Scott v. . Ballard

23 S.E. 185, 117 N.C. 195
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 23 S.E. 185 (Scott v. . Ballard) 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
Scott v. . Ballard, 23 S.E. 185, 117 N.C. 195 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

The complaint was as follows:

"I. That on 7 December, 1892, Thomas B. Keogh and Harriett A. Keogh, his wife, executed to the above-named defendant B. L. Duke a deed of mortgage, wherein they conveyed unto him a large and valuable real estate, situate in the city of Greensboro, to-wit": (here follows the description of three tracts of land.)

"II. That said Keogh and wife afterwards, to-wit, on 18 February, 1893, executed a deed in trust to John N. Wilson, whereby they conveyed the same lands above described in the deed of mortgage to B. L. Duke, unto him, the said Wilson, in trust to secure a debt of $1,066.73 to J. W. Scott Co., a body corporate doing business in the city of Greensboro; $1,061.08 to Tyre Glenn; $1,403.08 to J. D. White, and $1,805.43 to J. A. Hoskins, with power in the trustee, in case of nonpayment of said sums by 18 February, 1894, and the interest thereon at 8 per cent, to advertise and sell the lands therein conveyed, and out of the proceeds pay the said sums of money, after first retaining all costs and expenses incident to the sale, as will fully appear by a copy of said deed in trust, on record in the register's office of Guilford County, in book 92, page 26, and hereto annexed as a part of this complaint.

"III. That said B. L. Duke, subsequently to the execution of the mortgage aforesaid, made an assignment to defendants V. Ballard *Page 141 and J. F. Wiley, as trustees, of all his property, to secure his creditors, and amongst the property conveyed he transferred to said Ballard and Wiley the bond secured in said Keogh mortgage, where by they became entitled to the security of said mortgage for the (197) payment of the sum of $8,500 and the interest thereon.

"IV. That in June, 1894, the creditors secured in the deed in trust to Wilson being anxious to get the property in shape to handle so as to get the Duke debt as well as their own out of it, dispatched Tyre Glenn, one of their number, to Durham to see the said Ballard and Wiley, assignees of B. L. Duke, and it was agreed then that plaintiffs might proceed and sell under their deed subject to the Duke mortgage, and buy and then subdivide into lots and sell in lots, with the understanding that sales should be for cash as to one-third of the purchase money, one-third on six months, and the other third on 12 months, and that the cash received should be paid over on the Duke mortgage, and the proceeds of the notes for the deferred payments should likewise be paid over on the same mortgage, until the whole debt was paid, and all this was agreed to, with the further understanding that said Ballard and Wiley could not specify any length of time during which they could wait for payment in this way, but with the agreement on the part of said Glenn and his coplaintiffs that, if said Ballard and Wiley were obliged to close up the trust estate under Duke's assignment, they were to go and sell and pay over at once as agreed on, in parcel.

"V. That the arrangement was made and appeared to be perfectly satisfactory to all parties, and plaintiffs, having full confidence that the property conveyed in the two deeds was worth and could be sold for enough to satisfy all the debts, in pursuance of such arrangements at Durham, on 6 July caused John N. Wilson to advertise, and on 6 August, 1894, the property was put up and sold and knocked down to the plaintiffs, or to one of them in trust for himself and (198) the others, in order to put themselves in a situation to sell the same in parcels, as had been agreed upon, and accordingly they took title and sought to get possession of the property, but were delayed therein for some two months after their said purchase, and since that time they have rented out the property, and it is still rented out, on terms not inconsistent with a sale or sales, as had been agreed on with Ballard and Wiley.

"VI. That in November, 1894, but a short time after plaintiffs had purchased and got into possession as aforesaid, Mr. Ballard, one of the assignees of B. L. Duke, wrote to plaintiff Glenn making inquiry into what plaintiffs were doing with the property, and to this answer was made apprising him of the very short time they had had possession, *Page 142 and asking for an extension of time so as to allow them to make sales in lots or parcels, and in reply to this application for extension of time said Ballard wrote back that he would extend the time to 15 December, to have all the money paid down in cash, and on the reception of this last letter the plaintiff Glenn again went down to Durham to see the assignees.

"VII. That on the occasion of this last visit to Durham last above spoken, of the attention of said Ballard was called to the original understanding and contract between them in regard to a sale and purchase by the plaintiffs, and a subsequent sale of the lands in lots, and the payment of the proceeds over to them to the extent of paying the debt of Duke in full, and the terms of the original agreement aforesaid were again assented to, on the assurance of plaintiffs then and there given that in case of any necessity to them to close out the deed of assignment made to them by Duke, they, the plaintiffs, would at once subdivide the property into lots and go on and make sales and pay over the proceeds to them as had been agreed on, and the (199) plaintiffs well hoped that Ballard and Wiley would carry out this joint arrangement; but two weeks thereafter they wrote to plaintiffs saying they were not willing that the property should be subdivided and sold by plaintiffs at public sale, but might be sold privately, and in bulk and not in lots.

"VIII. That very soon after this last position was taken by Ballard and Wiley, to-wit, on 24 December last, they advertised a sale of said property, to take place on 24 January last past; but they withdrew that advertisement and did not sell on the day appointed; but instead of selling on that day they again advertised on 25 January to sell all the said lands on 1 March, (1895), with a suggestion in the advertisement that the lands may be subdivided before the day of sale and sold in lots or parcels, without saying that they would be so sold.

"IX. That seeing the equivocal language used in said advertisement, in regard to selling, whether en masse or in parcel or lots, the plaintiffs, in order to favor the disposition of the property under circumstances to bring the most money, have opened a correspondence on the subject and urged a sale by lots; but in answer to such reasonable request the plaintiffs are now informed by said Ballard and Wiley that they will not sell in lots, buten masse only.

"X. Plaintiffs further complaining show unto the court that the lands conveyed by Keogh and wife in the mortgage to secure the debt of B. L. Duke embrace a considerable area of ground, about sixteen acres, situate in the most desirable part of the city of Greensboro for private residences, and that the same is already subdivided to a *Page 143 considerable extent into lots, and is capable of being further subdivided, so as to be capable of being put up to sell in quantities and size of lots inviting to bidders, and within the ability of parties to buy and pay fair prices for the same, as will more fully appear by (200) reference to the Duke mortgage and to a plat of the lands herewith filed and prayed to be taken as a part of this complaint, and they further show that a sale in lots and parcels would pay off the Duke mortgage and in large part, as they believe, their debts secured in the said deed in trust to Wilson; but if sold en masse

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E. 185, 117 N.C. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-ballard-nc-1895.