not absolute, but defeasible as to all such timber as is not cut and appropriated within the time, and as the correct deduction from the position ■ it was held, at the last term, in Williams v. Parsons, 167 N. C., 529, that such an estate, while it exists, is subject to the lien of a docketed judgment and to the ordinary methods of enforcing collection of the same, as in other cases of realty. Speaking to the subject in Williams' case, the Court said:

“We have held in numerous cases that these deeds for standing timber, as ordinarily drawn, convey a fee-simple interest in such timber as realty, determinable as to all such timber as is not cut and removed within the time specified in the deed, and that while such estate exists, it is clothed .with the same attributes and subject to the same laws of devolution and transfer as other interests in realty. Bateman v. Lumber Co., 154 N. C., 248; 70 S. E., 474 ; 34 L. R. A. (N. S.), 615; Hornthal v. Howcott, 154 ,N. C., 229; 70 S. E., 171; Midyette v. Grubbs, 145 N. C., 88; 58 S. E., 795; 13 L. R. A. (N. S.), 278; Lumber Co. v. Corey, 140 N. C., 467 ; 53 S. E., 300; 6 L. R. A. (N. S.), 468; Hawkins v. Lumber Co., 139 N. C., 160; 51 S. E., 852.

“Thjs being true, we now see no reason why the sheriff’s deed did not convey to plaintiff the interest of W. S. Morrison, at Jeast the equity of redemption existent at the time the judgment was docketed, in January, 1907, and giving him the present right to enter and cut the timber for the remaining period of time as against every one whose interests are now before the Court. Mayo v. Staton, 137 N. C., 670; 50 S. E., 331; Revisal 1905, sec. 629.”

And in the recent case of McKinney v. Street, 165 N. C., 515, the Court held, in a well sustained opinion by Associate Justice Brown: “The rule of court, afterwards enacted into a statute, Revisal, secs. 574-575, that all judgments entered during a term shall relate to the beginning of the term and be deemed to have then been entered, is to prevent advantage being taken by litigants Avho may have been fortunate enough to have first secured their judgment, and unseemly endeavor to get first to the ear of the court; and will not apply to a judgment, obtained during *541 a term of court subsequent by a day or a fraction of a day to the registration of a deed to lands, so as to affect the rights of an innocent bona fide purchaser for value.”

Again, it is well established in this State that a mortgagee to secure a present loan is to be considered a purchaser for value within the meaning of both 13 Elizabeth, eh. 5, and 27 Elizabeth, ch. 4; Rev., secs. 961-964; and the same principle obtains in reference to mortgages and deeds of trust to secure a past indebtedness except as to an estate or interest existent in the property conveyed. Sykes v. Everett, 167 N. C., pp. 600-607; Branch v. Griffin, 99 N. C., pp. 174-184; Brem v. Lockhart, 93 N. C., 191; Moore v. Ragland, 74 N. C., 343; Potts v. Blackwell, 57 N. C., 58; same case, 56 N. C., 449.

On perusal of the facts presented, it appears that judgment by default final, in favor of the creditor, was taken at December Term, 1911, of the Superior Court of Beaufort County, against the lumber company, the principal debtor, and "W. F. Harrell, one of the indorsers, and same was duly docketed and indexed; and judgment by default final against the other two individual defendants, Moore and Kessenger, on 12 June, 1912, the term of court having commenced 27 May, 1912; and same was duly docketed and indexed; that the property, this timber interest, was acquired by Kessenger and Harrell in February, 1912; that these owners mortgaged the same to Dumay on 1 June, 1912; that the mortgage was registered 7 June, 1912; that same was thereafter duly foreclosed by sale under provision of the deed, and plaintiff Fowle purchased for full value and without notice; and, applying the principles heretofore stated, it follows that the creditor’s judgment, obtained and duly docketed in December, 1911, constituted a valid lien against the estate and interest of Harrell, a.half owner of the timberj and that the judgment against Kessenger,- owner of the other half interest, having been rendered after he had conveyed his interest to a purchaser for value and without notice, same will not -constitute a lien on such interest by relation to the first day of the term, and, as to that interest, the plaintiff is the owner, freed from any claim or lien by reason of the judgment.

This being the status of the matter as to the judgment and lien existent in favor of the creditor, the question recurs as to the effect of the transaction between the defendant Moore and said creditor and by which Moore, having advanced the money in payment of the claim, took an assignment of the judgment to McLean, trustee, for the purpose of preserving and enforcing collection according to the rights of the parties.

In 2 Black on Judgments, sec. 995, it is stated- to be the general rule on this question, “that payment of a judgment by one of two joint defendants operates as a satisfaction and extinguishment of the judgment, and the defendant cannot take an assignment of it or be subrogated to *542 the rights of the creditor as against his codefendant or keep the judgment alive in any manner or for any purpose,” citing, among other cases, Dunn v. Beaman, 126 N. C., 764, and Towe v. Felton, 52 N. C., 216, and substantially the same statement is given in 23 Cyc., 1470, as follows: “Under this rule, it is not competent for one joint defendant, on payment of a judgment, to take an assignment of it so as to wield it against his codefendant, and it is none the less extinguished by the payment, although such assignment he made.”

Whether this should be regarded as the proper rule in this jurisdiction, where the rights of parties on legal and equitable principles are now administered in one and the same court, it is not necessary to determine, for it has long been recognized with us and so held in numerous decisions that a surety on paying a judgment may preserve the lien as against the principal by taking an assignment to a third person for his benefit, and it has been expressly held that he may do this also as to his cosureties and use it to collect the proportionate part that may be due him in enforcing an equality of obligation between them. Peebles v. Gay, 115 N. C., 38; Rice v. Hearne, 109 N. C., 150; Barringer v. Boyden, 52 N. C., 187.

In many of the courts of this country, most of them, the principle prevails without resorting to an assignment. See case of Nelson v. Webster, 72 Neb., 332, reported with a very full and learned note on this subject in 68 L. R. A., p. 513.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 852, 168 N.C. 537, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowle-v-mclean-nc-1915.