Robertson v. Robertson

484 S.E.2d 831, 126 N.C. App. 298, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 360
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 20, 1997
DocketCOA96-839
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 484 S.E.2d 831 (Robertson v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Robertson, 484 S.E.2d 831, 126 N.C. App. 298, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 360 (N.C. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

GREENE, Judge.

Marion P. Robertson (M.P. Robertson) and Bonnie Robertson (respondents) appeal a judgment and order of the superior court confirming the Report of Commissioners partitioning in kind real property held by Inez P. Robertson (petitioner) and respondents.

M.P. Robertson and Albert Robertson jointly owned property in Rockingham County which was primarily used to farm tobacco. After Albert Robertson died, his wife (petitioner), inherited his share of the property as well as one-half of the jointly owned tobacco allotment of 10,737 pounds. After Albert’s death, M.P. Robertson operated the farm with the assistance of his son. Although petitioner did not participate in the farm’s operation she continued to get a percentage of the farm’s *300 yield. In 1987 M.P. Robertson purchased an additional tobacco allotment in his own name of 12,706 pounds and placed that allotment on the jointly held property for a total allotment on the jointly held property of 23,443 pounds.

Petitioner filed a petition in 1993 in the Superior Court of Rockingham County to partition the real property held as tenants-in-common with M.P. Robertson. After a hearing before the Clerk of Superior Court of Rockingham County an order was entered on 19 May 1994 requiring that the property be partitioned in kind. Specifically, the order found that petitioner and M.P. Roberston each owned a one-half interest in the property and that “there is substantial land ... and adequate cropland so that division can be made without substantial injury to the parties.” On appeal to the superior court, by judgment filed 19 August 1994, the court decreed that petitioner was entitled to a partition in kind “as said Partition ... can be accomplished without substantial injury to either” party and “it being understood that the tobacco pounds alloted [sic] to said realty which were not jointly owned shall be the property of [M.P. Robertson].”

Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 46-7 (1984) three commissioners were appointed by the superior court to partition the property “fairly and equitably.” By report of 2 October 1995 the commissioners “did allocate the subject properties into two portions of equal value and then by the toss of a coin in the presence of a witness they did allocate the two portions as follows:” parcels A (19.89 acres) (including a migrant worker house) and D (5.11 acres) (54.74% of the cropland) and 54.74% of the jointly owned tobacco allotment going to petitioner; parcels B (4.17 acres), C (21.26 acres), and E (5.11 acres) (45.26% of the cropland), a non-contiguous 11.97 acre wooded tract and 45.26% of the jointly owned tobacco allotment going to respondents. Respondents appealed and by order of 29 December 1995 the commissioners’ partition was confirmed by the Clerk of Superior Court.

On appeal to the superior court (from the clerk), a hearing was held at which evidence was presented revealing that the commissioners visited the property on more than one occasion and “gathered . . . information from the County Tax Office and the County Planning Department” and the County Farm Office. They also prepared survey maps of the property showing the acreage of the croplands and the wooded tract of property. The commissioners considered the jointly owned tobacco allotment but “did not consider [M.P. *301 Robertson’s separately owned allotment] in any form or fashion in the division of the property.”

Henry Sands (Sands), a certified real estate appraiser who has had experience in appraising tobacco farms, examined the property and gave the opinion that relative values of the two parcels of land were “real close.” According to Sands, when determining the value of the property “only the joint tobacco allotment would be taken into account, not the solely owned.” Sands stated that as to respondents’ tobacco allotment that could not be grown on their own land, the allotment could be sold, put on other property, or put on land that is leased from another farm.

Evidence for respondents revealed that respondents operate five different tobacco farms. M.P. Robertson and Albert Robertson purchased a portion of the jointly owned property in 1961 and the remainder in 1965, to be used for tobacco farming. Because there is a shortage of local labor, respondents must rely on migrant workers, and without the migrant worker house that was assigned to petitioner respondents will “not be able to collect the [tobacco] crop.” Respondents spent $3,641.31 to make improvements to the migrant worker house. It will cost $2,000 to move one of the “bulk barns” (located on parcel A) that is owned by M.P. Robertson and necessary to farm tobacco because it is located on petitioner’s half of the property. Before the partition respondents were able to raise two-thirds of their acreage for tobacco production on the jointly held property but after the partition, due to new regulations, respondents will only be able to raise one-half of the acreage. If a certain percentage of a tobacco allotment cannot be used, the owner of that allotment risks forfeiture of it. The allotment, however, can be sold or transferred to another farm currently owned or purchased for that reason. After the division respondents will not be able grow all of their allotment due to a lack of croplands, but petitioner will have surplus acreage on which to grow her allotment.

Howard Gentry, an appraiser, determined that the two divided parcels were of approximately the same value. Howard Williams, also an appraiser, valued the tobacco allotment at two dollars per pound. He also valued the migrant worker house at $10,000 dollars and determined that the total value of the property, exclusive of the noncon-tiguous wooded lot of 11.97 acres, was approximately $102,000 or approximately $1,850 per acre. The wooded lot was valued at approximately $5,900.

*302 Following the hearing, the court made the following uncontested pertinent findings of fact: (1) the property to be divided consists of acreage and a tobacco allotment of 10,737.352 pounds; (2) M.P. Robertson separately purchased tobacco allotments in 1987 consisting of 12,706.648 pounds; (3) both the jointly owned and the separate allotments have been grown on the jointly owned property from the time the separate allotment was purchased through 1994; (4) a tobacco allotment is a commodity that is marketable separate from real property and may be sold to third parties or transferred to other property; an allotment must be attached to real property that qualifies for such allotment under the United States Department of Agriculture and Consolidated Farm Service Agency rules and regulations; the size of a tobacco allotment which may be attached to real property is based, in part, on the amount of cropland on the real property; (5) there is a total of 23.31 acres of cropland on the jointly held property; (6) M.R Robertson and his family have grown and marketed the jointly owned tobacco allotment, from which petitioner received 10% of the gross amount obtained from the sale of the jointly owned tobacco; (7) a house for migrant workers is located on parcel A and used by respondents’ farming operation, including farming on property other than the jointly owned property in question; (8) there was no injury to respondents by awarding parcel A, including the migrant worker house, to petitioner; (9) respondents’ farming operation will be adversely affected by the partition in the following ways:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
484 S.E.2d 831, 126 N.C. App. 298, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-robertson-ncctapp-1997.