Martha Kane v. . Edward Graham Haywood

66 N.C. 1
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 66 N.C. 1 (Martha Kane v. . Edward Graham Haywood) 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
Martha Kane v. . Edward Graham Haywood, 66 N.C. 1 (N.C. 1872).

Opinion

It appearing, to the satisfaction of the Court, from the report of the clerk, that EDWARD GRAHAM HAYWOOD, one of the attorneys of the Court, had, as attorney for Mrs. Martha Kane, received the sum of $4,496.22, and from the affidavit of Mrs. Kane, that he had after repeated solicitations, failed to account for and pay the same over to her:

On motion of Moore Gatling and Phillips Merrimon, attorneys for Mrs. Kane, a rule was granted in the first named case on Col. Haywood to pay the said balance of $4,496.22 into Court.

This rule was made returnable on the 4th day of January, 1872.

At the return of this rule, Col. Haywood filed in Court the following answer thereto: *Page 4

In the matter of MARTHA KANE.

The respondent answering the rule herein, for answer thereunto, says:

That sometime about the close of the year 1867, or the beginning of the year 1868, Mrs. Martha Kane called on this affiant, at his law office in the city of Raleigh, and represented to him, that she was one of the heirs at law and next of kin to John Kane, deceased — was poor and helpless, resided in Ireland, and desired this affiant to act for her in obtaining possession and reducing to money her share of the said John Kane's real estate and personal property, and upon hearing her statement and questioning her, this affiant thought it probable that her statements were true and that she had legal rights, and undertook to investigate the rights further. Upon further investigation this affiant became satisfied that she had legal rights, and about the month of March, 1868, she having confessed her inability to pay this affiant a retaining fee, he took from herself and her husband, Thomas Kane, the power of attorney, bearing date February 6th, 1868, and herewith filed, whereby he, this affiant, became the agent and attorney in law and fact of the said Martha and Thomas, to receive the said Martha's share of the real and personal estate of John Kane, deceased, reduce the same to possession and account with them for three fourth's the value thereof, with powers also to supply such attorneys under him as he should see fit to conduct such business, and upon the receipt of this power of attorney, this affiant agreed to become, and did become, such agent and attorney in law and fact of the said Martha and Thomas, as is therein set forth and described.

This affiant avers that all moneys, property and estate, real and personal, which has come into his possession or under his control, for and in behalf of the said Martha and Thomas, have so come into his possession and under his control, in and by virtue of said instrument. *Page 5

After collecting evidence of the marriage of said Martha and Thomas, of the naturalization of the said Thomas, and taking numerous ex parte depositions to ascertain the genealogy of the Kane family, and to find out who were the next of kin and heirs at law of John Kane, deceased, and to identify the said Thomas Kane with the Thomas Kane, whose naturalization we were prepared to prove, which evidence had to be collected in Ireland, New York State, New Jersey and elsewhere, the collection of which consumed some eight or ten months and required a very extensive, laborious and voluminous correspondence, and to aid in which the said Martha, at the suggestion of this affiant had retained and used the services of Moody B. Smith, Esq., counsellor and attorney at law, resident in New York City, this affiant supposed he would have been able to assert the said Martha and Thomas' rights, and to obtain possession of the money, property, and estate to which they were entitled, without suit, but the administrators of John Kane insisted that they had exhausted his personal estate in the payment of debts, except as much thereof as had been lost by the recent civil war or had perished or been destroyed by other inevitable accidents, and the persons in the possession of the real estate of which John Kane, died seized and possessed, and which consisted of town lots in the city of Raleigh, and an undivided moiety of a plantation near Raleigh, in Wake county, refused to acknowledge the said Martha's rights.

The persons, who by their tenants under them, were in possession of the town lots in the city of Raleigh, claiming them as their own, were two infants, by name Francis Patrick McCarthey and Isabella McCarthey, and the mother of the said infants, by name Mary McCarthey, wife of Dennis McCarthey, claimed the same; also, asserting that she was a sister and heir at law of John Kane, deceased, and though born in Ireland and married to an Irishman, her husband had been naturalized after their intermarriage and before the death of the said John *Page 6 Kane. The undivided moiety of John Kane, deceased, in the aforesaid plantation near Raleigh, had been sold under a license obtained from the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Wake county, by the administrators of John Kane, deceased, on a petition filed by them against Francis, Patrick and Isabella McCarthey, as the sole heirs at law of John Kane, deceased, for assets to pay debts and the said moiety was in the possession of the purchaser at said sales.

About the month of October, 1868, this affiant, without further consultation with the said Martha and Thomas, and claiming the right so to do under the aforesaid power of attorney, instituted a civil action, in the Superior Court of Wake county, in the name of the said Thomas and Martha Kane as plaintiffs, against the said Patrick Isabella McCarthey, infants, and Dennis McCarthey and Mary, his wife, as defendants, to recover possession of the said Martha's share of the aforesaid town lots in the city of Raleigh, and to effect a division of the same among the parties entitled thereto, according to their respective rights which said action was eventually carried by appeal into this Court, where at January Term 1869, it was held that the said Martha, as one of the heirs at law of John Kane, deceased, was entitled to an undivided moiety, of and in said town lots, and the said Mary McCarthy was entitled to the other undivided moiety, and by consent of the parties interested therein, it was adjudged that the said lots should be sold by the Clerk of the Supreme Court, and the proceeds equally divided between the said Martha Kane and Mary McCarthey, which sale was accordingly made, as directed, by the said clerk. The Court further decreed that the defendants, Francis, Patrick and Isabella McCarthey, should account for the rents and profits of said town lots which they had received since about the year 1866, and by an arrangement entered into, between, this affiant and the counsel for the defendants, the amount of said rents was ascertained by consent, and the rents and profits and proceeds of sale of town lots were carried into one common account *Page 7 and fund, and the respective rights of the parties in said fund were ascertained by consent — the share of the said Mary McCarthey being charged with the amount of rents and profits, which had been received and consumed by her children, Francis, Patrick and Isabella, all which will more fully and at large appear by reference to the proceedings in said action, now on file in this Court, and here referred to, for greater certainty.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martha-kane-v-edward-graham-haywood-nc-1872.