Spivey v. . Grant

2 S.E. 45, 96 N.C. 214
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 45 (Spivey v. . Grant) 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
Spivey v. . Grant, 2 S.E. 45, 96 N.C. 214 (N.C. 1887).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The defendant Adbeal Grant, against whom the plaintiff brings his action for the recovery of certain articles of personal property, and thirteen others belonging to' the Roanoke Grange, entered into an arrangement with the produce and commission house of Jones, Lee & Co., of Norfolk, Va., to secure advancements to each in the cultivation of their several crops during the year 1883. It was agreed that the former should unite in giving a single bond for the aggregate of the sums desired, and that each should secure by deed in trust, his separate share thereof to the latter. One of the grangers, W. C. Woodruff, acted for the others in making the necessary arrangements to obtain the required supplies. In carrying out the agreement, the said Woodruff, Adbeal Grant, and their associates, made their bond in these terms, and bearing their signatures and seals :

*216 $2,341.05. On demand, 1st November, 1883, with interest from date at nine per cent., we owe and promise to to pay Messrs. Jones, Lee & Co., the just and full sum of two thousand three hundred and forty-one dollars and five cents. This 1st day of April, 1883.”

At the same date, the defendant Adbeal Grant executed a deed in trust to the plaintiff, and under which he claims the personal property demanded in the action, which deed is in the following form :

A. Grant, of the county of 'Northampton and State of North Carolina, is justly indebted to Messrs. Jones, Lee & Co., of the city of Norfolk, Ya., in the sum of eleven hundred dollars, for which they hold a joint note given by A. Grant, J. C. Grant, R. S. Barham, W. P. Lowe, E. W. Spivey, W. H. Vaughan, W. E. Woodruff, B. T. Parker, S. C. Williams, J. H. Wood, J. A. Soaby, K. D. Vaughan, J. W. Spivey, being dated April 1st, 1883, and due November 15th, 1883, with interest at rate of 9 per cent, per annum, from date, and to secure the payment of the same, I do hereby convey to W. C. Spivey, of the county of Northampton and State of North Carolina, trustee, these articles of personal property, to-wit: eight mules, two horses, one yoke oxen, farming utensils on the Yellowly farm, and a lien on all the crops to be cultivated and made by me during the year 1883, according to an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina, entitled an act to secure advances for agricultural purposes. But on the special trust, that if I fail to pay said debt and interest on the same, on or before the 15th day November, 1883, then the said W. E. Spivejr, trustee, may sell said property, or so much as may be necessarj*-, by public auction, for cash, first giving twenty days’ notice at three public places in said county, and apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment *217 ■of said debt and interest on the same, and pay the surplus, if any, to me.
Given under my hand and seal, this the 1st of April, 1883.
A. Gkant, [Seal.]
Witness: J. M. Grant.”

The deed, after probate and registration, with the note under seal, were sent to Jones, Lee & Co., who refused to .accept them. Thereupon, one of the firm, representing it in the negotiations, and in the presence and with the consent of the said Abdoal and Woodruff, corrected the bond by changing the day of the maturity to the 15th of November, and the rate of interest to eight per cent., and the same reduction in the rate of interest was made in the recital in the deed in trust as well as in the registry.

The defendant J. M. Grant was permitted on application to interplead and set up title to the propertj'' in himself, and thus controvert the plaintiffs’ claim. He asserts that • the property, except the crops, together with a plantation, was purchased by himself and said Adbeal on December 22d, 1882, from Alanson Capehart, the title to the lands being-retained until the fifteen hundred bales of lint cotton, to be delivered in annual parts during- a series of years, the consideration agreed on, were all delivered, with other provisions contained in the instrument, not of special significance in the dispute. He further relies on a covenant or deed, of which the following is a copy:

“This is to -witness and show, that whereas we, J. M. Grant and A. Grant, have jointly purchased of Alanson Capehart, a farm on Roanoke river, with all the stock, mules, horses, cattle and all the farming implements thereon, and did agree before the making the purchase, where the dividing line on the land should be, and that each one of us should take and cultivate his part of the farm as agreed upon, and *218 should divide all the personal property equally between us and use the same to best advantage in making the crops, and each one of us obligating to pay each and every year one half of the cotton we were mutually or jointly obligated to pay, as specified in the contract with said Capehart, which contract is now of record in register’s office in said county.
“Be it known to all whoever it may concern, that it was and is understood between us, that all of said personal property as divided between us, should and shall be held, and the legal title to the same remain in us jointly, and if either of us should fail to or refuse to make our equal part of the payment as above specified, then and in that event, the title to said property shall be in the other, and it was and is further understood, that if either one of us should think or consider it to be to our advantage to exchange any of the stock thus held by us for other stock or property, then that which may be received in exchange shall be held in place of the other that was exchanged.
“ In witness of our agreement or understanding as made between us at the time of making the purchase of said property jointly, we and each of us have hereunto set our hands and seals, this 29th day of October, 1883.
Witness: J. M. Grant, [Seal],
PI. H. Grant. A. GraNt, [Seal].”

Issues were drawn up and submitted to the jury, whose responses thereto are as follows:

1st. The plaintiff is the owner of some part of the property mentioned in the contract, and the said J. M. Grant to none of that demanded in the complaint;

2d. The damages sustained by the wrongful withholding is $940.41, with interest to be added from December 1st, 1883;

3d. The value of the crops taken is $394.41, (which it is conceded is embraced in the damages assessed);

*219 4th. The $2,341.05 bond was not after delivery, fraudulently altered by the obligees.

It was admitted that the property seized in the claim and delivery order has been converted by said J. M. Grant to his own use, and could not be restored in kind, and that $1,100 had been advanced to Adbeal Grant; and further, that the correct date of the deed to the plaintiff was ¡VI arch 1st, instead of April 1st.

Several exceptions were taken to evidence offered on the trial, to-wit:

I.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 45, 96 N.C. 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spivey-v-grant-nc-1887.