Rutherford v. . Green

37 N.C. 121
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 N.C. 121 (Rutherford v. . Green) 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
Rutherford v. . Green, 37 N.C. 121 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The bill was filed in November, 1839, and the object of it is to obtain a conveyance of foi^ tracts of land adjoining each other, situated in the counties of Rutherford and Lincoln, and containing in the whole 740| acres; which the plaintiffs'claim as the heirs at law of James Rutherford, deceased. It sufficiently appears in the pleadings and proofs, that James Rutherford died in November, »1819, without having been married,- and leaving brothers and sisters, natives and residents of Scotland, and subjects of the King of Great Britain, and also leaving Walter B. Rutherford, a son of Alexander Rutherford, one of the said brothers of the said James, which said Walter B. was also a native of Scotland, and came into this State and married here in the year 1816, and has ever since resided here without being naturalized: and that the plaintiffs are the issue of the said Walter B. Rutherford; born in this State, of his said marriage.

The bill states, that in 1818, James Rutherford, for a price paid, purchased the land in question from Joseph Weir, who *123 was then seized of it, as described in the bill, and in a plat of survey thereto annexed; and that Weir then executed a penal bond for a large sum of money, with condition to be void on the conveyance of the land in fee simple by Weir to Rutherford or his heirs on request. That one Hogg became the administrator of the intestate James in 1823, and came into possession of his papers, and, among them, of the bond or articles in question; and that upon some agreement or' combination between Hogg and Weir, the former delivered the bond to the latter, from whom it has not been since obtained, and by whom it was probably destroyed.

The "bill then states, that Joseph Weir died in 1828, leaving a widow and several -children, who are made defendants in this suit; and also that Joseph Green, another defendant, is in possession of, and claims a part of the laud purchased by James Rutherford, but that if he has a sufficient conveyance for the same, he took it with notice of J. Rutherford’s previous purchase, and cannot hold against' thej plaintiffs.

The prayer is for a discovery and production of the bond or articles, and for proper conveyances of the legal title from the defendants for the parts of the land, of which the title is in them j|jspeclively, and for general relief.

The widow and heirs of Weir answered together, and the defendant Green separately. Neither answer admits the bond from Weir to Rutherford, nor any knowledge, if there was such an one, that.it covered the land in dispute. That of the Weirs states, that as they understood and believe,

Hogg, as administrator of James Rutherford, instituted an action of debt against Joseph Weir on some bond, and that a compromise was made between them, on which Weir paid the costs and made satisfaction to Hogg for the contract and took it up; and they suppose that may have been the instrument on which this bill is founded, though of that they have no knowledge or information. Those defendants further say, that they have not been in possession or enjoyment of any of the land claimed by the plaintiffs, since the death of Joseph Weir; and they do not admit that the plaintiffs are the heirs at law of James Rutherford.

The answer of Joseph Green admits the plaintiffs to be *124 Rutherford’s heirs, as alleged by them; and that he wasseiz-e(^ acres of the land described in the bill, and lying in Lincoln; which he claims in the following manner: He sa7s J°sePk Weir entered into a recognizance which bound these lands to the State, upon which judgment W8S rendered, and the lands sold by the sheriff on an execution thereon isrued, and were purchased by one Samuel Green, who took a sheriff’s deed, and afterwards conveyed to this defendant, Joseph Green.

Both the answers further state, that before the conveyance from Samuel to Joseph Green, the plaintiffs filed a bill upon the same subject matter against Samuel Green and the present defendants, the Weirs; in which there was a decree in favor of the defendants to that suit, dismissing the bill: and they pray the benefit thereof as a bar to the present bill.

It may be as well to dispose of this last point at once, by mentioning that the defendants have failed to establish it by offering any former decree in evidence. The truth is, the answers are mistaken on. that point, as we happen to remember that the former suit alluded to was transferred to this court for hearing; and that when it should have been heard, the counsel for the plaintiffs found, that for some defect of proof, he could not sustain the bill, and asked lea^ to dismiss it before the hearing, without prejudice; which was accordingly granted; and then, it seems, the present suit was brought. Clearly, if the former proceedings were before us, there is nothing in them that could present an obstacle to .the present bill; but as they have not been read, it is sufficient to declare that the defendants have failed to establish the fact stated in that part of their answers.

Upon the question of the right of the plaintiffs to inherit from James Rutherford, which is made in the answer of the Weirs, the court entertains no doubt. The facts are clear, that they are the nearest relations of the deceased, who are citizens of the United States, and that their father and all the brothers and sisters of the deceased are aliens. The matter of law is equally clear; as it was long ago decided in an ejectment brought upon the demises of the present plaintiffs. Rutherford v Wolf, 3 Hawks 272. It was there *125 held, that the act of 1801 remained in full force, standing the general canons of 1808; and to that may now be added the legislative sanction, by the re-enactment of both those acts together, in the Revisal of 1836.

A question might have been made between the plaintiffs themselves, whether some of them can claim parts of the land as being co-heirs with the other plaintiffs. All of them are eight in number; so that it is probable some of them might not have been born before the act of 1823, c. 1210, went into operation; and as to those born after, a plausible objection might be raised, that they were not heirs. But we think there would not be much difficulty in the point, had the facts been stated, to raise it. Before the act, all the brothers and sisters, although some of them were posthumous, would be admitted, as they came into life, to inherit. Cutlav v Cutlar, 2 Hawks 324. This the statute of 1823 altered, by enacting that no inheritance shall descend to any person, unless such person shall be in life at the death or within ten months after the death, of the person last seized. But we do not think the present case within that act, since James Rutherford, the proposilus, died in 1819, and the descent from.him was fixed by the law as it existed at the time of his death. The act, if the words were doubtful, ought not to be construed so as to affect the right to lands previously descended. But the language in this caséis all future: “ no inheritance shall descend to any person, unless such person shall be in life” &c.; which clearly shews, that its provisions are altogether prospective and do not embrace the case of a descent from a person before that time dead.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.C. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutherford-v-green-nc-1842.