Smith Ex Parte

47 S.E. 16, 134 N.C. 495, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 29, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 16 (Smith Ex Parte) 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
Smith Ex Parte, 47 S.E. 16, 134 N.C. 495, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 123 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

This is a motion in a partition proceeding, formerly pending in the court of pleas and quarter sessions, to docket the same, and for leave to issue execution upon a judgment therein rendered, which charged one of the tracts of land with a sum of money to be paid to another tract for the purpose of effecting equality of partition.

At the November Term, 1861, partition was decreed and lot No. 6 was assigned by the commissioners to Amelia Smith, subject, however, to a charge of $150.66 in favor of lot No. 1, which was assigned to John S. Hamilton, who now makes this motion. In the allotment the commissioners, in awarding the sum to be paid by lot No. 6 to lot No. 1, used this language: "We do assess the boot before named to be paid or due whenever said dower right of Martha Hamilton shall cease upon the said land." The report of the commissioners was confirmed by decree of the court at February Term, 1862. Martha Hamilton died in 1878. Asher Edwards, who is the respondent in this proceeding, has acquired the title to lot No. 1 by mesne conveyances from Amelia Smith, and is now in possession of it. He has answered the petition of Hamilton by pleading, among other things not necessary to be stated, that the charge upon the land has been paid and that the right to enforce the same is barred by the statute of limitations. So far as it appears he does not *Page 361 allege actual payment, but simply pleads payment, and relies upon the lapse of time to sustain the plea, that is, he relies both upon the statute of presumptions and the statute of limitations. The pleas are in proper form, and the question is again presented whether the judgment or decree of a court charging one lot with a sum of money to be paid to the owner of another lot, in order to equalize the division of land or for "owelty of partition," can be affected either by the statute of presumptions or the statute of limitations.

The judgment in this case was rendered in 1862, and, but for the provision inserted by the commissioners in their (497) report, which we have quoted, and which, of course, was made a part of the decree when the report was in all respects confirmed (Bull v. Pyle, 41 Md. 421), the right of action to enforce payment of the charge would have been deemed to have accrued prior to August, 1868, if section 168 of the Code had not been repealed by the act of 1891, ch. 113, as to actions begun after 1 January, 1893. This proceeding was begun in 1903. If the right of action had accrued prior to August, 1868, and section 136 of the Code had not been repealed, we think the statute of presumptions would have applied to any proceeding instituted to enforce payment of such a charge upon the land by issuing execution on the judgment. In Ruffin v. Cox, 71 N.C. 253, it is said that certain authorities, which are cited in the opinion, hold that there is no bar, either by the statute of presumptions or the statute of limitations, in such cases, but this is not correct, as a reference to the cases cited will show, and it was not necessary to the decision of that case to pass upon the point. None of the cases cited in Ruffin v. Cox, refer to the question in regard to the statute of limitations or statute of presumptions except the case ofSutton v. Edwards, 40 N.C. 425, which case has been erroneously cited several times since it was referred to in Ruffin v. Cox for the proposition that the statute of limitations is not a good plea in such cases. In Dobbin v. Rex, 106 N.C. 444, the statute did not apply, because the land had already been sold under an execution, and the plea was not available to the party who relied on it, because it came too late. The question was not presented in Wilson v. LumberCo., 131 N.C. 163, as is stated by Clark, J., on page 167; nor did it become necessary to decide it in the case of In re Ausborn,122 N.C. 42, because in that case, as was said by Montgomery,J., for the Court, there had been no decree of confirmation and the statute could not bar, as the right to issue (498) execution, or, in other words, to enforce the payment of the charge, had not accrued, and the statute therefore had not *Page 362 commenced to run. Those cases were rightly decided and we approve them.

It has been supposed by some that because it was said in one or two of the older cases decided before 1868 that "there is no statutory limitation as a bar by which proceedings of the kind are governed," it followed that lapse of time could not affect the right to issue execution upon such a judgment. This expression was used by Nash, J., in the leading case ofSutton v. Edwards, 40 N.C. 425, at p. 428, but immediately afterwards he explains what is meant, namely, that there was no statute of limitations applicable to judgments at that time, as they were subject only to the statute of presumptions, under and by virtue of which there was a presumption of payment or satisfaction of all judgments and decrees within ten years after the right to enforce them accrued. Rev. Code, ch. 65, sec. 18. He discusses the case with reference to the statute of presumptions, and strongly intimates that it would have defeated the plaintiff's suit but for the fact that the charge rested upon the lot of an infant, and by the provision of the statute the sum charged was not due and payable until he attained his majority.

We must infer from the language of the Court in Sutton v.Edwards that if the sum charged upon the lot of greater value had been due at the time the judgment was rendered, the plea of payment or satisfaction would have been sustained under the statute of presumptions in force at that time. The failure to distinguish clearly between the old law and the new in this respect, or between the statute of presumptions and the statute of limitations, (499) has caused some apparent confusion in the causes upon this important subject, but we think they can all be easily explained and reconciled when this distinction is kept steadily in view, and when each decision is restricted to the particular facts upon which it was based. In In re Walker, 107 N.C. 340, the question was discussed by Merrimon, C. J., who wrote the opinion of the Court, and, while the Court held that prior to 1868 there was no statute of limitations that could operate as a bar in such cases, it strongly intimated that the statute of presumptions applied, though in that case it was found as a fact that the charge upon the land had not been paid or satisfied, and the point therefore was only incidentally presented. But in Herman v. Watts,107 N.C. 646, the question under discussion was directly involved, and the Court held that, as the partition had been made and the charge imposed upon the land prior to 1868, the decree was subject to the statute of presumptions, and that as the plaintiff in the case had failed to rebut the presumption raised by the law, the Court should have instructed *Page 363 the jury to find in favor of the party who pleaded the payment. It was also held that the proper remedy for enforcing such charges is by execution, formerly by venditioni exponas, to be granted upon motion or petition in the original proceedings. Waring v. Wadsworth, 80 N.C. 345; Turpin v.Kelly, 85 N.C.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 16, 134 N.C. 495, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-ex-parte-nc-1904.