Gulley v. . MacY

84 N.C. 434
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 84 N.C. 434 (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, 84 N.C. 434 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

RueeiN, J.

For present purposes we may treat the following as the undisputed facts of the case: In February, 1863, Thomas C. Nichols executed a deed, absolute on its face, conveying the land which is the subject of controversy ■to the defendant, George W. Thompson, and soon thereafter .entered the army, where he remained until his death in January, 1864. He left surviving him as his widow the plaintiff, Mibra, (since intermarried with George W. Gulley) .and the other plaintiffs, his children. On the 20th of May, .1863, Daniel White, the father of Mibra, gave her the sum *435 bf one thousand dollars, and at the same time .executed an instrument in writing wherein he declared that he gave her that sum to be accounted for as an advancement in the distribution of his estate, and directed her to use it in “the redemption of her land now under a mortgage deed in the hands of one Mr. Thompson, said land to be for her use and benefit during her life, and then to her children equally.’'' This money she paid to .Thompson in June, 1863, who made her no deed but simply surrendered that which he had received from her husband, which had not then been registered, but has been since the beginning of this suit. After the death of Nichols, the defendant, Macy, became his administrator and in 1872 instituted certain proceedings in the probate court for a sale -of the same land for assets to pay the debts of his intestate, and obtaining an order sold the same on the 1st June, 1872, when the defendant, Allen, became the purchaser at the price of $627, upon the payment of which amount be took a deed from the administrator, the said proceedings however being inoperative because of the great irregularities therein. The defendant, Allen, soon after so purchasing, took possession of the land and has continued it ever since, except as to a small piece which lie sold to the defendant, High, and placed him in the possession thereof.

The facts in dispute between the parties are as follows: The plaintiffs allege that Thompson had purchased the land of Thomas C. Nichols, and that the deed of February, 1863, in being an absolute one, expressed the true intent of the parties; that plaintiff, Mibra, also purchased it, when in June, 1863, she paid Thompson the very money which had been advanced her by her father, and upon the express trusts declared by him, and that both of the defendants, Allen and High, had notice of all these facts at the time of their respective purchases. On the other hand the defendant, Thompson, alleges that said deed was intended only as *436 a security for an amount which Nichols owed him, at the time of its execution, and' for certain-o-ther amounts then advanced to him or assumed for him, and that there was an express understanding between them that it should not be registered, but should be surrendered upon payment of the amounts intended to be secured, and that it was further agreed that Nichols and his family were to remain in possession of the land ; and he expressly denies that there was any contract in regard to the land, between the plaintiff, Mibra, and himself, but says she paid him the money as agent for her husband, who was then in the army, and with the purpose simply to redeem his land in accordance with the understanding between them, and therefore he surrendered her the deed, and made her none; that he knew that the money paid him had been furnished by her father, but had not the slightest intimation of the trusts imposed.

The defendants, Allen and High, deny all' notice of any irregularity in the proceedings for the sale, and of the claim of the plaintiffs, or any of them, to the- land, and the former alleges that the money he paid for the land was used by the administrator of Nichols in the payment o'f his intestate’s debts, and that believing the land to be his, he has put improvements upon it.

The prayer of the plaintiffs is to have the defendant, Thompson, declared a trustee of the legal title for them ; and that he be decreed to execute a deed .conveying;the land to the plaintiff, Mibra, for life with remainder in fee to the other plaintiffs, and that the proceedings in the probate court for a sale by the administrator be declared irregular and void, and the deed to Allen he cancelled, and that they recover the possession of the land.

The defendants, Allen and High, deny the right of plaintiffs to recover the land, and the former asks, in case the sale to him be set aside, that he be allowed for his improvements, *437 and also subrogated to the right of creditors, to whom his money was paid, against the land as the property of Nichols.

On the trial in the court below, the plaintiff, Mibra, was introduced as a witness for the plaintiffs and testified that .«he first saw the deed from Nichols to Thompson in June, 1863, when she went to see the latter for the purpose of buying the land back that she told him that she had gotten some money from her father and wanted to buy the land back, when he said he would, call and see her' that he did not take the money that day, but the next week she went again and paid him the money and he delivered to her the deed from Nichols to him, and that there was nothing said about that deed being a sufficient title, nor did she ask him. This was the whole of the evidence offered by the plaintiffs as to the alleged purchase of the land of Thompson by the plaintiff, Mibra.

The defendants introduced the defendant, Thompson, and offered to show by him the real consideration of the Nichols deed, and that it was only intended as a security, and to be surrendered upon the payments of the amounts secured, and the understanding between them that it should not be registered, but upon the objection of the plaintiffs the court excluded the evidence and the defendants excepted. This witness then stated that the plaintiff, Mibra, came to his house and told him that she had brought the money to redeem the land ” or else that she had “ come to pay back the money” lent her husband, and he could not say which of the two expressions she used ; that she paid the amount and not a word was said about her buying the land or his making her a deed, and that he had no such understanding; that at the time he surrendered the deed to her, he told her that it had never been registered because he expected the land would be redeemed; that he had told her, too, that it had been the understanding between. Nichols and himself that when his money was paid he was to surrender the land, *438 and that he.accompanied the act of delivery with the words, “ I now surrender the deed in compliance with that premise/ That he had previously told her of the understanding that he was to surrender the laud when his debts were paid; that he had signed no writing of any sort-binding himself to convey the land to the plaintiff, Mibra, or any other person, that his debt had, been paid and he had no further interest in it, and if there was any title in him he was willing to convey to any person to whom the court might direct.

The defendant asked the court to charge the jury—

1.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.C. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulley-v-macy-nc-1881.