Shields v. . Whitaker

82 N.C. 516
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 82 N.C. 516 (Shields v. . Whitaker) 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
Shields v. . Whitaker, 82 N.C. 516 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The defendants, Montgomery T. and James H. Whitaker, the first as principal, the other as surety, on February 21, 1860, executed to the plaintiff W. H Shields guardian, for the use of his wards. Charles T. and Olivia N. Lawrence, a bond in the sum of twenty-nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, payable one day from date, on which a small sum only has been paid. On May 1, 1868, the said Montgomery T. and wife executed a deed, absolute in form and for the expressed consideration of two thousand dollars, ■conveying to his brother, the defendant, Ferdinand H , a valuable tract of land in Halifax county. The plaintiffs allege, and the defendants deny, that the land was conveyed upon an express parol agreement that it should be held as a security, and be applied in payment of the indebtedness •of the said Montgomery to said Ferdinand, and of one-half of the amount due on said bond, which by a compromise entered into ivas to be accepted in full satisfaction. The execution of the bond and their liability under it were admitted by the obligors, but not by Ferdinand. The following issues were submitted to the jury :

1. Did M. T. Whitaker convey to Ferdinand H. Whitaker the lands described in the complaint-in trust to pay his debt and fifty cents in the dollar of the debt due the plaintiffs?
2. Did the defendants, Montgomery T. and James H. Whitaker, sign, seal and deliver to the plaintiff, as guardian of Charles T. and Olivia N. Lawrence, on February 21, 1860, their writing obligatory, wherein they promised to pay to the plaintiff, as sueh guardian, twenty-nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, one day after date with interest thereon from said date ?
3. What payments have been made thereon and when ?

'To the first two issues the jury answer in the affimative, *518 and to the latter, they say “ two hundred and sixty-four dollars, January 1, 1868.”

On the trial before the jury several exceptions to the admissibility of evidence were taken by the defendant, Ferdinand, none by the others.

1. The bond was not produced nor its loss shown, and the defendant objected to any evidence of the indebtedness until the absence of the writing was accounted for. The objection was not sustained : The issue in reference to the bond was entirely unnecessary since the indebtedness was admitted by the only parties interested in it. 'If established as to the debtors, it is sufficient to raise and annex a trust to the debtor’s land, conveyed to the grantee, for the reason that he takes it subject to the charge, and by means of his undertaking to discharge the trust. The question of indebtedness is not between the creditors and Ferdinand, but between them and the makers who owe, and the verdict only affirms what was not disputed by those competent to raise an objection to the kind and quality of the testimony offered. The declaration of one’s liability, as against his interest and from the presumption of its truth, may be received against others. Braswell v. Gay, 75 N. C., 515.

It is manifest however the bond should be produced or its loss or destruction explained, and filed before judgment is entered up. Morrow v. Allman, 65 N. C., 508.

2. The contents of a letter from Montgomery to Shields, written pending negotiations between them for the settlement of the debt, and before the execution of the deed, were given in evidence, the original being lost, after an objection that Ferninand was not privy to the communication and ought not to be affected by it: If there were force in .the objection, it -would exclude proof of the arrangement by which the debt was to be secured, and the trust, created by the subsequent conveyance of the land, for its payment; and this result will follow, although the deed was made with *519 the full understanding of both the parties to it, that it was the mode adopted to give eifect to the arrangement. The estate is acquired by Ferdinand, eneumbered with the trust, and certainly its nature and extent became a proper subject of enquiry.

3. The objection to the notice given to Shields, and what was said at the time, of a proposed meeting on the premises with a view to an adjustment, is equally unfounded, as w'ell for reasons already given, as because the meeting did take ■place and a proposition was made by, or with the consent of Ferdinand, to set off two hundred acres of the land to Shields in discharge of his claim.

The main point however discussed before us, and illustrated by numerous references in the brief of the defendants’ counsel, is, as to the competency of parol proof to establish the alleged trust.

The question to be considered is simply this: A debtor conveys his land to one under an express verbal agreement that it shall be held and applied to the payment of certain debts of the grantor, and among them a debt due the grantee; will the latter be allowed, thus acquiring title, to repudiate his obligation and appropriate the property to his own individual use and benefit ? Would not this be a gross fraud not only upon the debtor, but upon the creditors for whom he intends to provide, which a court of equity will interpose to prevent? The question seems to involve its own answer, and such in our opinion is the law declared by this court. We propose to examine some of the numerous adjudications on the subject:

In Wood v. Cherry, 73 N. C., 110, Pearson, C. J., says: A trust can only be made in one of four modes : 1. By transmission of the legal estate when a simple declaration will raise a trust. 2. A contract based upon a valuable consideration to stand seized to the use, or in trust for another. 3. A covenant to stand seized to the use of or in trust for *520 another upon good consideration. 4. Where the court by its decree converts a party into a trustee on the ground of fraud.

In Shelton v. Shelton, 5 Jones Eq., 292, land was conveyed by direction of Mary Morgan who bought and paid for it, to Vincent Shelton, son of her daughter Elizabeth, wife of an insolvent husband, subject to a verbal trust declared by said Mary Morgan, in favor of said Elizabeth for life, remainder to all her children. The trust was declared valid and enforced, Pearson, C. J., thus explaining the doctrine: The truth is, neither the declaration nor the implication of a trust has ever been considered as affected by that rule of evidence. The deed has its full force and effect in passing the absolute title at law, and is not altered, added to or explained by the trust, which is an incident attached to it in equity, as affecting the conscience of the party who holds the legal title. Herein a trust differs from a condition by which the estate is defeated at law upon the payment of money, for the condition affects the legal estate, and to give it force, must be added to, and constitute a part of the deed. Tt follows

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.C. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-whitaker-nc-1880.