Martin v. . Bundy

193 S.E. 831, 212 N.C. 437, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 24, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 S.E. 831 (Martin v. . Bundy) 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
Martin v. . Bundy, 193 S.E. 831, 212 N.C. 437, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 339 (N.C. 1937).

Opinion

This is an action brought by plaintiffs against certain of the defendants to restrain the sale of land (describing same), in which plaintiffs with their brothers and sisters (afterwards made parties defendant) claim a one-fifth interest. The restraining order was continued to the hearing. The facts of record are as follows: (1) W. G. Whichard, of Pitt County, N.C. died about 1875 intestate, seized and possessed of some 500 acres of land in Pitt County known as his "Home Place." He left surviving him five children — Ashley Whichard, W. A. Whichard (who married J. G. Taylor), M. L. Whichard (who married John W. Martin), and M. R. Whichard (who married J. J. Jones), and F. M. Whichard. On 7 December, 1882, Ashley Whichard and wife conveyed their interest in the land to John W. Martin, the deed being duly recorded.

It is alleged in the answer of appealing defendants: "That in the early fall of 1885 the children of W. G. Whichard above named, except Ashley Whichard and John W. Martin, entered into an agreement to divide the W. G. Whichard land among the said children of W. G. Whichard and John W. Martin, the said John W. Martin taking one share or a *Page 439 child's part, he having purchased the share and interest of Ashley Whichard in said W. G. Whichard land. That they agreed to make a mutual partition or division among themselves, and to pass deeds to each other, instead of partition by special proceeding in court. That, pursuant to said agreement, the said children and John W. Martin called in Willis Whichard, a prominent citizen of the county and who was also a surveyor, and Marcus Manning, a surveyor, and had them to survey and divide said land equally and fairly among said children and John W. Martin, he representing one share and interest as above stated. That they proceeded to divide said land in five shares or lots, each share adjoining or running to the run of Grindal Creek on the north, and said shares or lots were numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. That said children and John W. Martin drew for said land and John W. Martin drew lot 1; W. A. Whichard drew lot 2; M. R. Whichard drew lot 3; M. L. Martin (who married John W. Martin) drew lot 4, and F. M. Whichard drew lot 5. That the said Willis Whichard drew the said division deeds and all of said children, including M. L. Martin, signed the said deed to John W. Martin for lot 1; and all of said children, including John W. Martin and wife, signed a deed to W. A. Whichard for lot 2; and all of said children, including John W. Martin and wife, M. L. Martin, signed deed to M. R. Whichard for lot 3; and all of said children, including John W. Martin, signed deed to M. L. Martin for lot 4; and all of said children, including John W. Martin and wife, M. L. Martin, signed deed to F. M. Whichard for lot 5. The said deeds were all executed on 9 September, 1885, and all acknowledged before E. A. Moye, C. S.C., on the same day and ordered recorded by him; and all of said deeds recorded in Book I-4 of the Pitt County registry. . . . The plaintiffs contend that the defendant's title is defective, for that the certificate of probate of E. A. Moye, clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt County, in probating the deed of F. M. Whichard, M. L. Martin et als. to John W. Martin, recorded in Book I-4, page 505, of the Pitt County registry, does not show that M. L. Martin was privately examined, nor that the clerk found the facts required to be found by sec. 2515 of the Consolidated Status of North Carolina. Defendant John W. Martin, opposing defendants' contentions, alleged that it was not necessary to put title in John W. Martin, as he took a child's part from Ashley Whichard and wife by deed, as above set out, and this particular deed did not pass title to John W. Martin, it simply allotted to him and fixed his possession and restricted his possession to that which was already his, and that was the case with the other tenants in common receiving deeds. That M. L. Martin took and accepted a deed for Lot No. 4 signed by John W. Martin and the other tenants in common, and she joined in the deeds to the other tenants in common, *Page 440 and she was bound by her action, and was estopped to claim any part of Lot No. 1 deeded and assigned to John W. Martin as long as she took and held Lot No. 4, which she did, and her children, including the plaintiffs, are estopped to now question or attack said deed or to claim any interest in the land described and allotted and conveyed in said deed; and the defendant pleads the said action of M. L. Martin as a complete bar and estoppel against the plaintiffs and the other children of M. L. Martin to claim or recover anything in this action."

Thereafter, on 15 January, 1895, the said M. L. Martin conveyed her said Tract No. 4 to J. J. Jones. "That said deed was for a valuable consideration set out in said deed; that her husband, John W. Martin, joined with her in said conveyance; that it was duly probated with her private examination and recorded, and the grantee went in possession under said deed, and he and his assigns have since held said land. That the said M. L. Martin, having entered into said partition agreement with her cotenants in common, as above set out, and having executed deeds to her said co-tenants in common, including the deed to John W. Martin, the deed in question, and having accepted deed from her cotenants in common for Lot No. 4, said W. G. Whichard land, and having accepted the same and held the same for more than seven years, nearly ten years, and having then sold the same by proper deed to J. J. Jones, she estopped herself to claim any right or interest in Lot No. 1 conveyed to John W. Martin, or to claim any right or interest in the lots of land conveyed and allotted to the other tenants in common, and she never did claim or assert any right or interest in lot 1 assigned and deeded to John W. Martin, nor to any of the other lots assigned and deeded to the other tenants in common, and she died in 1902. That the plaintiffs and the other children of M. L. Martin are likewise estopped by the said action of M. L. Martin above set out to claim or hold any rights or interests in the said Lot No. 1 allotted and deeded to John W. Martin as above set out; and the defendant pleads such acts and deed of M. L. Martin as a complete bar and estoppel against the plaintiffs and the other children of M. L. Martin to maintain this action. That the defendant John W. Martin has held the land in question in absolute and adverse possession, in his own right and under known and visible lines and boundaries, for 50 years, and under colorable title during said term of 50 years, and he pleads such adverse possession under known and visible lines and boundaries and under colorable title in bar to any recovery against him in this action. And on account of the adverse possession of the defendant for the term above set out he pleads the 20-year statute of limitations and the 7-year statute of limitations in bar of any recovery by the plaintiffs or any of the children of M. L. Martin." *Page 441

The defendant John W. Martin, together with his wife, Laura Martin, whom he married after the death of M. L. Martin (his first wife), made a deed of trust to W. J. Bundy, trustee, to secure certain indebtedness. The defendants Baugh Sons Co. and W. J. Carson are holders of notes secured by the deed of trust.

Defendants pray, in part: "That the action be dismissed at the cost of the plaintiffs, and that the defendant John W. Martin be adjudged the sole and absolute owner in fee simple of the tract of land in controversy, subject to the deed of trust in question."

The judgment of the court below was as follows: "This cause coming on to be heard before his Honor, E. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 S.E. 831, 212 N.C. 437, 1937 N.C. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-bundy-nc-1937.