Morrison v. . Watson

7 S.E. 795, 101 N.C. 332
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 S.E. 795 (Morrison v. . Watson) 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
Morrison v. . Watson, 7 S.E. 795, 101 N.C. 332 (N.C. 1888).

Opinions

The plaintiff claimed title to the land described in the complaint, by virtue of an execution sale and sheriff's deed made pursuant thereto.

The defendant denied that the plaintiff was the owner of the land, or that he wrongfully withheld possession thereof. He admitted being in the possession.

The following issues were, without objection, submitted to the jury:

1. Is the plaintiff the owner, and entitled to the immediate possession of the land described in the complaint?

2. Did the defendant, at the time of bringing this action, unlawfully withhold possession thereof?

3. What damages is the plaintiff entitled to recover?

The plaintiff put in evidence a deed from Z. F. Long, sheriff, to himself, for the land in controversy, dated 26 August, 1882, which purported to convey the land in dispute; also one hundred and sixty acres in addition, made up of one tract of one hundred acres, one of fifty acres, and one of ten acres. The plaintiff also showed in evidence a judgment rendered at Spring Term, 1870, of the Superior Court of Richmond County, in favor of the executors of Stephen Pankey v. Thomas Watson, Peter Hanner and John G. Watson, for thirty-five *Page 278 dollars, with interest on the same from 13 November, 1864, and the costs, docketed 17 May, 1870. Executions were regularly issued thereon until 4 October, 1873. On 20 October, 1873, the judgment was transferred to Z. B. Moore. On 2 April, 1879, leave was given the plaintiff in said judgment to issue execution, and on 5 April, 1879, an execution was duly issued thereon, which was duly levied upon the land in controversy, and the sheriff proceeded, on 9 January, 1879, to sell, when the same was purchased by Z. B. Moore for the sum of forty (334) dollars. On the same day he transferred his bid and judgment to the plaintiff. The plaintiff showed in evidence the note upon which the same was founded, executed by Thomas Watson, Peter Hanner and the defendant, John G. Watson, dated 13 November, 1863, and due twelve months after date. The plaintiff also showed in evidence a judgment in favor of Frank Sanford v. John G. Watson, dated June, 1876, for $15.85, with interest from 6 May, 1860, upon which execution issued 6 January, 1879. No homestead was ever allotted to the defendant.

The plaintiff, for the purpose of showing that the lands of the defendant were, in January, 1879, worth less than $1,000, and the amount of the judgment, after objection by defendant and exception to its admission, introduced W. I. Everett, who testified that he knew the land formerly owned by John G. Watson, Sr., but did not know the dividing lines. He knew where the dwelling was, also the twenty-five acres; that in June, 1879, in his opinion, from three ($3) to four ($4) dollars per acre was a fair valuation. He could not say as to the eighteen acres. The whole tract contained two hundred and twenty-seven (227) acres. In respect to the one hundred acres, he only knew its value by comparison with other similar tracts in the neighborhood; had not been on it; could not say how long before 1879 he last saw the lands.

The plaintiff proposed to ask the witness the value of the one hundred acres. Objected to by the defendant, because the witness states that he cannot give the value of the land except by comparison with other tracts in the neighborhood. Objection sustained; plaintiff excepted.

There was much other testimony as to the value of the lands.

The counsel for the plaintiff requested the court to charge the jury:

1. That there was no evidence that the defendant was worth, (335) in June, 1879, one thousand dollars and the judgment, interest and costs, amounting to eighty-three dollars.

2. That upon the whole evidence the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

The court declined to so instruct the jury, and the plaintiff excepted. The court then instructed the jury that they could consider the whole *Page 279 evidence, and, after ascertaining the value of the land, per acre, in June, 1879, they should make a calculation as to its total value.

The court then explained to the jury the issues, and the way in which the testimony should be considered with respect to them, and instructed them that they could consider the return on the execution, in passing upon the question whether the defendant had other property than the land covered by the sheriff; and that to recover in this action the plaintiff must show, by a preponderance of the testimony, that the defendant's land was worth, in June, 1879, less than one thousand dollars and the amount of the judgment, interest and costs, amounting to $83, and that the defendant had no other property which could have been sold to pay the judgment.

The jury found the first and second issues in the negative.

Motion for a new trial, for reception of the evidence objected to, and for refusing the instruction asked, and for error in the instructions given.

Motion denied. Judgment in accordance with the verdict. Appeal by plaintiff. No homestead was allotted to the defendant in the course of these proceedings, and to the present action he opposes the defense that, without an allotment of his exemption, notwithstanding the debts antedated the Constitution, in order that the (336) debts might be satisfied from the excess, if sufficient remained to discharge it, out of the land in exoneration of the homestead, the sale was illegal and the deed did not divest the title.

This construction finds support in the ruling of the court, though not unanimous, upon the point in the elaborately argued and carefully considered case of McCanless v. Flinchum, 98 N.C. 358.

While it is conceded that under the Constitution of the United States, as construed and applied to the exemption enactment, a debt previously created, and before the State Constitution was adopted, must be paid out of the debtor's estate, and the exemption must give way when it cannot be otherwise satisfied out of the debtor's property (Edwards v. Kearzey,96 U.S. 595), yet the debtor possesses still the right to retain, exempt from sale, even at the instance of such a creditor, whatever excess there may be in his hands after the disposition of so much as may be needed to discharge the debt, and to have the inquiry made in the mode prescribed by law to have the fact ascertained previous to the sale. Should the sale of the part estimated to be sufficient turn out no *Page 280 to be insufficient, the creditor may then have recourse also to the part assigned as exempt. The Code, sec. 502, et seq. The debt must be paid at all events, but the method of proceeding, in appropriating the property liable, is a matter of legislative regulation.

Were it an open question, it might admit of doubt, whether this must not be done in all cases by the assessors, as the statute provides, to render valid the enforcement of the process in the sheriff's hands, and before he undertakes to sell the real estate, instead of instituting such an inquiry before the jury, in an action to establish title and recover possession of premises thus sold. But it has been held that when the real estate is manifestly deficient, and it shall so appear (337) afterwards, such sale will be upheld upon the ground that no harm has come or could come to the debtor by reason of an omission to have a proceeding to ascertain if any homestead could be secured, and therefore it would have been useless and without detriment to the debtor. It is thus held in Miller v. Miller, 89 N.C. 402

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7 S.E. 795, 101 N.C. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-watson-nc-1888.