Mast v. . Raper

81 N.C. 330
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 N.C. 330 (Mast v. . Raper) 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
Mast v. . Raper, 81 N.C. 330 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff, as administrator with the will annexed of Margaret Gardner, applies by petition to the superior court clerk of Forsyth for license to sell, for the payment of her debts, a tract of land in said county devised by the testatrix to her two children Margaret E. and Sarah L. Paper. The devisees and also N. H. D: Wilson and Charles E. Shober, partners of the firm of Wilson & Shober, and John H. Welborn, each of whom asserts a lien on the land, are made defendants, in order that their conflicting claims may be determined in the action. Wilson & Shober and John H. Welborn file answers, setting out the facts upon which their respective claims are founded and assenting to the sale and the transfer of the controversy to the fund to be substituted in place of the land. The plaintiff has accordingly by order of the probate court made sale of the land and holds the proceeds to await the decision in regard to their distribution.

*332 The facts agreed on by counsel as constituting the case are as follows:

Between the years 1861 and 1865, James D. Payne, administrator with the will annexed of Joab Teague, and by authority thereof, contracted with J. J. Raper to sell and convey the land for one thousand dollars, and thereupon the latter gave his note for that sum, and the former executed his bond to make title when the purchase money was paid.

In the year 1866, the parties came to an account and it was found that $750 was still due, and the said Raper thereupon executed two notes, one for $650 with the testatrix, Margaret Gardner, as surety, payable to H. T. Byerly, guardian to the minor children of the testator, Joab Teague, and the other for $100 to the administrator, James D. Payne, and the original note of $100 was surrendered. The guardian IT. T. Byerly brought suit on the note delivered to him against J. J. Raper, the principal, and recovered judgment for the amount due thereon at fall term of 1870 of Forsyth superior court. After the docketing of this judgment, Raper paid thereon $195, and also paid the note held by the administrator in full, and directed title to the land to be conveyed to the said Margaret Gardner, his surety, which was accordingly done on the 31st of January, 1872, without the knowledge or consent of the guardian. This judgment has been assigned to the defendant, J. E. Welborn.

Wilson & Shober recovered judgment at spring term, 1872, Of Davidson superior court, against said J. J. Raper and the plaintiff’s testatrix, Margaret Gardner, on a note for $650 and interest, and about the same time recovered judgment before a justice of the peace against Raper alone for two hundred dollars, both of which judgments they caused to be docketed in the superior court of Forsyth on the 11th day of May, 1872. The defendant, Welborn, insists upon the priority of his docketed judgment against *333 Raper, to whom on payment of the purchase money the land belonged; whilst the defendants, Wilson & Shober, contend that the legal estate in the land passed by the deed to the plaintiff’s testatrix and their larger judgment against her is the only lien upon it.

The merits of the controversy are open to us and we are called on to decide upon the whole case to the satisfaction of which debts the proceeds of sale shall be applied, and which of the competing claimants has the prior legal or equitable title thereto. When the substituted note was executed to the guardian for a. large part of the remaining purchase money, the land was held by the administrator, Payne, under an express agreement with Raper, the debtor, that it should be in trust to secure the payment of the purchase money, as well as the. portion contained in the note payable to the guardian, as the small residue payable to himself. If the renewal notes had been taken by Payne and he had assigned the larger to the guardian, the right"to retain the estate and the legal obligation of the vendor to hold it for the security of both, would be clear and indisputable. The execution of one directly to the guardian does not change the substantial character of the transaction, or affect the legal rights of the parties, as the purchase money is not paid by giving a new security for it, unless so intended, and the vendee is only entitled to a conveyance when the purchase money is paid. This is involved in the decision in Lord v. Merony, 79 N. C., 14, where it is held that a note taken payable to the guardian, to whom the money due on a sale of land by the clerk and master, when collected, would be paid, still retained its lien upon the land even after the clerk and master had conveyed to the purchaser and the latter had sold and conveyed to an innocent holder.

When the renewal notes were substituted for the single original note, they did not lose their lien upon the retained *334 estate in the land, but the vendor continued to hold the same as trustee for both, and neither could he rightfully part with the title, nor Raper demand it until the notes were paid. The guardian took the debt with this security and in like condition when reduced to judgment it passed under his assignment to Welborn. Wilborn v. Gorrell, 3 Ire. Eq., 117.

When upon Raper’s payment of the small note, under his direction the land was conveyed to the plaintiff’s testatrix, the surety to the larger note, with notice of its non-payment and the attaching trusts, the act was a direct breach of fiduciary obligation concurred in by all the parties to the transaction, which had not the effect of discharging the land, and the trust remained unimpaired following the transfer of the legal estate to her. To this precedent liability for the unpaid purchase money, any lien created by a docketed judgment is necessarily subordinate, because it can only 'reach the debtor’s interest with all the encumbrance thereon. If his equitable estate had been such as could be sold under execution, no greater interest than the debtor had would be acquired by the purchaser, and the judgment lien can have no wider scope of operation. Flynn v. Williams, 1 Ire., 509; Homesley v. Hogue, 4 Jones, 481.

Had the testatrix lived, the trust could be enforced against her by the holder of the guardian.note; the same right exists to have satisfaction out of the moneys derived from the administrator’s sale.

The operation of the rule of subrogation will be illustrated by reference to some adjudged cases.

The surety to a note given for land, the title to which is to be retained until full payment of the purchase money, has an equity on the insolvency of the principal debtor, to have a re-sale of the land, his property, and the proceeds applied in discharge of the debt. Smith v. Smith, 5 Ire. Eq., *335 34; Egerton v. Alley, 6 Ire. Eq., 188; Ferrer v. Barrett, 4 Jones’ Eq., 456.

So one surety may have property provided by the debtor for the indemnity of a co-surety subjected to the payment of the debt in exoneration of both. Leary v. Cheshire,

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.C. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mast-v-raper-nc-1879.