Whitehurst v. . Hinton

184 S.E. 66, 209 N.C. 392
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 184 S.E. 66 (Whitehurst v. . Hinton) 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
Whitehurst v. . Hinton, 184 S.E. 66, 209 N.C. 392 (N.C. 1936).

Opinion

DEVIN, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case. This is an action for an accounting by the defendants to the plaintiffs for rents and profits received by the defendants from lands described in the complaint, and owned by the plaintiffs and defendants as tenants in common since the death of John L. Hinton in 1910; for judgment that plaintiffs recover of the defendants the amounts found by said accounting to be due to the plaintiffs by the defendants, and that said amounts are liens on the undivided interests of the defendants in said lands; and for the partition of said lands among the plaintiffs and defendants according to their respective interests in the same by commissioners appointed by the court for that purpose.

The action was begun in the Superior Court of Pasquotank County on 4 February, 1922. Pleadings were filed during the year 1928. At November Term, 1929, the action was referred to a referee for trial. *Page 394 Thereafter, on 6 October, 1933, the referee filed his report, setting out therein his findings of fact and conclusions of law, as he was ordered and directed to do by the court.

From the evidence offered at the several hearings by him, the referee found the following facts:

(1) John L. Hinton died in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, on or about 18 January, 1910. At the date of his death he was a widower, his wife, Sophia Hinton, having died on or about 20 October, 1907. He left surviving him the following named children, to wit: C. L. Hinton, R. L. Hinton, W. E. Hinton, E. V. Hinton, Mary F. Hinton, and Ida Sawyer, wife of Lee Sawyer, and the following named gradchildren [grandchildren], to wit: Ada V. Whitehurst, now the wife of Cecil Whitehurst, Flossie Nosay, now the wife of Henry Nosay, and Sophia Morgan, now the wife of J. C. Morgan, the said grandchildren being the children of his son, John C. Hinton, who died on or about 9 June, 1900.

Mary F. Hinton, daughter of John L. Hinton, deceased, died intestate on or about 26 August, 1917, leaving as her heirs at law her brothers, C. L. Hinton, R. L. Hinton, W. E. Hinton, and E. V. Hinton, her sister, Ida Sawyer, and her nieces, Ada V. Whitehurst, Flossie Nosay, and Sophia Morgan, children of her deceased brother, John C. Hinton.

C. L. Hinton, son of John L. Hinton, deceased, died intestate on or about 31 August, 1919, leaving surviving him his widow, Ruth Morgan Hinton (now Alley), and his three children, Sophia, Charles L., and John L. Hinton.

Ida Sawyer, daughter of John L. Hinton, deceased, died on or about 3 November, 1927, having first made and published her last will and testament, by which she devised and bequeathed all her property, both real and personal, to her husband, Lee Sawyer, and to her children, John M., Will Lee, Eddie, and Emma Sawyer. She died after this action was begun.

(2) After the death of John L. Hinton, to wit: On 29 January, 1910, his sons, C. L. Hinton and R. L. Hinton, propounded for probate in common form by the clerk of the Superior Court of Pasquotank County, North Carolina, as the last will and testament of the said John L. Hinton, deceased, a paper writing in words as follows:

"I, John L. Hinton, being at this time in good health and mind, do make, publish and declare the following to be my will and testament,

"I give to my wife, Sophia M. Hinton, for and during her natural life, all the property I have in this State except the Gordon Farm in Camden Co., and after her death, I give the same to my six children, Mary F. Hinton, Sophia Ida Hinton, Charles L. Hinton, E. V. Hinton, W. E. Hinton, and R. L. Hinton, to share alike. I give to my four *Page 395 sons above named all the property I have in other States, to share alike. The Gordon Farm I give to Mrs. John C. Hinton, during her life, then to her four children, her son, John, to have the buildings, fifty acres around the house, and thirty acres of woods, the remainder to the other three children, share alike in said Gordon Farm, where they now reside.

"I appoint my sons C. L. Hinton and R. L. Hinton to be my executors to my will herein set forth.

"Signed and sealed this September 4, 1902,

"Witnesses: JOHN L. HINTON. (Seal.) GEO. B. PENDLETON, WM. T. OLD."

(On the face of the said paper writing and across the devise of the Gordon Farm appears the following:)

"I revoke the gift of the Gordon Farm. May 18, 1906.

JOHN L. HINTON."

The said paper writing, with the codicil thereto, was duly probated in common form by the clerk of the Superior Court of Pasquotank County, as the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, deceased, and was thereafter duly recorded in the office of said clerk. C. L. Hinton and R. L. Hinton, who were named therein as executors of John L. Hinton, deceased, duly qualified as such executors.

(3) After the probate in common form of the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, deceased, the devisees therein named, except Sophia M. Hinton, who had died before the death of the testator, entered into possession of all the lands in this and other states of which the testator died seized and possessed, and received all the rents and profits from said lands, in accordance with their respective interests in said lands under the said last will and testament. From time to time they executed deeds by which certain of said devisees became the sole owners of certain tracts of said lands, and such owners have conveyed said tracts of land to purchasers who are now in possession of said tracts of land. The said devisees have received from time to time the purchase price of certain of the lands devised to them and have appropriated to their own use the amounts so received. One-sixth of the amounts so received by said devisees aggregates the sum of $26,375.

The said devisees have sold and conveyed timber standing and growing on certain of the lands devised to them, and have received from the purchasers of said timber the purchase price for said timber. One-sixth of the amount received by said devisees as the purchase price for timber sold by them is $1,189.57. *Page 396

(4) The said devisees have collected and received as rents for the lands devised by said last will and testament, and not located in this State, the sum of $109.00 per year, for the years 1910 to 1931, inclusive.

(5) 6,000 acres of the lands owned by John L. Hinton, deceased, at the date of his death, and located in this State, were and are arable lands. The rental value of this arable land for the years 1910 to 1931, inclusive, was $4.00 per acre. One-sixth of the total rental value of said lands for said years is $84,000.

(6) Prior to the death of Mary F. Hinton, on or about 26 August, 1917, her brothers and her sister had conveyed to her all their right, title, and interest in and to certain tracts of land devised in the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, deceased, upon her agreement to convey all her right, title, and interest in other tracts of said land to them or to certain of said devisees. She had failed to execute deeds in accordance with said agreement. Shortly after her death, Ada V. Whitehurst, Flossie Nosay, and Sophia Morgan, as heirs at law of the said Mary F. Hinton, deceased, at the request of the devisees named in the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, deceased, signed deeds conveying to certain of said devisees all their right, title, and interest in certain lands devised in the last will and testament of John L. Hinton, deceased, and subsequent to his death conveyed by certain of the devisees to others of said devisees in severalty. The execution of said deeds by the said Ada V.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Hinton
104 S.E. 341 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1920)
Newbern v. . Leigh
113 S.E. 674 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
Newbern v. Leigh
184 N.C. 166 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.E. 66, 209 N.C. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehurst-v-hinton-nc-1936.