Gulley v. . MacY

81 N.C. 356
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 81 N.C. 356 (Gulley v. . MacY) 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
Gulley v. . MacY, 81 N.C. 356 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Dillaed, J.

The case made by the pleadings in legal substance is that Thomas C. Nichols, in February, 1863, conveyed the land in controversy to' the defendant George W. Thompson, and in a short time went into the army and died, and Mibra his widow, since then intermarried with George W. Gulley, after the conveyance aforesaid, purchased the said land from Thompson with money furnished her by her father as a separate estate for herself ¡with remainder in fee to her children, who are co-plaintiffs in this action. She had no deed executed by Thompson, making estates as was designed, but merely had him to surrender the deed made to him by Thomas G. Nichols, which had never been registered, and she thereafter kept the said deed in her possession, and lived on the land with her children, believing that the land belonged to her and them, without any suspicion of its possible liability to pay the debts of Thomas *362 C. Nichols, and without any knowledge whatsoever of any proceedings had or threatened for that purpose.

It is alleged that matters thus stood until early in 1873 when E. 0. Macy having become administrator on the estate of Thomas C. Nichols, as it is charged, at the procurement of Sol. J. Allen, a near neighbor, who well knew of the equitable title of Mibra and her children, filed his petition in the probate court for a license to sell the land to pay the debts of Thomas C. Nichols ; and it is averred that although the probate court had jurisdiction of the subject matter, yet the proceedings were not such as to give that court jurisdiction of the persons of Mibra and her children. It is particularly charged that the summons issued in the cause was returned unexecuted on George W. Gulley, with whom by this time Mibra had intermarried, and that no other summons or publication as a substitute therefor was ever issued or made as to him. That the summons was returned served on her the said Mibra, but in truth and fact was not, until after the sale of the land; and as- to the infant children, no service was made on them, and having no general guardian, one Whitaker was appointed a guardian ad litem before the petition was filed, on the nomination of Macy the administrator, wdio had no acquaintance with his wards, and he without any conference with their friends or inquiry into their case, forthwith accepted service and filed an answer prepared for him by Macy or by his counsel, assenting to the sale. And it is represented that in the cause thus constituted in court, a sale was decreed and had, sale reported and confirmed, purchase money paid by Sol. J. Allen and title executed to him, who purchased and afterwards conveyed a few acres to 0. 0. High, both having notice of the equitable title of the plaintiffs, and the said Allen having fraudulently procured the sale to be made, that he might become the purchaser, the whole thing being conducted *363 through, without any- knowledge thereof, it is alleged, by the said Mibra and her children.

Upon the sale coming to the notice of said Mibra and after everything, was done and accomplished under the special proceedings in the probate court, she and the said infants by a regular guardian instituted this action in the superior court, returnable to term. And upon the facts hereinbefore recited, they seek to have a declaration of trust by the court of the legal title in Thompson by the deed surrendered by him which has been registered, and title executed to them according to their rights respectively, and to impeach the decree and sale in the probate court, and have the same held inconclusive, on the ground of the cause not being duly constituted in court, or at the least, of preventing an uncon-scientious use of it by Sol. J. Allen and C. 0. High claiming under him, on the ground of its being contrived and fraudulently procured by arrangement between them and Macy, the administrator, and of the purchase being made with notice of the equitable claims of the plaintiff.

We think the superior court had jurisdiction of the action. The purchase of the land from Thompson as a separate estate, with money furnished to Mibra by her father, if true as alleged, entitled her to have legal estates created by a proper deed, to herself for life, remainder to her children. But that not being done, and the deed that was surrendered being since registered, the legal title is now in Thompson and it is competent to a court having equitable powers to declare him a trustee, and to decree the execution of title and at the same time to declare the title of Allen and High null and void, or at the least to adjudge it inoperative from the fraudulent procurement of the sale and a purchase with notice.

Certainly, if no sale had ever been made by decree of the probate court, Mibra and her children would have had the right, and could have enforced it, to have had the title ex *364 ecuted to them by Thompson. And- although a sale has been had, and apparent title acquired under the decree of that court, still if the fact be true on which the equity arises, the superior court had the jurisdiction by construction to declare the trust and to enforce it, and no other court had. The court of probate may'have had the power while things were in fieri and perhaps when ended, by motion in the cause, to set aside the sale and put the parties in statu quo, but it had not the power either when the cause was pending, nor now, that it is ended, to adjudge a trust against a stranger and enforce it, nor adjudge a trust ex delicto in Allen and High, if any title is held to be in thém.

In the ease of Oliver v. Wiley, 75 N. C., 320, the action was brought in the superior court for an account and settlement, and on the facts set out, there was a necessity to enforce an express trust, and also to declare and enforce some constructive trusts arising ex delido; and it was objected that the probate court had jurisdiction and not the superior court. This court in answer to the objection say: “The probate court has no jurisdiction to enforce a trust created by contract and not arising out of the official duty of an executor, or a constructive trust arising out of fraud or the like.” And they held “that when the superior court had jurisdiction over one main ground of relief, it is not obliged to dismiss the case but will go on and give full relief.”

In Dula v. Young, 70 N. C., 450, the administrators sold a tract of land belonging to their intestate under the decree of the probate court, and pending the proceedings, the heirs at law sued in the superior court to have a trust declared of the legal title to their own use as heirs to their mother, on the ground that the same had been bought with the proceeds of her land and the title was to have been taken in her name. The superior court retained the case and did not dismiss the parties to the probate court to assert their claim in the pending special proceedings.

*365 In Johnson v. Jones, 75 N.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.C. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulley-v-macy-nc-1879.