High v. . Pearce

17 S.E.2d 108, 220 N.C. 266, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 5, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 108 (High v. . Pearce) 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
High v. . Pearce, 17 S.E.2d 108, 220 N.C. 266, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 522 (N.C. 1941).

Opinion

WINBORNE, J., concurring in result.

STACY, C. J., and BARNHILL, J., join in concurring opinion. John A. Pearce died a resident of Wilson County, owning lands in both Johnston and Wilson counties. Altogether he owned around eighty-five acres, about fifty-three acres of which lay in Wilson County. The Wilson County lands were encumbered by a first mortgage to the Federal Land Bank of Columbia for about $4,500, and by a second mortgage to the Bank of Lucama for $250.

S.E. High, Sr., cashier of the Lucama Bank, qualified as administrator of Pearce and filed a petition in Johnston County to make assets to pay debts of the administration. In this petition he described three tracts of land, two of them lying in Johnston County and one lying in Wilson County. In his petition he sets up the aforementioned encumbrances on the Wilson County land, and also alleges that Annie Pearce, the widow of John A. Pearce, and a party to the proceeding, had a dower right in the lands of the decedent.

Annie Pearce admitted the allegations of the petition and did not resist the sale of the lands, but she asserted that she had a dower right in them and the right to have her dower allotted to her by metes and bounds. She therefore asked that the lands be sold subject to her dower and signified her intention of having the same allotted to her at a subsequent time by a proper proceeding instituted by herself. Upon this the clerk of the Superior Court of Johnston County ordered that her dower be allotted to her, reciting the admissions and allegations in the petition of a special proceeding, and that all persons having an interest had been made parties to such proceeding. He thereupon issued a "writ of dower" to the sheriff of Johnston County, who thereunder summoned three jurors, citizens and residents of Johnston County, to make the allotment; they proceeded to Wilson County, where the jurors allotted to Annie Pearce five acres of land, including the home but excluding parts of the curtilage. *Page 268

Report of this allotment was made to the clerk of the Superior Court of Johnston County, and the clerk thereupon confirmed the allotment. No certification of the proceeding was made to Wilson County.

An order was then made to sell the lands of the decedent, both in Johnston and Wilson counties, and a sale thereof was advertised.

Meanwhile, prior to the sale day, S.E. High, Sr., it is alleged, foreclosed the Lucama Bank mortgage of $250 on all of the Wilson County lands, including the part allotted to the widow for dower, and S.E. High, Jr., son of the administrator, became the purchaser at the price of $275. On a subsequent proceeding brought by S.E. High, Jr., Annie Pearce was ejected from the land.

Thereafter, at the public sale, under the order of the clerk, only the two tracts of land in Johnston County were sold, and here again S.E. High, Jr., became the purchaser, at the price of $250.

On 5 January, 1940, Annie Pearce filed a petition and motion before the clerk of the Superior Court of Johnston County, asking that the allotment of dower under this proceeding be set aside as fraudulent, and void as a matter of law.

In her supporting petition she sets up that the administrator, S.E. High, Sr., was cashier of the Bank of Lucama, which held a second mortgage on the Wilson County lands; that his close friends were summoned on the jury which allotted the dower; that he brought about the sale of the Wilson County lands, some fifty acres, upon the Bank of Lucama mortgage after the lands had been advertised under the order of court, and that his son, S.E. High, Jr., became purchaser at the price of $275; that at the judicial sale of the Johnston County lands S.E. High, Jr., again became purchaser at the price of $250, thus acquiring all of the lands, worth at least $6,000, subject to the Land Bank mortgage, for $525.

She alleges that she had never assented to the allotment of dower in the Johnston County proceeding, but, on the contrary, specifically demanded that the lands be sold subject to dower, to the end that she might have the same allotted in a proper proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction. She therefore contends in her petition that all the proceedings taken before the clerk of the Superior Court relative to the by the sheriff of Johnston and the Johnston County jury making the allotment, were void for want of jurisdiction, and asks that the various orders, writs of dower, allotment and confirmation be set aside in order that she may proceed, as provided by law, to have her dower allotted.

The respondents, S.E. High and S.E. High, Jr., answer, denying any fraud or bad faith; they contend that the allotment of dower was in accordance with the statute, and valid, and was had and done with *Page 269 consent of movant through her counsel; that the purchase price of the lands was determined by open sale; that the dower allotted to the widow was worth at least $1,250; and, by way of further defense, set up that movant is estopped by reason of the fact that she nowhere in the proceedings took any appeal, that she accepted and occupied the allotted dower, and especially that she set up dower in the proceeding brought by S.E. High, Jr., in which she was ejected from the premises.

The clerk denied the motion to set aside the allotment of dower, and, upon appeal, his order was affirmed by Williams, J., at chambers in Smithfield. From this judgment Annie Pearce appealed. In the instant case, it does not appear that the experience of the widow with the law was a happy one. Entitled to a dower of one-third in value of around eighty-five acres of land, partly in Wilson and partly in Johnston counties, she was allotted five acres out of the Wilson County tract of thirty-three acres, which tract was sufficient in value under the appraisal of the Land Bank to justify a loan of about $4,500. In addition to this mortgage there was an additional mortgage to the Bank of Lucama of $250, under which this tract of land was sold by S.E. High, Sr., who was cashier of the bank, as well as administrator of the estate, and which was purchased by S.E. High, Jr., at a price which netted only $144, leaving "no equity" for the widow, although in the present proceeding the respondents aver that the small part allotted to the widow as dower was worth $1,250. The widow protests that she is not in the hands of her friends, but in the hands of those moving to the restriction or extinction of her dower in all the lands. After the sale under the Lucama Bank mortgage, the other lands of the decedent in Johnston County were sold and S.E. High, Jr., became the purchaser at $250, thus, as the movant contends, making S.E. High, Jr., the owner of the entire tract of land for $525, including the equities of the widow in a substantial margin of value, and putting him in a position to clear the Land Bank mortgage on easy payments.

We think more consideration might have been given to the widow, and indeed to the statute itself, in view of the beneficence which instigated the institution of dower, to have allotted her dower in other lands of which she could not be stripped so easily. However this may be, upon a consideration of the record we must eliminate the question of fraud as not supported thereby. *Page 270

The real question upon which decision must rest is that of jurisdiction: Were acts of the clerk of the Superior Court of Johnston County, in allotting dower to the widow in lands situate in Wilson County, void for want of jurisdiction?

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 108, 220 N.C. 266, 1941 N.C. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/high-v-pearce-nc-1941.