United States v. Blanton

270 F. 321, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 783
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedDecember 9, 1920
DocketNo. 812
StatusPublished

This text of 270 F. 321 (United States v. Blanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Blanton, 270 F. 321, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 783 (E.D.N.C. 1920).

Opinion

CONNOR, District Judge.

On the 23d day of June, 1919, the United States filed a petition in this court against Vance Blanton and a large number of other landowners, residing in Cumberland and Hoke counties, N. C., for the purpose of securing, by condemnation, pursuant to the act of Congress'of July 2, 1917, as amended April 11, 1918 (Comp. St. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 6911a), title to a large area in said counties as a military camp, which will appear by reference to the original petition and proceedings thereon in the clerk’s office. Process was duly issued and served on the defendants, Flora Viola Ray and her infant children, residents of Fayetteville, N. C. See Petition, p. 14.

Defendant Flora Viola Ray was entitled to a dower, which had not been allotted, and her children, defendants Stella Ray, Frances Ray, and Vontrice Ray, infants, were entitled, subject to their mother’s dower, to the tract of land lying and being in Hoke county, within the Camp Bragg area represented in the plat filed with said petition as tract No. 301, containing 384.4 acres.

On May 5 and 6, 1920, “at the request of the officials of the govern[322]*322ment,” J. H. Smith, B. R. Gatlin, and A. B. McFayden, citizens of Hoke county, made—

“an estimate of tlie lands belonging to Mrs. Flora Viola Kay, widow, and the minor children of D. J. Ray, deceased; * * * that said commissioners valued the property at that time as follows": Dwelling, $250; kitchen, $100; barn, $125; crib, $75; smokehouse, $25; fowl house, $25; 30 acres timber, $750; 327 acres of woodland, $4,578 — total $7,428.’’

See Exhibits A, B, ánd C.

On June 19, 1920, J. C. MacRae, Esq., then—

“employed by the Real Estate Service of the War Department as a real estate expert, in connection with the .acquisition of lands in the Camp Bragg area in Cumberland and Hoke counties, was requested by Mr. W. H. McDonald, field representative of the Real Estate Service of the War Department, with offibes at Fayetteville, N. C., and in charge of the acquisition of lands in the Camp Bragg area, to call on Mrs. Flora Viola Ray in Durham, N. C., and see if she would sign a contract or proposal to sell the lands described in the petition or motion in this cause to the United States for the sum of $5,736 ($15 per acre). Mr. McDonald stated that this sum was the highest price the real estate service would approve for payment for said lands.”

Acting upon the said request, Mr. MacRae—

“went to Durham on June 19, 1920, at the expense of the government, and called on Mrs. Flora Viola Ray,- at her home on Arnett avenue, where he found her dressed, but lying down. She got up and sat in a chair in the presence of her daughter, Miss Stella Ray, age 20 years. He stated to Mrs. Ray that he called upon her at the instance of the government for the purpose of ascertaining if she would sell the lands owned by her deceased husband, D. J. Ray, for the sum of $5,736 — that is, $15 per acre. He told her that this price was more per acre than that paid by the government for any lands, adjoining her lands, which is a fact; the said prices for the adjoining lands ranging from $6 per acre to $13 per acre. He also told her that this price was more than twice the amount of the first appraisal of her land, but that Mr. McDonald felt that the first appraisal was not sufficient, though it had been made by disinterested citizens of Hoke county. He explained carefully to Mrs. Ray and her daughter, Miss Stella Ray, that she did not have to sell her lands to the government at the price of $5,730, inasmuch as the lands were included in the condemnation proceedings instituted by the government, and that she could await the findings of the commissioners appointed by the federal court as to the amount to be paid for the lands.” Exhibit 1, Mr. MacRae’s affidavit.

It does not appear that Mr. MacRae told Mrs. Ray that the three citizens selected by the government to appraise her lands May 5, 1920, had reported their value to be $7,428.

It appears that about the 21st day of November, 1918, J. W. Johnson and W. T. Covington, together with J. Hector Smith, “visited and viewed the lands of Mrs. Ray, and, after due examination and consideration of the character, location, and condition of said lands, they formed the opinion that a fair cash market value of the said lands was $6.50 per acre.” This was the appraisal to which Mr. MacRae referred in his conversation with Mrs. Ray. See Exhibit D. She .said the price was satisfactor}1' to her and asked her daughter, Miss Stella Ray, what she should do, and her daughter replied, “Do whatever you want to.” Mr. MacRae asked her if she would sign the contract or proposal to sell to the government for $5,736, and she replied that she would, but stated that she was.nervous and asked him to sign her [323]*323name for her. He suggested that it would be better for her daughter to sign her name, whereupon Miss Stella Ray signed her mother’s name, at her mother’s request, and in her mother’s presence, and witnessed the signature by signing her own name to the paper. He then witnessed it. Exhibit 1.

While not very important, it appears from an examination of the original contract, in the record, that Mr. MacRae wrote the words “D. J. Ray Est,” and Miss Stella Ray wrote thereunder the words “Viola Ray.” Exhibit 2. Whether by this manner of executing the paper it became the “act and deed” of Flora Ray may admit of debate. It is, however, not material to the disposition of this motion. It is manifest that Mr. MacRae did not consider the manner in which the paper was signed as material to the final act in passing title to the land, nor was it so.

Mr. MacRae told Mrs. Ray that it would be necessary to pass the title of her children to file a petition in the superior court, and that she would have to secure the services of a lawyer; that, her children being minors, the sale could be completed only by an order of court. She understood this and asked him to suggest the name of a lawyer. He named several lawyers residing in Fayetteville. Knowing, as she did, that Mr. MacRae was a lawyer practicing his profession in Fay-etteville, she asked him if he could not attend to the case for her children and herself. He said that he could do so at the same cost as any other reputable lawyer. She requested him to file the petition, and, as it in no way conflicted with his relations with the Real Estate Service of the War Department, the contract or proposal to sell having already been executed by Mrs. Ray, he consented to do so. Returning to Fayetteville, he drew the petition addressed to the clerk of the superior court of Hoke county, having jurisdiction in the premises, and returned to Durham on June 22, 1920, where he again saw Mrs. Ray, read the petition to her, and requested R. C. Cox, a notary public, to take her affidavit thereto. The verification is signed: “Flora her Viola X Ray.”

Mr. MacRae suggested to Mr. McDonald that the government should pay a part of the cost of obtaining the order, and he consented to add $75, making $5,811. It is entitled “In the Matter of Flora Viola Ray and Stella Rqy and Annie Ray and Vontrice Ray, by Their Next Friend, C. W. Broadfoot.” Exhibit 1.

, On April 21, 1920, application was filed by C. W. Broadfoot to the clerk of the superior court of Hoke county, setting forth that “the children of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 F. 321, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-blanton-nced-1920.