Swepson v. . Johnston

84 N.C. 449
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 N.C. 449 (Swepson v. . Johnston) 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
Swepson v. . Johnston, 84 N.C. 449 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

On February 3rd, 3865, the defendant entered into a covenant with the plaintiffs to convey to them within twelve months the legal title, free from incumbrances, “ to thirteen hundred and seventy acres of land, comprising, eleven different tracts, situate, lying and being in Transylvania county, in the State of North Carolina, on the waters of French Broad, and being the lands upon which the said Johnston has recently resided,” and at once to put them in possession. The action begun on October 27tb, 1868, has for its object the enforcement of the specific performance of this obligation.

The defendant, brought in b3 publication, in his answer ■denies that he has title to one thousand seventy-three acres •of the land which had been conveyed by one E. Clayton to Thomas L. Webb, trustee, in a deed of marriage settlement •for the separate use of the defendant’s wife and the use of their children ; but admits his ownership of two hundred .and ninety-seven acres, adjacent to the large tract, and alleges that these matters were fully explained to the plaintiffs at the time of making the contract. In explanation of his failure to carry it into offeet, he states that when the ¡agreement to sell was made in October, 1864, and before the ■title bond set out in the complaint was executed, he expected to procure the assent of the trustee to the proposed conveyance, and that this was afterwards withheld because during the interval of delay in payment, a tract of land, for the purchase of which negotiations were then in progress, owing to the depreciation of confederate currency, was withdrawn from market, and the money could not be re-invested lor the.benefit of the trust estate.

At fall term, 1870, the plaintiffs filted a supplemental bill, .accepting the defendant’s admission of the ownership of the *451 smaller tract, the boundaries of which they do not know •and call upon him to define, and demand that he make 'them title thereto, and also to his contingent equitable life estate in a share of the larger tract, which they insist passes to hina under the Clayton deed •; and these they offer to accept in fulfilment of the stipulations of the contract.

In response to the supplemental complaint, the defendant says that he' has the legal title to one hundred and twenty-one acres only, consisting of two tracts, the one con-vejed by one McJenkiu to him by deed, of which he annexes a copy, the other known as the “ Wilson tract ” containing one hundred and eighty-three acres, oiie undivided third of which he owns, and the remainder he bought at a ■sale under a decree of the court of equity for five hundred dollars, no part of which has he paid or secured, nor has he any certificate of purchase from the clerk and master, though he has since been in possession paying to the life-tenant of the land the annual interest on the purchase money.

The defendant further states that in 1858 after his purchase of the McJenkin farm and the one-third interest in the Wilson land, he contracted in writing with the trustee of his wife, with her assent, for the sum of $1,406.25-which has been paid him out of the trust fund, to convey these lands to said trustee to be held upon the trusts of the marriage settlement, which contract has not hitherto been carried into effect b- deed for that purpose.

He further says that the deed of Clayton, was intended by the parties to convey the land upon the same trusts, but it was by mistake so drawn as to secure a contingent equitable estate to the defendant, and he asks that it be so corrected as to conform to this common intent. The other material allegations are controverted.

At the same time, the trustee, Webb, was allowed to in-terplead and assert his equitable estate in the premises, and *452 he reiterated the allegations contained in the second answer in regard to his purchase of the land for the trust fund, and his payment therefor from the sale of slaves conveyed in the deed of marriage-settlement, and he demands of the defendant bis specific execution of his prior contract to convey the same.

At spring term, 1872, the death of the trustee was suggested and an order made that notice issue to the plaintiffs to show cause at the next term why his successor should not be made a party in his stead. After many continuances, the cause was removed by consent to Buncombe and thence to Henderson superior court, and there tried at a special term in June, 1880, upon issue» to the jury, which, with their responses, are as follows :

1. Did the plaintiffs pay all the purchase- money as- alleged in the complaint? Yes.

2. Did the plaintiffs, when the bond was executed, know of the claim or interest of Webb, the trustee, in the Olay ton land of one thousand and seventy acres ? Yes.

3.. Was the McJenkin land purchased with the trust funds or for the purposes of the trust upon the written request of the defendant and his wife to the trustee, and did he assent thereto ? Yes.

4. Was the Wilson- land purchased under similar circumstances? Yes.

5. Did the plaintiffs, or either of them, on February 3rd, 1865, have notice of these facts in regard to those two tracts ? No.

6. What damages have the plaintiffs sustained in the premises, if any ? $500.

The court thereupon adjudged that the defendant make-title as demanded in the supplemental complaint, and that the judgment itself operate as a conveyance thereof under the statute, from which the defendant appeals.

The exceptions in the record are, first,, for that there was *453 no party ip represent the interests of the trustee or the •isestuis que trust involved in the action- and secondly,-for -errors assigned in the form of the decree itself.

If the purpose of the suit was to settle the title to the land, in order to such effect it -is obvious that the antagonistic equitable claims of the wife, through her trustee, should be represented and concluded by the result. C. -C. P., § 61. But the action is in personam and to compel the specific execution of a covenant to convey an estate in land. This, in a proper case, he will be required to do when the title is vested in him; and when not, he maybe required to make reasonable efforts to acquire such title as he has contracted to convey, and be punished if he will not. But the-force of the judgment is spent upon the person of the recusant contractor, and hence if he is unable to comply with bis contract and has a sufficient legal exeuse for his failure, the plaintiff is without this remedy.

It is a defence to the suit that the vendor is unable to convey the title, for want of it in himself, after reasonable efforts to -obtain it. Frjr Spec. Perf., § 6:58-; Pom. Cont.'; § 2G3. And the doctrine is carried so far as to apply to the case in which the vendor, after his contract, has sold and conveyed the land to a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice of the prior equity. Ib.; Lord Kenyon in Denton v. Stewart, 1 Cox, 258. And also when the concurrence of others is neeessary to perfect the title. Fry Spec., Perf, §'665; Pom. Cont., § 295.

In Green v.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.C. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swepson-v-johnston-nc-1881.