Frost v. . Reynolds

39 N.C. 494
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 N.C. 494 (Frost v. . Reynolds) 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
Frost v. . Reynolds, 39 N.C. 494 (N.C. 1847).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The interest of a vendee of land, where the contract rests in articles for a conveyance, when the purchase money shall have been paid, is not the subject of sale under execution at law, while the purchase money, or any part, remains unpaid. After the payment of the price, it was held in Henderson v. Hoke, 1 Dev. and Bat. Eq. 119, that it may be sold as a trust estate, within the Act of 1812. But until payment there is not a pure trust for the vendee, upon the sale and conveyance of which, it was the purpose to displace the legal estate. Neither is it an equity of redemption, properly speaking. It is true that the legal estate is regarded, in equity, as being retained by the vendor as a security for the pm-chase money; but still it is not a security of the character of a mortgage, upon which an equity of redemption arises. There is no loan of money — no previous property in the vendor, which he, as a mortgagor, is to redeem but the security is for the price of the land bargained for, and the right of the vendee is to a specific performance of an executory contract. There has been no instance yet, in which this interest was held to be saleable, under the Act of 1812, either as a trust, or an equity of redemption; nor any principle laid down, as far as we remember, from *500 which that could be adduced. And we do not feel at liberty to carry the Act beyond its words, except in such cases as Thorpe v. Ricks, 1 Dev. and Bat. 613. Pool v. Glover, 2 Ired. 129, and Harrison v. Battle, 1 Dev. Eq. 637, in which the Court was unavoidably compelled to go beyond the literal terms of the Act, in order to prevent its evasion and the defeating of its plain purpose by a debtor, who, instead of using a proper mortgage by a conveyance on conditions, upon which an equity of redemption, technically, would arise, substitutes therefor a species of conveyance, which has grown into common use as a security for debt, under the name of deeds of trusts, and is substantially a mortgage uúth a power of sale. In that case the Court was obliged to bold, that the resulting rust was in the nature of an equity of redemption, and therefore within the second section of the Act of 1812. But that reason does not apply to the rights of vendor and vendee under articles, which was not a case within the contemplation of the legislature, or within the mischief then to be redressed, as that is not a usual mode for debtors to give a security for their debts, but only contains the terms of the contract of sale, upon the observance of which, by the parties respective^, each of them may entitle himself to a decree for a specific performance. It is only when the whole purchase money.has been paid, that the interest of the vendee may be taken on execution, and then it is not as an equity of redemption, but as a pure trust under the first section of the Act. The Court, therefore, holds, that the plaintiff gained no title under his purchase of the lot, nor any right, which can enable him to call for a conveyance, to his-own use, from Carter upon the payment of the purchase money to- him.

The bill however seeks other relief, and of a different character. It is that the debt toCarter, and all the judgments against Boon and Frost, as well as those that were satisfied by the sale, as those remaining due to the plaintiff, may be declared liens on the premises, and a sale *501 decreed, for their satisfaction, and that the plaintiff may be substituted for Carter, and the other judgment creditors, and receive all those sums to his own use.

In opposition to this claim of the plaintiff, the defendant Reynolds, in the first place, sets up the assignment to himself prior to the filing of the bill, and that would be an effectual bar to relief, in respect of the judgments, if the assignment were for valuable consideration, and bona fide. For, as the executions did not bind the premises, the creditor could create a lien only by filing their bill to charge this property; and an assignee before that holds, Harrison v. Battle, 1 Dev. Eq. 537. McKay v. Williams, 1 Dev. and Bat. Eq. 398. But of course a fraudulent assignment, made to defeat the judgments, or without consideration, as was mentioned in the case last cited, forms no impediment to the relief. Of that character the Court must deem the assignment here. As far as can be seen upon the evidence, the defendant Frost owed nothing to the other defendant Reynolds. The answer states, that he owed him $60 on a bond, and also $76 1§ on an account. But the bond has not been produced, nor any proof given that it ever existed. An account for $76 1$ was exhibited with the answer; but there is no evidence to substantiate its truth ; and besides it is actually receipted in full under the date of January 20th, 1841, more than two years before the assignment to Reynolds. There must, therefore, be a declaration, that Reynolds did not take his assignment, to secure or satisfy the debts mentioned in his answer, nor upon any valuable consideration, but that the same is fraudulent against the creditors of Boon Frost. This leaves the plaintiff’s case to stand upon his rights or against the defendant Frost himself. His claims are of three kinds, and it will be proper to consider each by itself.

As a creditor by his own two judgments, one of which he alleged to be altogether due, and of the other nearly the whole, the plaintiff is entitled, upon settled princi *502 pies, to satisfaction, or to the lot, as the equitable property of his debtor. McKay v. Williams, 1 Dev. and Bat. Eq. 398. Brown v. Long, 1 Ired. Eq. 190. It is admitted, that the debtor has no other property out of which satisfaction can be had, and the executions have been returned nulla bona, except as to these premises; and the Court has already said, they were not subject to executions.

But the claim upon the satisfied judgments stands upon a different ground. The plaintiff does not come into Court as the purchaser of these judgments, and seek to set them up as subsisting judgments. On the contrary, he admits they arc satisfied by the return of that fact on the executions, and the payment of the debts to the executors by the Sheriff. But he says, they were satisfied with his money, which under a mistake he paid as the price of this lot, which the SheriiT had not authority to sell; and therefore, that he ought to be substituted for the execution creditors, and be allowed to set up the judgments again in this Court, or, at all events, to claim the sum he paid, as a debt against Boon Frost, and have a decree for satisfaction out of the premises. But the Court is of opinion, that in neither aspect is he entitled to relief at present.

This Court cannot set up the satisfied judgments again for the purpose of charging the debtor’s equitable property. They are extinguished at law by payment in due course of law, obtained by selling the debtor’s property, or a piece of land as the debtor’s legal property; and we are not aware of any principle, on which equity can put them on foot again for the benefit of any person.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.C. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-reynolds-nc-1847.