Willey v. . Gatling

70 N.C. 409
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 70 N.C. 409 (Willey v. . Gatling) 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
Willey v. . Gatling, 70 N.C. 409 (N.C. 1874).

Opinion

The facts, involved in this action, are thus stated and transmitted to this Court, by his Honor, as part of the record. (410)

1. On the 10th of August, 1958, one Jacob Alphin, being indebted to R. H. L. Bond in four notes of $1,100.06 each, of date January, 1856, to which John Boothe and John Alphin, (the testator of the defendants, John Alphin Costen Jordan,) were sureties; one of which notes had a credit of $1,052 thereon endorsed; and being further indebted to Jacob Hinton, the intestate of the defendant, John G. Gatling, in four other notes of $1000 each, of date 21st January, 1858, to which the said Bond and John W. Hinton were sureties; and also indebted to other sums due other persons, but over which the eight notes above set out, had priority of payment, made a deed in trust, conveying to Shadrach W. Worrell two lots in the town of Gatesville, known respectively as the U.S. Hotel lot, containing about twenty acres of land, and the Hotel stable lot, together with certain personal property, particularly described in the deed, for the purpose of paying his debts and saving his sureties harmless.

The trustee, Shadrach W. Worrell, was empowered to sell (411) either publicly or privately the property conveyed, and apply the proceeds in payment of the said eight notes, equally.

2. The personal property, with the exception of a quantity of hotel furniture, still in the possession of the defendant, John Brady, was lost by the results of the war.

3. On the 1st November, 1858, the trustee sold the property conveyed, or so much of it as was not lost real and personal, to the defendant, Brady, for the sum of $9,500, receiving in payment a lot in Gatesville, which was valued by the trustee and Brady at $1000, (and the title to which was taken to the defendant, Worrell, individually,) and four bonds executed by Brady, for $1,150 each, payable on the 15th day of January, 1860-'61-'62 and 1863, respectively, and three other bonds, each for the sum of $1,300, payable on the 14th day of January, 1859-'60 and 1861, respectively, all bearing interest from the said day of sale, the 1st day of November, 1858. To secure the payment of these notes, the purchaser, Brady, re-conveyed the property to Worrell, the first trustee in trust, c.

4. Three of the notes due by Alphin, and to which Boothe and John Alphin were sureties, were purchased from Bond, the payee, by the defendant, David Parker, for himself; and the remaining note of that class was bought by him, as agent for his brother, the defendant, James W. Parker, before the execution of the deed in trust. Of the four *Page 336 notes due to Jacob Hinton, one was sold by him to Jacob Parker, two others to the plaintiff, and one seems to have been paid to him by the trustee.

5. Of the notes given to Worrell, the trustee, by Brady, for the purchase of the trust property, the three for $1,300 each, were paid at maturity in money; and so also was one of the $1,150; a second of these was paid in 1863, in Confederate money; a third was taken up by Brady during the war, upon his surrendering to the trustee one of the notes due Bond, which Brady had purchased from Parker, the first purchaser as aforesaid for the purpose, and with the consent of the parties, and the fourth was taken up by surrendering to the (412) trustee, one of the said notes payable to Jacob Hinton, and by him sold to Parker, and obtained by Brady under circumstances hereinafter described; whereupon the trustee conveyed to Brady the trust property absolutely.

6. Of the notes due Bond and purchased by David Parker, one was paid in full, as was also the balance of a second, after allowing the credit before stated of $1,050, or about the commencement of the war; the third was paid to David Parker by Brady, under the circumstances before recited, who also paid on the fourth note the sum of $350, April 10th, 1860, to James H. Parker, this last being sued on in Gates Superior Court, 1868, and judgment obtained thereon. This, too, has been paid in full, by the executors of the surety, John Alphin, the only solvent obligor.

In 1868, the condition of the trust fund and the notes primarily secured in the trust, was as follows;

The trustee, then resident in Baltimore, and insolvent, still held in his hands one only of the notes given for the purchase of the property by defendant, Brady, for $1,150 and interest. Of the notes secured by the trust, David Parker, another defendant, held as his own property, one of the four, payable to Jacob Hinton, for $1000 and interest. The sureties in this note at that time were insolvent. Parker also held, as agent of his brother, the defendant, James H., one of the Bond notes for $1000 and interest, one of the sureties to this being solvent. The plaintiff, Willey, partly in his own right, and partly for Jacob Hinton, held one of the notes payable to said Jacob Hinton for $1000 and interest. All of the rest of the eight notes had been paid, or otherwise taken in, except one of the Jacob Hinton notes, also then held by the plaintiff, but which at the first trial of this action, the jury found to have been paid in Confederate money in 1863.

In the Summer of 1868, the defendant Brady, having solicited of *Page 337 David Parker a loan sufficient to pay off the balance due in his purchase of the trust property, so that he could procure an absolute title to the same, was informed by Parker that he had no money (413) that he could lend, but that he did have one of the Jacob Hinton notes. He, Brady, borrowed this note of $1000, giving in exchange therefor his individual note without security, and that he and Parker went to Baltimore, surrendered this, the Hinton note, to the trustee, and took up his own $1,150, the only part of the trust funds then in the hands of the trustee; whereupon the trustee made Brady a deed for the property he had theretofore purchased. On their return, Brady and Parker had a settlement, and Brady gave him his individual note for the amount due him, (Parker,) including the amount of the Hinton note, borrowed as aforesaid. On this note Parker brought suit, and at the return term obtained judgment for want of a plea, execution issued, and under it, and others against Brady, the whole controlled by David Parker, the property bought of the intestate and all the other property of Brady was sold and purchased by Parker. The plaintiff was present at the sale, and read a written notice of his claims on the trust property.

At Fall Term, 1869, the plaintiff brought suit, alleging his possession and ownership of the two notes, secured as hereinbefore set forth, by the trust made by Alphin, and charging, in substance, the facts above stated, and praying for an adjustment and settlement of all the equities arising under the said deed of trust, and for other relief, c. At Spring Term, 1871, the case was submitted to a jury, by his Honor, Judge POOL, who left the question of payment to their decision under the evidence. He charged, that if there was any understanding or knowledge or agreement between Brady and Worrell, or any two of them, that the trustee should apply the payment made to him to the notes of the testator held by one creditor, to the exclusion of those held by another creditor, to the prejudice of the latter, such notice or agreement would constitute collusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.C. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willey-v-gatling-nc-1874.