McCaskill v. . Lancashire

83 N.C. 393
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 N.C. 393 (McCaskill v. . Lancashire) 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
McCaskill v. . Lancashire, 83 N.C. 393 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Dillard, J.

The plaintiffs being creditors of the debtor partners trading under the name and style of J. W. Lancashire &'Co., in November, 1870, after the death of W. H. Morehead and Melvin Lowery, two of the firm, recovered two judgments against J. W. Lancashire as surviving partner, one in a justice’s court for two hundred dollars and the other in the superior court for a large sum, both of which were docketed in the county in which the lands described in the complaint are situate. . .

*394 The .object of the action is to have a certain alleged equitable interest or estate of J. W. Lancashire & Co. in the lands described in the complaint, which cannot be sold under an ordinary execution, defined and adjudged by the court, and to have the same applied to plaintiffs’ judgment as being assets of the late firm, and in order to understand the points presented for our determination, it will be material to make a concise statement of the facts :

In 1866, J. W. Lancashire & Co., all .the members of the firm being then alive, contracted to purchase the lands from the defendant, A. G. Thornton, at the price of $3,500, on the terms that they were to pay $1,000 cash down, and give their note for $2,500 to cover the balance, and the said Thornton was to convey the land at once.

The purchasers performed the contract on their part by making the cash payment and giving their note for the deferred instalment, and the said' Thornton attempted to perform his part of the contract by executing what he and his grantees took to be a deed sufficient in form and substance to pass the estate, but the same was in fact inoperative to pass the legal title for want of a seal to it.

J. W. Lancashire immediately went into possession of the land, and used the same as partnership property, and having the instrument executed to them, they had every confidence that their title was good.

While matters stood thus, the land was levied on under an execution in favor of Hinsdale as the property of A. G. Thornton, and sold by the sheriff and title made to the purchaser, who bought with notice of the equities of J. W. Lancashire & Go., and just before the sale, the said Thornton went into bankruptcy and surrendered the note for $2,500, which is nowin the hands of his assignee, D. G. McRae. Since the discharge of Thornton under the bankrupt act, he has acquired by deed the title of' the purchasers at sheriff’s sale under the Hinsdale execution.

*395 The record states that the question of bankruptcy was stricken out and then follows the entry, “Demurrer sustained and appeal by plaintiffs.”

Putting out of the case all the allegations connected with the going into bankruptcy of A. G. Thornton and his final discharge, we have upon the demurrer the following legal questions:

1. Are the facts sufficient in law to entitle the plaintiffs through the equity of J. W. Lancashire & Co. or the survivor of the members of the firm for a title as against A. G. Thornton, to require of the court to adjudge between that equity and the supposed conflicting equity of Thornton to retain the legal title until the outstanding $2,500 of the purchase money is paid, and another equity in him supposed to consist in his new legal title acquired from the purchaser at sheriff’s sale under Hinsdale’s execution.

2. If such equity may be asserted by plaintiffs, may it be done by independent action in the superior court, or must it be by proceeding supplementary to execution before the clerk in whose office their judgments are docketed.

3. If the remedy by action in the superior court be proper, then can plaintiffs proceed without making parties to the action the heirs of Morehead and Lowery, the two deceased members of the late firm of J. W. Lancashire & Co.

The instrument executed by Thornton to the members of the firm of Lancashire & Co. at the time of the purchase, though not effectual to pass the title, had at least the efficacy of á memorandum in writing sufficient under the statute of frauds to enable the intended grantees to compel a correction of the same or the re-execution of a proper conveyance to them, and on a suit brought for that purpose, the correction or the execution of a new deed would have-been decreed notwithstanding the non-payment of the $2,500 bond, because, under the contract, the deed was to have been made before the payment of that sum, and un *396 less there was some equitable ingredient to prevent, the decree would have been made. Adams’ Eq., 169; Simmons v. Spruill, 3 Jones’ Eq., 9. In our state the vendor’s lien does not exist as in England, but in place of it, the title retained is the only security to the vendor, and if he part with the title, then the purchase money is on the personal responsibility of the vendee, and in the case of an inoperative conveyance, as in this case, as the title was not intended to be retained, the court would, as a general thing, decree the instrument to be made perfect as it was to have been. Adams’ Eq., 128; Simmons v. Spruill, supra. But on application to a court of equity for correction or re-execution in a case like this, where a portion of the purchase money is unpaid, it is not a right .compulsory on the court to grant it, but it is a matter within the sound discretion of the court to grant the relief prayed without or with a prepayment of, or liability for, the unpaid purchase money, as the events may or may not render it unjust to decree performance of the contract in specie as it was originally made; and whether in this case, there be ór be not any events sufficient to justify the court to hold the equity of the plaintiffs as subject to the prior payment of the purchase money still outstanding, the court below has not said, and therefore we are not called upon to express an opinion.

Seeing then that the firm of Lancashire & Co. had an equity for the title against Thornton, and that J. W. Lancashire as surviving partner succeeded solely to that equity to be administered in payment of the joint creditors, it remains only to enquire on the first ground of demurrer whether the plaintiffs have the right to assert that equity in their own behalf.

The equity for title by way of correcting the instrument given for the land, existing at the first for the whole firm, became at last an equity by construction of a court of equity for John W. Lancashire, the surviving partner, in whom by *397 the ordinary doctrines of equity and the provisions of our statute, (Bat, Rev., ch. 42, § 2,) that right is declared to be vested in order to enable him to wind up the partnership and pay its debts. The plaintiffs having reduced their claim against the firm to judgment against Lancashire, the surviving partner, the docketing of the same operated a l'ien in their favor on the equity of the judgment debtor to have the title, and that equity under the construction of this court as to the meaning of the expression “real property” used in our statute, ivas such an interest as would be affected by the lien of a docketed judgment. Hoppock, Glenn & Co. v. Shober, 69 N. C., 153; McKeithan

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.C. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaskill-v-lancashire-nc-1880.