Kitchin v. . Grandy

7 S.E. 663, 101 N.C. 86
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 S.E. 663 (Kitchin v. . Grandy) 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
Kitchin v. . Grandy, 7 S.E. 663, 101 N.C. 86 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

This action, instituted to have a trust fund in the hands of the defendant R. H. Smith, properly administered, after the pleadings (87) were filed, was referred to James M. Mullen with the direction, "to hear and determine all matters of controversy in the same arising." *Page 99

The referee made his report at Fall Term, 1886; so much of his findings of fact as is necessary to a proper understanding of the controversy and the rulings in the court below, brought up for review, is as follows:

On 21 December, 1880, Joseph J. Edmundson, having purchased a tract of land lying in Martin County and described in the deed therefor executed to him by Burton H. Spruill and wife Laura K., on the same day paid $200 of the purchase money, and gave to the said Laura K. his five several notes, under seal, for the residue, one in the sum of $500, due with accruing interest, at eight per cent on 1 October, 1881, and the other four each in the sum of $575, with like interest, due on the first day of the same month in the successive years from 1882 to 1885, inclusive. To secure the deferred installments at the same time, the vendee Edmundson reconveyed the land to the defendant Richard H. Smith, trustee, vesting in him the right and imposing an obligation in case of default in the payment of said notes or any one of them, on the request of the holder, to advertise and sell said land for cash, and requiring him, after deducting the expenses and costs attending the execution of the assumed trust out of the funds thus arising, to apply the residue "to the amount remaining unpaid upon said note or notes, with interest accrued, and the balance, if any, he shall pay to the said Joseph J. Edmundson, his heirs and assigns."

Before the maturity of these notes they were transferred to and became the said Burton H. Spruill's property.

On 15 January, 1884, the said Burton H. entered into a contract with defendants, Grandy Sons, for an advance to him of $1,500 to secure the payment whereof, as also other stipulations contained in it for the consignment to them, as commission merchants to sell, of eight bales of cotton for each $100 advanced, and the payment of (88) $1.50 for each bale deficient, he gave them his written obligation and further assigned to them as collateral security, in his deed of 22 January, of the same month, the four notes of $575 each, upon the first of which had been paid $300, and conveying also "all of his crops to be grown during the year on the Cypress Swamp Farm, in Halifax County, which the said Spruill had theretofore bought from the plaintiff, and his carts, wagons and farming implements," with the power of disposing of the property in case of a failure to comply with his contract to refund the moneys to be advanced, and for which he had also given his separate written obligation due by the first day of December of the same year.

At the time of executing these papers the plaintiff and one Mrs. Neems held a mortgage security on the Cypress Swamp Farm, on which were to *Page 100 be grown the crops that were under the defendants' lien, amounting then to about $4,000, originally due to the plaintiff alone, whereof he had passed to Mrs. Neems about $1,100, that she then held. The said defendants had no notice of this encumbrance when the transaction with Spruill was consummated, but ascertained the fact a few days afterwards. They then declined to make further advances until assured that Spruill would not be disturbed in his possession, but permitted to proceed in the cultivation of the crop for their benefit, and this determination was early in February communicated to the plaintiff by their attorney, to which the following is his answer:

"Spruill is now in my office badly upset. I have no note due against him and cannot sell if disposed to do so, and certainly I would not sell if I could. Mrs. Neems holds one note for $1,100 now due, and she is the one to apply to, to not sell. If she does not sell there will be no sale. I could not guarantee that if sold the purchaser would charge no rent, but the fourth is all any one could charge, and it seems to me that the other three-fourths, his part, in case of a sale, together with (89) the notes you have, would be ample security for $1,500. If Grandy will advance no more than that on the crops and notes, and will hold them after paying his $1,500, advance for me, with Spruill's consent, he can have all the crops if the land should be sold, provided I bought it; and I certainly will buy it unless it should bring over four thousand dollars cash, which it will never do in this age and generation. I should be compelled to do it in self-defense. I have just agreed with Spruill that he is to convey to me all his interest in the notes you have and all his crops, subject to Grandy's lien of $1,500, and $100 more if I say so. Now if this is satisfactory to you, I will guarantee that Spruill shall not be disturbed nor his crop, until Grandy gets his money out of the crops and notes, at which time Grandy is to deliver the notes to me. I will stop the sale, or buy it if Mrs. Neems should attempt to sell."

This paper was communicated by the attorney to the defendants, and they then addressed a letter to their said attorney in these words:

"If we understand about the farm that Mr. Spruill bought of Mr. Kitchin, it stands as follows, viz.: All of Spruill's indebtedness on account of said farm is to Kitchin, except first note of $1,100 to Mrs. Neems. If Kitchin will place his notes in your hands as a guarantee that Mrs. Neems shall not sell the land, and in case she does, he will buy it, and the mortgage made to us shall not be disturbed, we think that would be safe. If Mrs. Neems sold the land, and land is worth it, we would bid enough on same through you to protect our interest. In case of sale, and Kitchin not doing as promised, forfeits the notes that *Page 101 he will place in your hands. If this is agreeable all round, and Mr. Spruill desires it after we are paid — principal, interest, and commissions on cotton he is to ship us, we have no sort of objection to Mr. Kitchin having the Edmundson notes in our hands. This will be done of course, you advising it. We have been (as Kitchin says (90) Spruill is) `upset' entirely in statements made to us (as we understood them) to act very judiciously in this matter, and hence it is that we call on you."

On 21 February, 1884, the plaintiff addressed to the said defendants a communication in these terms:

SCOTLAND NECK, N.C. 21 February, 1884.

Messrs. C. W. Grandy Sons.

DEAR SIRS: I will see that your lien for the present year on the crop of B. H. Spruill, on the Cypress Swamp Farm, shall not be disturbed or subjected to any of the debts of said Spruill, secured by mortgage or trust on said farm, and will save you harmless on account of the same, to wit, said debts secured by said mortgage or trust.

W. H. KITCHIN.

Contemporaneously with the making the last-mentioned communication, and as a condition thereof, the plaintiff required the said Spruill to assign to the plaintiff, as a collateral indemnity in subordination to that of the defendants, and as a security for the payment of the purchase money yet due for the Cypress Swamp Farm, the four notes held by the defendant, which transfer, in writing, the said Spruill made, stipulating therein that the defendants held them for supplies only, which did not exceed $1,500 in amount. This instrument was never registered, nor its existence and contents known to defendants or their attorney until after the beginning of the present suit.

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Related

Worley v. . Worley
199 S.E. 82 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E. 663, 101 N.C. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchin-v-grandy-nc-1888.