Rollins v. . Henry

84 N.C. 569
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 N.C. 569 (Rollins v. . Henry) 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
Rollins v. . Henry, 84 N.C. 569 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

This cause has been several times before the court, and last, on the defendant’s appeal for errors assigned *571 in its conduct at January term, 1878. The facts now set out in the record, essentially the same although differing in some particulars, so far as they are deemed conducive to a proper understanding of the exceptions, may be thus summarily stated :

On the 6th of September, 1850, the brothers, Robert M. and William L. Henry, in order to secure to each an equal share of the property which either might derive from father and mother, entered into a mutual agreement whereby it is provided, “that any property real or personal that may be acquired from either of their parents, either in the name of one or both of them, shall be held jointly between them, and if the conveyance is made in the name of one, he is to convey an equal interest in common to the other at a convenient, suitable and reasonable time; the said . are to answer equally for all improvements put on any of their joint property, and if one or the other shall superintend the improvements of property, he shall be paid for it out of the property, making due allowance, &e., or otherwise paid.” By its terms the agreement was to be in force as long as either of the parties to it shall wish it to continue, or until they shall .its being settled between them, at which time their joint property shall be divided between them.”

On the 9th of December, 1859, Robert Henry, their father, of the age of ninety-seven years, and then owning “ the Sulphur Spring tract of land,” now in dispute, conveyed the same by deed to the said William L. Henry, reciting as the consideration therefor the payment of $1,500 to one Peter Mostelly, of $100 to himself, and the rendering of divers services to himself and family, subject to six notes amounting in all to $10,000 and payable in equal annual instalments with interest from the first day of January, 1860.

To enforce the specific performance of the agreement, suit was instituted in the court of equity of Buncombe in 1863, *572 by R. M. against, W. L. Henry. The cause after many continuances was transferred to the superior court of Buncombe, and at spring term, 1869, by consent an order was entered referring “ the matter in dispute in all its lawful and equitable bearings to J.'G. Martin and W. D. Rankin to determine the same,” according to the spirit of the paper writing specified in the bill and° alleged to be executed by the said parties when established, and making the award a rule of court. At fall term, 1872, the referees made their report after hearing and considering the evidence adduced by the contestants, and award as follows:

1. The articles of agreement dated September 6th, 1850,. are genuine and binding.

2. The agreement is applicable to the Sulphur Springs property after paying therefrom the just claims attaching thereto at the death of Robert Henry, and that subject thereto and to the costs of the reference the said property ' shall be equally divided between the parties.

To the report, exceptions were filed by both, and at spring term, 1873, by consent the cause was ordered to be removed to the county of Rutherford, subsequently changed by the parties to Graham county, and at spring term, 1874, a consent decree entered finally disposing of the controversy, whereby the complainant recovered the Sulphur Springs and various other tracts in fee, and was declared entitled to process to put him into possession, and a deed of conveyance from said William L., and the latter exonerated from all further obligations under the said agreement. Pursuant to this judgment, title to the several tracts was (by deed January 30th, 1876,) duly conveyed to said William L. by the said Robert M. This constitutes the defendant’s claim and is the source of his title in the land.

The plaintiffs derive their title also under the said Robert M. as follows: Samuel B. Gudger, executor of Robert Henry, deceased, on the 8th of February, 1867, brought his action *573 against William L. in Buncombe superior court of law, and the same having been transferred to the superior court and then removed to Haywood county, at spring term, 1872, recovered judgment in the superior court of the last mentioned county upon the specialties filed for the sum $6,226.26 with interest on $3,569.14 principal money, and his costs, and this judgment was docketed in Buncombe county on the 25th of July following. On this judgment execution issued from the court in which it was rendered to the sheriff of Buncombe on July 3d, 1872, under which the Sulphur Springs land was sold to the plaintiffs and J. L. Henry on September 28th thereafter, for the sum of $6,475, and duly conveyed by the sheriff’s deed of the same date to’the said purchasers.

The plaintiffs also claimed title under a previous, sale by virtue of several other executions issued on judgments against said William L. and the same sheriff’s deed pursuant thereto, but as the executions were not produced and no sufficient proof of their loss offered to admit of secondary evidence of their existence and contents, this alleged source of title need not be considered.

As the plaintiffs claim under the execution exhibited, and the sheriff’s deed last executed is posterior to the lien created by the filing of the bill in equity by the defendant, Robert M., the efficacy of the final decree in which suit, by relation to its commencement, is to transfer the estate in the land, then vested in William L., to the present defendant, and to remove all liens and encumbrances, intermediate attaching, even when consummated by a sale, it is obvious that unless the decree can be successfully impeached for fraud, and it is open to such evidence on the part of creditors, it must prevail over the plaintiffs’ title and defeat their recovery. This the plaintiffs proposed to do; and upon issues submitted to the jury and the evidence produced in relation thereto, they find that, first, the plaintiffs are the owners of *574 the land and entitled to possession; and secondly, they are entitled to recover damages at the rate of $600 per annum for the four years admitted to be the period of the defendant’s occupation of the premises. During the trial various exceptions were taken for the defendant, the validity of which we are required to examine :

Exc. 1. The plaintiffs offered in evidence a transcript of proceedings instituted in the superior court of Buncombe to set up the proved but last will of Robert Henry and the final decree therein establishing its contents, to which the defendant was a party. The defendant objected to the transcript for want of jurisdiction in the court and for irregularity in*the proceeding, but it was admitted. The purpose for which the evidence was offered is unexplained, nor are its materiality and pertinency to the issues seen. If the object was to show the actual representative character of the suing executor, Gudger, and sustain the judgment recovered by him, the evidence was wholly needless, for the judgment is proof of itself and requires no support to validate the execution issuing thereon and the sale under it.

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

Related

McCoy v. . Justice
155 S.E. 452 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1930)
Richmond & Danville Railroad v. Gorman
7 App. D.C. 91 (D.C. Circuit, 1895)
Kelly v. Town of Milan
21 F. 842 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1884)
Rollins v. . Henry
86 N.C. 714 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.C. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-henry-nc-1881.