Ladd v. . Byrd

18 S.E. 666, 113 N.C. 466
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 18 S.E. 666 (Ladd v. . Byrd) 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
Ladd v. . Byrd, 18 S.E. 666, 113 N.C. 466 (N.C. 1893).

Opinion

Avery, J..:

.Prior to the passage of the Act of 1870, when the reversionary interest could still be sold under execution, *469 the judgment creditor might, at his option, recognize the claim of the. debtor to a homestead by exposing to sale only such reversionary interest without affecting the validity of the sale or in any way impairing the right of the purchaser to the possession of the land on' the expiration of the prescribed period of exemption. Long v. Walker, 105 N. C., 91; Wyche v. Wyche, 85 N. C., 96; Barrett v. Richardson, 76 N. C., 423. When made expressly “subject to the homestead,” it was held that the sale was valid and “ pas-red the reversionary interest only.” In such cases it is clear that those holding under and enjoying the right of exemption,- and their assignees, are in privity with a purchaser whose right to possession is postponed by the clemency of the execution creditor, and their possession in no event becomes adverse to his claim till his right of entry and of action accrues on the termination of the exemption. Corpening v. Kincaid, 82 N. C., 202; Lowdermilk v. Corpening, 92 N. C., 333. The same principle prevails as that which governs in the case of life-tenants and remaindermen or reversioners. The statute does not run until the new claimant can maintain an action for the possession and fails to bring it. Melvin v. Waddell, 75 N. C., 361; Staton v. Mullis, 92 N. C., 623; Avent v. Arrington, 105 N. C., 377.

But in the case at bar it seems that the present plaintiff, Ladd, recovered a judgment against one Adams on an old debt, and at a sale under execution thereon, on the 2d day of August, 1868, made without allotting a homestead to the debtor, became the purchaser and took the plaintiff’s deed for the land. When, however, the plaintiff attempted to enforce his right by an action for possession, it was decided ■that Adams, the debtor under whom the present defendants claim as heirs at law, was entitled to a homestead in the land (Ladd v. Adams, 66 N. C., 164), and the plaintiff was forced to submit to judgment of nonsuit, in accordance with the view which then received the sanction of this Court; that the *470 homestead provisions of the Constitution operated retroactively. Notwithstanding the fact that the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States subsequently rendered led to the overruling of that doctrine, Adams, having had his homestead previously allotted so as to embrace the whole tract of land in controversy, continued to occupy it till his Aeath, in 1889, and since his death the defendants have held possession, claiming as heirs at law of Adams.

We think that the judgment in the former action is conclusive upon both parties to the extent only that the plaintiff (having failed to raise the Federal question by appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States) was precluded from demanding the possession till the falling in of the exemption, while the defendant and-those claiming under him were estopped from denying as against the plaintiff and those claiming under him that they occupied the land in dispute as a homestead and not in the assertion of a title adverse to that of the plaintiff, so long as the homestead right subsisted. The creditor, though he acquired a good title under the sale, has recognized by his inaction the validity of the allotment of the homestead, and is in no worse plight than if he had not proceeded to sell until Adams died, in 1889. If the sale had not been made until that time a good title would have passed, as has been expressly held by this Court. Cobb v. Halyburton, 92 N. C., 652. It would therefore be strangely inconsistent with the doctrine laid down in the eases cited, that the creditor who sold subject to the homestead, when not bound to do so, or who calmly awaited, without action, the termination of the exemption and thereby recognized its validity, was not barred when the right expired, should we hold that another creditor who did not sleep upon his rights, but was compelled to acquiesce in the ruling of the highest Court of the State, is either concluded by the adjudication that the defendant was entitled to his homestead or is barred by the lapse of time during the occupancy under the claim *471 of exemption. The judgment of nonsuit was affirmed solely upon the ground that the homestead was valid — not because the reversionary interest could not be subjected for the debt. The sale was valid, and unquestionably a good title passed to plaintiff by virtue of the Sheriff’s deed. Long v. Walker, supra. Actions for possession are conclusive as to title only where an issue involving the title is raised and passed upon by the jury. Allen v. Sallinger, 103 N. C., 14. Therefore the judgment in the former proceeding binds both parties as to the validity of the allotment of the homestead to Adams, and no further. Cobb v. Halyburlon, supra. Although the ruling of this Court in Ladd v. Adams, supra, is admitted now to have been erroneous, those who claim under and in privity with Adams will not be heard, after his enjoyment of the benefits of the exemption to which the Court declared him entitled up to the time of his death, to claim all of the advantages of an adverse holding during an occupancy which was protected by the Courts as lawful only upon the idea that it was not adverse to the claims of creditors. But it did not appear as a fact whether the homesteader Adams left surviving him any minor children or whether he left a widow. The action for possession cannot be maintained while one of the children of Adams is still a minor. Cobb v. Halyburton, supra. The homestead right having been shown to exist is presumed to continue, and the burden was upon the plaintiff to show that it had terminated. The burden is always upon the remain-derman, w'hose estate is expectant upon the determination of a life-estate, to show that his right of action had accrued by the termination of the particular estate, w'hen suit was brought. Lewis v. Mobley, 4 Dev. & Bat., 323. The plaintiff must show title good against the world, and after it appeared that Adams was entitled to homestead and had it allotted to him, and the plaintiff acquiesced in the adjudication in his favor, and it appeared that there were children of Adams surviving him, it became thereupon incumbent upon the *472 plaintiff to prove that the exemption had terminated, or the attainment of the age of twenty-one by the youngest of such children. Holdman, a witness, married Martha, a daughter of Jesse Adams (we know not when), but since the death of Adams the homesteader, in 1889, said Holdman and his wife have been in possession. Another witness bad-testified that in 1889 Adams and his wife and daughter were' living with him on the land. It does not appear whether her name'was Martha, or whether she was a daughter by the same or a different marriage.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.E. 666, 113 N.C. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-byrd-nc-1893.