German v. . Clark

71 N.C. 417
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 N.C. 417 (German v. . Clark) 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
German v. . Clark, 71 N.C. 417 (N.C. 1874).

Opinion

RodmaN, J.

The record in this ease is voluminous, but the* material parts of it may be stated in brief, thus

The summons was issued 20th of May, 1869, and served on all the defendants. At Fall Term, 1869, of Caldwell Superior Court, the plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and all other creditors of John Witherspoon, filed their complaint, setting forth that John Witherspoon died in 1864; defendant Clark became his administrator in 1866; the other defendants, W. F. Witherspoon and Sarah Dula, are his heirs; the deceased died greatly indebted ; his personal estate is insolvent} he died seized of sundry pieces of land ; that at Fall Term, 1866, of Caldwell Superior Court, the administrator had filed a petition against the-heirs-for leave to sell certain lands therein specified,, which had been granted, but that he had delayed to- sell; it prayed that he might be enjoined from preferring among creditors, that an account might be taken, and that he Be compelled to sell the lands specified in his petition. Elk Farm is not specifically mentioned in the complaint, nor does it appear to be specifically mentioned in the petition. The defendants, *419 W. P'. Witherspoon and Dula, did not answer; and1 judgment •was given'against them'for want of an answer.

Clark, the- administrator, answered; submitting' to-- an ae-count. He said that Elk Farm had not been sold by reason of a suit in Wilkes county respecting it, and that the sale of if had been suspended by order of the Court.

The Judge decreed an account, which was accordingly taken, but which it is not material further to refer to.

At Spring Term, 1874, of Caldwell Superior-Court, the plaintiffs filed an affidavit reciting substantially the above facts,., and they say that the heirs, W. P. Witherspoon and Dula, had-brought an action in the Superior Court of Wilkes to recover-possession of the Elk Farm, to which they alleged an equitable title, and that the Supreme Court, at January Term, 1874, had granted them that relief, (the case is reported in 70 N. C. Rep. 450, Dula v. Young and Clark;) that they threatened to take possession of the land ; that it had been sold to Young by order of the Superior Court of Caldwell, as appears in the report of the case, who had made valuable improvements ; that W. P. With-erspoon is insolvent and Sarah Dula a bankrupt, and that these-two heirs, and the sous of Sarah Dula are largely indebted to the estate of John Witherspoon for money paid as surety for-them;

And they move:

1. That a Commissioner be appointed to sell Elk Farm for-the purpose of paying the debts of John Witherspoon.

2-. For an injunction against W. P. Witherspoon and Sarah-Dula from taking possession of Elk Farm.

4. Fora receiver of the rents and profits pendente Ute.

His Honor, the Judge below, adjudged accordingly, and the-defendants Witherspoon and Dula appealed to this Court.

The plaintiffs in this Court rest their motion on a single proposition, viz: that the heirs are estopped from asserting-title to the Elk Farm by the judgment for want of answers-taken against them in this action as aforesaid.

Upon this proposition several observations occur:

*420 1. No final judgment was given in this Court in the case of Dula v. Young. The Court expressed an opinion on the question presented and remanded the case. It does not appear that any judgment for Dula has been given below. If not, there is no ground for an injunction to prevent their entering on the land. Such entry as a Court can enjoin is only an entry under force or color of legal process. It will not enjoin a mere trespass unless irreparable damage is threatened. There are remedies for amere trespass, both preventive and punitory, as effectual and more appropriate than through the equitable powers of a Court.

2. If, however, the case of Dula v. Young has been closed by a final judgment, or if from any cause the plaintiffs in this ease cannot now avail themselves in that case of the alleged estoppel, the result is that they have waived and lost it by not pleading it in due time. That action was directly to assert an equitable title to the land. If the plaintiffs were estopped to assert it, the supposed purchaser and the administrator might have set up the estoppel. It is said, however, that the creditors, not having been parties to that action by name, had no opportunity to plead the estoppel, and they are not affected by the laches of the administrator. No one contends that ati administrator always represents the creditors of the intestate. Often their interests are antagonistic. But it cannot be denied, as a general rule, that in controversies respecting the personal property of the deceased, or what, from the circumstances of the controversy, must be considered personal property pro hao vice, as in that case the administrator represents the creditors ■ and the next of bin. This must necessarily be so in the sense in which it is here asserted. A man cannot generally be said • to represent his own creditors in his life time. Yet if a hostile • claimant obtains a bona Hele judgment against him for a piece of property, the judgment binds the title and his creditors . cannot impeach it. In the same sense, an administrator represents the creditors of his intestate.- It is his duty to possess t,himself of the whole estate for them, and there is a presump *421 tion that he discharges it. If there be an antagonism of interests, or fraud, or collusion with the claimant, these circumstances would take a case out of the general rule. Here nothing of that sort is suggested. The creditors might have made themselves parties if they had desired. Hardee v. Williams, 65 N. C. Rep. 56; Moore v. Shields, 68 N. C. Rep. 327. If these difficulties were out of the plaintiffs’ way, the question would be reached, can the judgment desired to be set up as an estoppel, be considered one %

It being by default is immaterial. Taking it in connection with the complaint, does it adjudge that the Elk Farm descended to W. P. Witherspoon and Sarah Dula as the heirs of John Witherspoon. On referring to the complaint it will be se.en that Elk Farm is not specifically or certainly mentioned in it. It says that in 1866 the administrator filed a petition praying for leave to sell “ certain tracts of land specified in his said petition, which said specification embraced all the lands of which his said intestate was seized and possessed at the time of his death, excepting the “ Kirby land,” and some smaller tracts. The petition is not referred to as a part of the complaint and is not? set out on the record, and that being so, is immaterial for the present, whether in fact it particularly described Elk Farm ■ or not. Indeed, the object of the action was not to obtain a judgment that certain lands had descended and should be sold. It was assumed that, that had been obtained in the action by the administrator against the heirs, in which it was the direct purpose.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McKenzie v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance
105 S.E. 720 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1921)
Puryear v. . Sanford
32 S.E. 685 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.C. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-v-clark-nc-1874.