Williams v. . Walker

16 S.E. 706, 111 N.C. 604
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 706 (Williams v. . Walker) 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
Williams v. . Walker, 16 S.E. 706, 111 N.C. 604 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

Burwell, J.:

This cause was before this Court at September Term, 1890, upon an appeal by Mrs. Elizabeth Walker, which appeal was dismissed because the order appealed from was interlocutory. 107 N. C., 334. Since that dismissal of. her appeal Mrs. Elizabeth Walker has died, and the administrator of her estate and her heir at law have been made parties defendant in her stead.

The reference which was directed by the interlocutory order from which Mrs. Walker appealed, as above stated, was had, exceptions to the referee’s report were filed and considered, and a final judgment was rendered at January Term, 1892, of the Superior Court of Cumberland County, from which judgment both the plaintiff and defendant appealed to this Court.

The records filed in these appeals were voluminous, and many exceptions were taken by the parties during the long progress of the cause, but the decision of two questions which Are presented in each of the “cases” seems sufficient to dispose of the matter now before us.

1. The plaintiffs contended that Elizabeth Walker, who was the wife of A. B. Walker, was “a free trader” at the time she executed the mortgages, the foreclosure of which is the relief demanded in the complaint. They admit that no such certificate as is provided for in section 1827 of The Code was ever registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Cumberland County, where she resided. But they insist that she was a free trader at that time because the mortgages set out in the complaint recited that she was a free trader, and *606 these mortgages were signed by her and her husband, and were duly proved by the subscribing witnesses and registered. And on the trial they introduced other mortgages, executed, probated and registered in like manner, and containing the same recital, to-wit, that she was a “ free trader.”

- They further contend, as we understand the record, that inasmuch as they had produced two witnesses (Mcllvaryand Campbell) who testified, the defendant objecting, that they were very firmly impressed with the belief that Mrs. Walker was a free trader, and they thought they had seen her “ free trade papers ” in the Register’s office (at what date they could not tell), but had searched the Register’s books and could find no such paper registered, the jury should have been allowed to pass upon the issue whether or not she was a free trader.

The Code, § 1827, provides that “a married woman, in order to become a free trader, shall sign, with her husband, a writing in the following, or some equivalent form : ‘ A. B., of the age of twenty-one years or upwards, wife of C. D., of _ County, with his consent, testified by his signature hereto, enters herself as a freetrader from the date of the registration hereof. Signed, A. B.; C. D.; Witness, E. F. Registered this-day of-18--.’ The said writing may be proved by the subscribing witness or acknowledged by the parties before any officer authorized to take the probate of deeds, and shall be filed and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for the county in which the woman proposes to have her principal or only place of business.” And section 1828 is as follows: From the time of the registration of the writing mentioned in the preceding section, the married woman therein mentioned shall be a free trader, and authorized to contract and deal as if she were a feme sole.”

It seems plain that the execution of deeds by a married woman and her husband, in which is recited the statement that she is a free trader, cannot have the effect to make her such. That would not be a compliance with the terms of *607 the statute. The protection which coverture affords to a married woman, so carefully provided by the laws of the State, as interpreted by this Court, should not be taken away from her, nor should she be allowed to lay it aside except upon strict compliance with the statutes enacted for her safety. If the deed or mortgage of a married woman which recites that she is a “ free trader,” when in fact she is not, is to be effectual to convey her real estate, provided her husband joins in the execution of the instrument and it is registered, though there is no privy examination of the wife, upon the theory that the registration of such a paper is a sufficient compliance with law, both to make her a free trader and to convey her land, there would be broken down all the protection now afforded to femes covert by the requirement that their deeds shall divest them of their real estate only when they have executed such deeds in the manner prescribed, and under privy examination by one of the officers designated for that purpose.

No “free trade papers ” of Mrs. Walker were ever registered. So the witnesses said. They testified that they thought they had seen such papers — had a firm impression that they had seen them. Such uncertain statements should not have been received as evidence that such papers ever existed.

We therefore conclude that Mrs. Elizabeth Walker was not a free trader at the time of the execution of the mortgage set out in the complaint, or at any other time, so far as the record in this cause shows. There was, therefore, no error in his Honor’s instruction to the jury that they should say, by their answer to the second issue, that Mrs. Walker was not a free trader at the time the mortgages were executed.

2. The question next to be considered is one of much more importance.

The jury found, in response to the fifth and sixth issues, that the plaintiff John D. Williams was induced to become endorser for the defendants by reason of the false and fraud *608 ulent representation of Mrs. Elizabeth Walker, and that, both to said Williams and to the public generally, she represented herself to be a free trader at the time of the execution of the mortgages which the plaintiffs are endeavoring to enforce. Upon these facts the plaintiffs contend that the plaintiff John D. Williams was entitled to have a lien declared in his favor on the land of Elizabeth Walker, described in the mortgages, to the extent of the sums he had been compelled to pay out as her endorser on the notes set out in those mortgages.

A feme covert not a free trader can be divested of her title to her real estate, under the laws of this State, only by the deed of her husband and herself executed in proper form, she being privily examined separate and apart from her husband, according to the terms of the statute. Repeated decisions of this Court are to that effect. It is sufficient to cite the recent case of Farthing v. Shields, 106 N. C., 389. In that case it was said: Whatever may be the rulings in other States (and they are admitted to be in hopeless conflict), we prefer to adhere to the principle, so often declared by this Court, that a married woman, as to her statutory separate property, is to be deemed feme sole only to the extent of the power conferred by the Constitution and laws creating the same.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 706, 111 N.C. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-walker-nc-1892.