Newbern v. . Leigh

113 S.E. 674, 184 N.C. 166, 26 A.L.R. 266, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 11, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 674 (Newbern v. . Leigh) 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
Newbern v. . Leigh, 113 S.E. 674, 184 N.C. 166, 26 A.L.R. 266, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 42 (N.C. 1922).

Opinion

John L. Hinton was a resident of Pasquotank, and died in 1909, leaving a will, which was duly probated and recorded in said county 29 January, 1910. His children, Mary F. Hinton, R. L. Hinton, C. L. Hinton, E. V. Hinton, W. E. Hinton, and Ida Sawyer were the sole beneficiaries under said will.

Among other lands owned by the said John L. Hinton at the time of his death was this tract of 200 acres. R. L. Hinton acquired the interest of the other devisees under the will, and on 15 March, 1913, conveyed it to D. E. Williams. On 5 May, 1915, D. E. Williams conveyed the same property to P. G. Sawyer, who conveyed it to Taylor and Hollowell. Taylor afterwards acquired Hollowell's interest, and on 7 August, 1918, W. E. Taylor conveyed the property to K. R. Winslow, one of the defendants in this action.

On 30 September, 1918, a caveat was filed to said will of John L. Hinton, by some of his grandchildren, the plaintiffs herein, who were not named in the will. The caveat was later sustained and the will set aside.In re Hinton, 180 N.C. 206.

On 2 September, 1920, the defendant K. R. Winslow sold said land to Fisher and Newbern, the plaintiffs in this action, and took a mortgage for the balance of the purchase money. Said Newbern and Fisher having made default in the payment of the deferred installments, J. B. Leigh, trustee in the deed of trust to secure said indebtedness, advertised the property for sale, when this action was filed by the plaintiffs and the defendants were enjoined from making sale of the property.

A motion to make the restraining order permanent was heard before Bond,J., who held that the defendant Winslow could not give a good title to the property, owing to the fact that the will of the said John L. *Page 167 Hinton, the original owner of the land, had been set aside under the caveat filed in 1918; and continued the restraining order to the hearing, and the defendants appealed. The fact that upon a caveat filed 3 December, 1919, the will of John L. Hinton was set aside cannot possibly affect the title of the defendants. There is no evidence nor claim that the devisees named in the will, probated in 1910, had any knowledge or intimation that the will would be attacked, and there is no contradiction that these defendants, as well as all others in the chain of title to the said property, were purchasers for value before the caveat was filed, and without any notice of any defect in the will of John L. Hinton, and that they were in all respects bona fide purchasers. A purchaser for value without notice of fraud under a devise in a will duly probated and recorded takes a good title.

Even were R. L. Hinton chargeable with constructive notice, this would not avail the plaintiffs in this action, for the first purchaser may have notice and take title accordingly, yet a second purchaser for value from him and without notice is a bona fide purchaser and takes a valid title. 2 Devlin on Deeds, sec. 746.

The courts have even held that where a purchaser for value without notice of fraud conveyed property, the second purchaser gets a good title even though he had notice of the fraud. Lanier v. Lumber Co., 177 N.C. 200;Arrington v. Arrington, 114 N.C. 166; Wallace v. Cohen, 111 N.C. 104.

C. S., 4145, referring to the previous section on wills and testaments admitted to probate, provides: "Such record and probate is conclusive in evidence of the validity of the will until it is vacated on appeal or declared void by a competent tribunal."

The various purchasers of the land in question were not only bona fide purchasers for value without notice of any imperfection or irregularity in the will of John L. Hinton, but had on the records a judgment of the probate court declaring the will to be genuine and the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, and they also had before them the statute to the effect that the records of the probate court were conclusive evidence of the validity of the will.

The question here presented is whether purchasers for value and without notice of any imperfections or irregularities in a will which has been duly admitted to probate and adjudged to be valid and recorded, can have their title impeached by the fact that subsequent to their *Page 168 purchase, the will has been set aside as invalid. It is true that this precise question has not been presented before in the courts of this State, but it has been repeatedly passed upon in the United States Supreme Court, and in other courts of the Union, and the decisions are uniform and, we think, in accordance with the ruling in this State upon analogous questions, that the bona fide purchasers without notice acquire a good title.

In Foulke v. Zimmerman, 81 U.S. 113, it was held that: "A probate of a will of realty in Louisiana, when the testator died domiciled in New York, is valid until set aside in the Louisiana court and the purchaser from the devisee of such will of real estate in Louisiana, while the order of the court of that state establishing the will remains in force, is an innocent purchaser, and is not affected by a subsequent order setting aside the will to which he is not a party."

In Davis v. Gaines, 104 U.S. 386, which is quite a famous case, involving a large amount of property in the city of New Orleans (known as the "Myra Clark Gaines will case"), the Court held that a will having been admitted to probate by the court in accordance with the law ordering a sale of all the immovables of the deceased, which sale was made to a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration was a judicial sale, and that title thereunder was not affected by the discovery and probate of a later will making a different disposition of the property.

The opinion in that case is a very exhaustive discussion of the subject, and cites numerous cases to the same effect. All the cases in fact hold that the proceeding establishing a will and ordering it to registration isin rem and binding upon all the world, especially as to innocent purchasers taking without notice and for value.

In Thompson v. Sampson, 64 Cal. 330, it was held: "Where the probate of a will is had, and the estate is distributed under the will, an heir, who, after removal of his or her disabilities, obtains a decree vacating the probate cannot follow the property devised in the hands of a bona fide purchaser for value from a distributee prior to the revocation and at a time when the proceedings were valid and binding."

In Arterburn v. Young, 77 Ky. 509, it was held: "The title of a purchaser of real estate from a devisee is not affected by the Circuit Court's reversal of a judgment of the county court, probating a will on an appeal prosecuted by the infant children of the testator more than five years after the rendering of the order of probate in the county court." In that State there was a statute authorizing such action within five years. The Court takes notice that this is a statutory exception, but that there was no waiver of the rights of infants.

In Hughes v. Burris, 85 Mo., 660, where there was a similar statute giving heirs five years in which to attack a will admitted to probate, a conveyance by the devisee executed after the probate and within the five

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Warren
161 S.E.2d 467 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1968)
Chastain v. McKinney
203 F.2d 712 (Sixth Circuit, 1953)
Weinberg v. Weinberg
37 S.E.2d 507 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1946)
Whitehurst v. Abbott
33 S.E.2d 129 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1945)
Whitehurst v. . Hinton
184 S.E. 66 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1936)
Simpson v. Cornish
218 N.W. 193 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 674, 184 N.C. 166, 26 A.L.R. 266, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newbern-v-leigh-nc-1922.