Waddell v. . Hewitt

36 N.C. 475
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 N.C. 475 (Waddell v. . Hewitt) 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
Waddell v. . Hewitt, 36 N.C. 475 (N.C. 1841).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

In the latter part of the year 1838 the plaintiff, P. N. Waddell, made a parol contract with the defendant for the sale of a plantation, situate on the Cape Fear river, near Wilmington, of which the plaintiff and his wife in her right were seized in fee. The price was $4000, payable in four equal instalments; of which the first was to be paid on the first of January, 1839, upon receiving a deed, and the other three to be paid on the 1st of January, 1840, 1841 and 1842, and for the same the defendant was to execute his bonds with approved personal security. Under this contract the defendant took possession immediately, with the consent of the plaintiff; and on the 1st ol January, 1839, he paid to the agent of the plaintiff in Wilmington, (the plaintiff himself residing in Orange,) the first instalment of $1000. At that time the plaintiff was absent from the State on a journey to Louisiana, and it was agreed between his agent and the defendant, in order to avoid any inconvenience or risk to the defendant from the death of the plaintiff, that, the agent should not pay over the money until the plaintiff should re. turn, and, together with his-wife, make the defendant a deed. The plaintiff did return in the succeeding summer, and on *476 the 15th of August, 1839, he and his wife executed a, conveyance t0 defendant, by bargain and sale, which they duly acknowledged before a Judge, so as to make the deed .effectual against the wife; .and the plaintiff sent it to his agent •with directions to deliver it to the defendant, and to receive his bonds, according to the contract, for the residue of the purchase-money. The agent, W; C. Lord, shortly thereafter offered the de.ed to the defendant, who objected to it on the grounds, that Mrs. Waddell had not joined her husband in the warranty, and that it did not describe the lands by corners, course, and distance, bu.t only by its name of “Buehoi,” and by calling for the lines of the adjoining proprietors. For these reasons the defendant declined receiving the deed. After further conferences, the defendant requested Lord to let him have the deed to lay before counsel; and for that purpose ,the deed was delivered to th.e defendant, who, .after consulting counsel, still .expressed his dissatisfaction, and returned the deed to Lord as the plaintiff’s agent.

The controversy between the parties is, whether the deed in question svas subsequently accepted by the defendant, so as thereby to execute the parol contract of sale or not. The bill states that it was thus accepted in December, 1839; and that thereupon the defendant, in discharge of the second payment, gave to the plaintiff a bond on one Gibbs, and offered his own two notes for the remaining instalments; but that, upon the plaintiff mentioning that he was entitled to sureties on'those two notes, the defendant said he would procure them and return the notes, when completed, to Lord, the argent; and that, in the mean while, it was agreed that the de=fendm't should leave the deed in the possession of Lord, as a security to the plaintiff for the compliance of the defendant. The bill then states that, upon the completion of this arrangement, the plaintiff returned Gibbs’ bond to the defendant, upon the understanding that the defendant’s own note should be fully executed by the sureties in a few days, and that then all three should be re-delivered together. And the bill further charges, that, by the direction of the defendant, the deed was kept by Lord, as a security to the plaintiff until the residue of the purchase money should' be paid or secur *477 ed, as stipulated. The defendant, however, did more in the business; and in the month of January following he gave notice that he should not give his notes, and abandoned the premises and instituted suit against Lord for the $1000, that had been paid.

The bill was filed in February, 1840, and prays that the land may be declared to be a security for the three last instalments of the purchase money, and that the defendant maybe decreed to perform his agreement by assigning and delivering Gibbs’ bond, and executing his own notes with sufficient sureties; and that, in default of payment of the monies then due, or as they might fall due, the same should be raised out of the land by sale or otherwise; and for general relief.

The answer, after admitting that Lord had delivered the deed to the defendant to enable him to have the opinion of counsel on it, and that he returned it to Lord with objections, denies that the deed was ever delivered to the defendant in any other manner or for any other purpose, or that he at any time expressed himself satisfied with the deed, or accepted, or agreed to accept if. The answer denies that the defendant passed Gibbs’ bondtotheplaintiff as a payment; and states that, at the time alluded to, the defendant informed the plaintiff of his objections to the deed, but stated to him that, upon getting a good deed, he was ready to direct the 1000 dollars, then deposited with Lord, to be paid over, and to give Gibbs’ bond, due January 1st, 1840, for the second payment, and to execute his own bonds for the residue; and that Waddell said, he would take Gibbs’ bond, if it would answer as a payment to certain creditors of his in Wilmington, and requested the defendant to put the bond in his possession, that he might submit it to those creditors. The answer states that Gibbs’ bond was delivered to Waddell for that purpose, and for that only; and that, after going out with it, he returned and said that it would suit, and then gave it back to the defendant; and it is then further stated, that Lord wrote two notes for the residue of the price, and that the defendant sigued them and took' them for the pur *478 p0ge 0f procuring their execution by some person as his surety-

The answer avers that no part of the contract was then 00118^61.6^ as COmp'eted; but that the understanding was, that Waddell should make another and proper deed, and that as soon as the defendant should be satisfied as to the title, he would deliver Gibbs’ and his own bonds, and not otherwise. And the answer further denies that the defendant delivered the deed to Lord as a security for the plaintiff, or that he ever had it in possession excepting only for the purpose of submitting it to counsel. The answer then insists that as the contract was not in writing, it is void and cannot be enforced under the act of 1819.

The deed of August, 1839, is identified by and annexed to the depositions o£ William C. Lord and Alexander Anderson, who are the material witnesses in the cause. The former, after stating the terms of the original contract, the offer of the deed to the defendant by him as the agent of the plaintiff, and the refusal of it in the summer or autumn of 1839, as already set forth, then deposes, that, upon information given by him of that refusal to Waddell, the latter came to Wilmington in December, 1839, and had several interviews with Hewitt in the presence and at the office of the witness, upon the subject of the execution of their contract; that at first Hewitt insisted on his former objections to the deed then in the possession of the witness; but that, after several conferenees, Hewitt agreed to accept the title and deed as it was-After having done so, Hewett requested the plaintiff to take a bond on R. Gibbs for the next payment; and to that the plaintiff, after ascertaining that he could use the bond without loss, assented on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.C. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddell-v-hewitt-nc-1841.