Furst & Thomas v. Merritt

190 N.C. 397
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 4, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 190 N.C. 397 (Furst & Thomas v. Merritt) 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
Furst & Thomas v. Merritt, 190 N.C. 397 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

Stacy, C. J.

The plaintiffs are engaged in business at Freeport, Ill. They authorized A. D. Merritt by contract to act as their “salesman,” or exchange agent for their goods and products in Durham County; but before the final execution and acceptance of said agreement, plain[399]*399tiffs required the said A. D. Merritt to furnisb two sureties wbo would guarantee tbe faithful performance of the contract on his part. E. S. Merritt signed as one of the sureties.

There is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to the representations and circumstances under which J. A. Fowler’s name was affixed to said instrument.

Touching the authorization of his signature, the defendant, J. A. Fowler, testified as follows:

“About five years ago I met J. T. Merritt and his son, A. D. Merritt, in a buggy in a road near my home. They stopped and J. Y. Merritt asked me to sign a recommendation for his son so that he could work for some firm. I asked him if that was all it was, he said that was all it was, and that there would never be any hereafter to it. I said, if that is all it is, you can put my name down. I cannot read, and I relied on the statement of J. Y. Merritt that the paper was only a recommendation. J. Y. Merritt did all the talking and A. D. Merritt remained in the buggy beside him. I never knew the paper was a guaranty until I received a letter from plaintiffs terminating contract.”

J. Y. Merritt testified for plaintiffs as follows:

“My son said he would have to get two sureties to sign the contract before he could go to work. He said he thought he would get Mr. Fowler and E. S. Merritt. Ye got in the buggy and started out to see them and met Mr. Fowler in the road. I told him that my son had a job and needed two sureties to sign the contract before he could go to work. I told him all about it. He said to go ahead and put his name down. I did all the talking. We did not have a pen so I waited until I got to Carrhoro and then signed J. A. Fowler’s name to the contract. I told Fowler that I thought there would be no hereafter.”

Cross-examination: “I did not tell him it was a recommendation. . . . I told him it was a recommendation. . . . My son offered to read the contract to Fowler and he said it was not necessary. I do not know whether my son took the contract out of his pocket or not. He had it in his pocket. I told Fowler what the contract was, that it was a security.”

A. D. Merritt, for the plaintiffs, testified as follows:

“We met Mr. Fowler in the road and my father did all the talking. I took the contract out of my pocket and offered to read it. He said it was no use, he could not read, and to go ahead and put his name down. My father told Fowler that there would be no hereafter to it. I do not think Fowler would have signed the contract if he had been told that it was an unlimited obligation to stand for my debts. I was to be exchange agent to sell the goods of plaintiffs’ in Durham County. The contract was sent to me to be signed by myself and two guarantors.”

[400]*400It will be observed that the defendant, J. A. Fowler, pleads fraud in the factum as well as fraud in the treaty, in connection with the contract and agreement sought to be avoided. The difference between these two pleas becomes important in the instant case because of the presence and position of the plaintiffs, who contend that they are innocent third parties and in no way connected with the alleged fraud.

This difference has been obscured, to some extent at least, since the abolition in this jurisdiction of the distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity, but it should be remembered the abolition of the "forms of all such actions and suits” by the Constitution of 1868, Article IV, sec. 1, does not imply that the distinctions between law and equity have been abolished in North Carolina. The principles of law and the doctrines of equity remain the same and are practically unaffected by this constitutional provision, the only change wrought being in the method of administering them, and in some degree the extent of their application. Waters v. Garris, 188 N. C., p. 310, and cases there cited.

Prior to the adoption of the Constitution of. 1868, the execution of an instrument brought about by fraud in the factum could be avoided in an action at law, because void, while a deed or contract induced by fraud in the treaty, either in the consideration of it, or in the false representation of some matter or thing collateral to it, could be relieved against only by 'a suit in equity, because only voidable. McArthur v. Johnson, 61 N. C., 317; Gwynn v. Hodge, 49 N. C., 168; Canoy v. Troutman, 29 N. C., 155; Reed v. Moore, 25 N. C., 310; Logan v. Simmons, 18 N. C., 13.

It was said by Pearson, J., in Devereaux v. Burgwin, 33 N. C., p. 493, that, “under the plea of non est factum, if the execution of the deed is proven, it cannot be avoided in a court of law by proof that it was procured to he executed by means of falsehood and misrepresentation or other fraud. There must -be fraud in the f actum j as by substituting one paper instead of the one intended to be executed, so as to show that the party did not intend to execute the paper he was thus made to sign, seal and deliver as his deed.”

In a court of law, the question was a naked one of deed or no deed— factum or non est factum. Gant v. Hunsucker, 34 N. C., 254.

Speaking of the distinction between the two kinds of fraud, in Cutler v. R. R., 128 N. C., p. 480, Purches, G. J., said: “Frauds affecting the validity of deeds are of two kinds — fraud in the factum, and fraud in the treaty. This distinction, though not as material now as formerly, is still material in some cases. Medlin v. Buford, 115 N. C., 260. Besides, the importance of the distinction pointed out in Medlin v. Buford, it was important before the junction of legal and equitable jurisdiction [401]*401in the same court, to determine the jurisdiction, as courts of law had jurisdiction of frauds in the factum, but not of frauds in the treaty which were cognizable alone in courts of equity. This made it important to determine, before commencing the action, whether it was fraud in the factum or fraud in the treaty, as the proper court in which to bring-the action depended on this distinction. And while the distinction is important, it is not of that importance that it formerly was, as one is sure now to get into the right court, if there is fraud whether in the factum or in the treaty.”

While this distinction between void and voidable deeds is no longer important for the purpose of determining the jurisdiction of the court which shall hear the case, it is still highly important in its consequences to innocent third persons, “because nothing can be founded upon a deed that is absolutely void, whereas from those which are only voidable, fair titles may flow.” Somers v. Brewer, 2 Pick, 191. Then, too, in certain instances, even in actions between the original parties and where the rights of innocent third persons are not involved, the rules of evidence may require an observation of the difference, depending on the relief sought, whether, for instance, the action be for reformation or cancellation. Montgomery v. Lewis, 187 N.

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Bluebook (online)
190 N.C. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furst-thomas-v-merritt-nc-1925.